Joris-Karl Huysmans | À REBOURS “Formerly, during his Parisian days, his love for artificiality had led him to abandon real flowers and to use in their place replicas faithfully executed by means of the miracles performed with India rubber and wire, calico and taffeta, paper and silk. He was the possessor of a marvelous collection of tropical plants, the result of the labors of skilful artists who knew how to follow nature and recreate her step by step, taking the flower as a bud, leading it to its full development, even imitating its decline, reaching such a point of perfection as to convey every nuance — the most fugitive expressions of the flower when it opens at dawn and closes at evening, observing the appearance of the petals curled by the wind or rumpled by the rain, applying dew drops of gum on its matutinal corollas; shaping it in full bloom, when the branches bend under the burden of their sap, or showing the dried stem and shrivelled cupules, when calyxes are thrown off and leaves fall to the ground.This wonderful art had held him entranced for a long while, but now he was dreaming of another experiment.He wished to go one step beyond. Instead of artificial flowers imitating real flowers, natural flowers should mimic the artificial ones.” — Joris-Karl Huysmans | À REBOURS innovation, recursionNatasha JoukovskyOctober 22, 2016mimesis, Joris-Karl Huysmans, À rebours, nature, art, metamorphosis, 1Comment Facebook0 Twitter LinkedIn0 0 Likes