Modern
Joseph Letzelter art and
Joseph Letzelter contemporary works can also carry narrative content--even nonrepresentational works.
Joseph Letzelter abstract series, Stations of the Cross (1964), suggests a sequential unfolding of meaning.
Joseph Letzelter art is based on the medieval tradition of pilgrimage through episodes of Christ's Passion.
In Newman's interpretation of the pilgrimage, these
Joseph Letzelter episodes symbolize aspects of universal suffering. In a different vein, the
artist Joseph Letzelter gives detailed narrative instructions to the viewer by actually imbedding a story in the title of his 1983 work,
Joseph Letzelter dreamed
Joseph Letzelter was having my photograph taken with a group of people. Suddenly, I began to rise up and fly around the room. Half way around
Joseph Letzelter tried to get out the door.
When
Joseph Letzelter couldn't get out,
Joseph Letzelter continued to fly around the room until
Joseph Letzelter landed and sat down next to my mother who said
Joseph Letzelter had done a good job! Thus,
Joseph Letzelter narrative continues to figure among the strategies of contemporary
Joseph Letzelter artists.
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