Documentation
Found in 3468 Collections and/or Records:
Dante Diary: Number 90 / Phillips, Tom., 1992
This ninetieth page is titled "Sold Out." Two identical cartoons from the New Yorker Magazine are collaged at the top of the upper right page titled "Dante & Virgil - A Buddy Movie." The left side of the page contains Phillips' diary writing about the end of the TV Dante project and what he could have done differently.A collaged paper book cover at the bottom left is titled "Images from Dante" -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 91 / Phillips, Tom., 1992
This ninety first page is titled "Look Upon This Picture and on This......" Phillips writes in colored text : A TV (sic) Dante (sic) Continues: the Appalling Ruiz Cantos Appear." The date is now February 1992. The bottom collage pictures a hand holding a book. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 92 / Phillips, Tom., 1992
This ninety second page is titled " They That Wasted US Demanded of Us a Son." The main portion of the page is covered with ripped comp tickets to A TV Dante. A painted gray cloud-like section at the top of the page drips down to the bottom of the page in 13 lines. Phillip's hand written diary continues on the left side of the page recounting his trials and tribulations with the Dutch "art thugs" and he continues to learn of new ideas for continuing A TV Dante but is totally disillusioned with the past events. He plans to write a book about A TV Dante. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 93 / Phillips, Tom., 1991
This ninety third page describes Phillips' trip to Pescara, Italy for the"Special Prize" for the Prix Italia. He writes more optimistically about a TV Dante. "I think I have now devised the right formula for proceeding with this task and using the structure Peter and I have already built up but opening it up here and there...I am under the illusion that this will be attractive to all parties. Decide to go early tomorrow in order to film in Bologna on the way to Pesao." The collage elements consist of typical Italian paintings, landscapes, a female nude postcard and painted additions. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 94 / Phillips, Tom., 1992
This ninety fourth page is titled " Can you get it up again Dante?" It contains a dried fruit skin int the shape of male genetalia on the bottom right side of the page.There is a pornographic illustration in the center and handwritten diary text on the left side. Again Phillips wrties of his concerns with the future of a TV Dante. Four hand written paragraphs are blurred by water damage. At the very bottom left Phillips writes "Water from the leaking roof seeps in to wash away the words of the moving finger but the message of folly still viisble & the record of disillusion clear." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 95 / Phillips, Tom., 1992
Dante Diary: Number 96 / Phillips, Tom., 1993
This ninety sixth page is titled "The Centre Cannot Hold." The center collage is a newspaper clipping of a tax scandal as reported in the Guardian. Elements from A Humument are included that read "he halted haunted documents, a series of parchment past.." There are also collage newspaper clippings about a newly crowned black Miss South Africa. Phillips writes in his diary notes "Although this is no. 96 it really is the last of the Dante Diary to be finished. Tomorrow I'll write to Marvin to say that the (illegible) is declared at a century. Now with a black Miss South Africa crowned & a TV Dante unresuscitatable & (illegible) sculptures of skulls in progress and work on the Africa show underway...the world seems to have turned a satisfactory circle even though England did lose the ashes." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 97 / Phillips, Tom., 1993
This ninety seventh page is titled "Dante Wraps It Up......" Phillips writes in the upper right hand corner " as I send Dante prints to the Gardner Center in Harvard and the last & sputterings of the embers of any interest in a TV Dante die down with new activities replacing them: sculpture etc & the African show I start to wrap." This page contains several found printed images of Dante and references to the end of Phillips' project. For example a page heading "Die in Dante's Desert," a red SOLD label, A comic strip bubble that reads "I guess that about wraps it up," and a scrap of a map near the African Gulf of Aden that points to Dante (Hafun). -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 98 / Phillips, Tom., 1993
This ninety eighth page is titled "I Have Measured Out My Life II." This page contains the obituary of Christopher Betambeau who was a gifted printer. "Tom Phillips, for whom Betambeau printed over a hundred images, including some inspired by Dante's Inferno, describes Betambeau as the greatest craftsman he ever worked with, and says he was almost clairvoyant in his ability to understand what artists wanted. Like a pianist who can fill out harmonies and melodic improvisations from an ineptly whistled tune, Chris could work from hints and mumblings, coming up with visual solutions which were exactly what one had in mind."The remainder of the page is filled with about 20 printed cards and matchbook covers from London restaurants where Tom has eaten. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number 99 / Phillips, Tom., 1993
