Spring Annual 2022: “Objectivity in Art” by Felipe Rodolfo Hendriksen

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Objectivity in Art


He stops the offensive to see a painting by Le Brun he had always admired, the one with Alexander in the tent of Darius. The queens, supplicant, at his feet. The dark-skinned servants, frightful, with their hands on their heads. He’s on the left, great, hands wide open as if he were vainly pontificating or asking for forgiveness. The general sentiment of the piece is one of incredulity. In all that he sees a symbol and an allegory of what was happening and was going to happen.

Satisfied, he leaves Versailles: he’ll soon have to march down Champs-Élysées.

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Felipe Rodolfo Hendriksen


Felipe Rodolfo Hendriksen recently graduated from Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina with a Professor Diploma in Humanities. He is twenty-five and has been writing (with some ups and downs) since he was a child. He is now seeking to attend graduate school in America to study popular culture in general and comic books in particular. In his writings, he humbly follows the steps of Borges, Bolaño, and Murakami.


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