Archaeology of Mythology

What will have been…

Posted in Uncategorized by louishenderson on March 30, 2011

The future at issue in archaeology becomes intertwined with a past; it is a future anterior. It is the past that will have been when the archaeologist’s gesture (or the power of the imaginary) has cleared away the ghosts of the unconcious and the tight-knit fabric of tradition which block access to history. Only in the form of this “will have been” can historical consciousness become possible.


Louis Henderson. Untitled. British Museum, 2011

Archaeology moves backward through the course of history, just as the imagination moves back through individual biography. Both represent a regressive force that, unlike traumatic neurosis, does not retreat toward an indestructible origin but rather toward the point where history (whether individual or collective) becomes accessible for the first time, in accordance with the temporality of the future anterior.

Giorgio Agamben. Philosophical Archaeology.

Snakes and Coffins

Posted in Uncategorized by louishenderson on March 4, 2011

But if he must, the man remains fearless.
Alone before god, simplicity keeps him safe.
He needs no weapons and no cunning,
As long as God’s absence comes to his aid.

Friedrich Hölderlin. The Poets Vacation.