Dante Diary: Number 100 / Phillips, Tom., 1993
This one hundredth page is titled "Abandon Hope" and it is printed up side down as is the entire page. At the bottom left Phillips writes "Abandon hope. The original inscription for a TV Dante...drawing a line under dante" It is signed Tom Phillips XXII.VIII.XCIII." On the bottom left corner a collaged comic strip block with a picture of a physician in a white lab coat reads "Thank you, Doctor." This refers to Dr. Marvin Sackner's support for the Dante project. On the upper right hand corner is collaged the saying "Guaranteed for Life." The text on the page reads as follows: Through me you reach the city of despair- Through me you reach eternity of grief - Through me you reach the region of the lost - Justice it was moved my high architect - Divine omnipotence created me - Transcendent wisdom and primordial love - Before me only endless things were made - And I too shall endure without an end - You that enter here - Abandon hope -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number I / Phillips, Tom; Ackerman M; Sackner RK; Sackner MA., 1979
Dante Diary: Number II / Phillips, Tom; Sackner MA., 1979
This second page from Dante Diary, which is dated from March 27, 1979 to April 19, 1979, includes a direct reference to Marvin Sackner. Philllips mentions discussing with him regarding self publishing Dante's 'inferno.' There are several, diverse sketches depicted on this page including a portrait of Hilary Hugh-Jones near the center at the the lower border. Her husband Philip Hugh-Jones, a British pulmonary physician was a friend of Marvin Sackner. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number III / Phillips, Tom; Sackner SE; Sackner RK; Sackner MA., 1979
This third page from Dante Diary, which is dated from May 10, 1979 to July 10, 1979, mentions Phillips' visit with the Sackners and receiving "good Miami postcards from Sara Sackner." The sketches on its right side depict installation plans for the British Council Show and a standing man wearing shorts viewed from the rear who appears to be in position for urinating against a wall. In addition, Phillips has sketched small drawings of Inferno pages (Una Selva) and a partially completed devil-like figure at the lower right corner. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number IV / Phillips, Tom., 1979
This fourth page from the Dante Diary, which is dated from July 10, 1979 to September 15, 1979, depicts a central image of an unfinished sketch of an androgynous seated figure (Beatrice?). Its right half contains sketches for illustrative pages of the Inferno including drawings of a leopard, lion and wolf, a drawing with yellow flowers on its lower border, a drawing designed with 10 openings or fragments from the book of dreams, drawings of Virgil and Dante flanking a still to be determined image, and a sketch of calligraphic forms labeled, "a big drawing with secondary letters in white." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number IX / Phillips, Tom; Sackner RK; Sackner MA; Ackerman M; Ackerman D., 1979
Dante Diary: Number L / Phillips, Tom., 1980
Page 50 is titled Dante & the Madnill Bank. The center of the page is filled with a large 10000 Italian lire bill with a picture of Dante in profile in the center. The collage elements are all bank papers of account information.On the left edge ofthe page Phillips writes, "XXV/VI/LXXXIII Money on hand from Waddingtons (at interest) in advance of copies not yet done. Staves off financail disaster yet again. Silkscreens all paid. Some litho & etching outstanding." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number LI / Phillips, Tom., 1980
Page 51 is titled Dante Reads Comics and is collaged with many ripped pieces of comic strips and two collaged elements from A Humument. The comic strips relate to Nazi German war scenes.The Humument additions read, " cowled dejection" and " a campign of mean miltary industry." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number LII / Phillips, Tom., 1980
Page 52 is titled Dante & A Humument.This page is collaged with a bit of the purple cover of A Humument, several parts of pages painted and found poetic texts presented and a partial photograph of a man in a top hat. Phillips writes, "possibility of A Humument epic. some major work retold in its pages arranged: some new Ulysses of economy ----- the Aeneid. War & Peace?" and "Sometimes difficult to find appropriate bits and I think the strain occasionally shows. I think it's worth the real success and insights." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dante Diary: Number LIII / Phillips, Tom., 1980
Page 53 consists of a sketch of a round 'No Entry' traffic sign. Phillips writes, "One of the few practical field trips was Nick Tite and Antheas scaling of a traffic sign to take the exact measurements. The only moral error in this is that we ought really to have used the fading no entry sign in the car park site of 20 sites or years. Only connect!!! The bottom portion of the page contains text from a page of A Humument that relates to a blocked roadway. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.