the tul suitcas
Transcription
the tul suitcas
VOLUME ONE THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 1 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES Greenaway C a t a l o g u e 22 of 92 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 92 92 DR AWINGS VOLUME ONE PETER GREENAWAY THE RIVELINO GALLERY LOCARNO The Tulse Luper Suitcases, 2002 to 2005, is an ambitious multi-media project deliberately made for the Information Age sharing manifestations in feature-films for the cinema, DVDs, websites, published fictional texts, exhibitions, video-games, VJ-events, theatre, opera, paintings and drawings. The project covers the adventures of Tulse Luper – born 1911 and possibly still alive (he was 92 in 2003) – writer and collector and professional prisoner, who travels the world, leaving evidence of his fascinations and works in a collection of 92 packed suitcases that purport to include by object, event and idea, everything that is in the world – an entire encyclopaedia of the planet and all that is in it, where nothing, absolutely nothing, is left out. VOLUME ONE THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 1 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES Greenaway C a t a l o g u e 22 of 92 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 92 92 DR AWINGS VOLUME ONE PETER GREENAWAY THE RIVELINO GALLERY LOCARNO The Tulse Luper Suitcases, 2002 to 2005, is an ambitious multi-media project deliberately made for the Information Age sharing manifestations in feature-films for the cinema, DVDs, websites, published fictional texts, exhibitions, video-games, VJ-events, theatre, opera, paintings and drawings. The project covers the adventures of Tulse Luper – born 1911 and possibly still alive (he was 92 in 2003) – writer and collector and professional prisoner, who travels the world, leaving evidence of his fascinations and works in a collection of 92 packed suitcases that purport to include by object, event and idea, everything that is in the world – an entire encyclopaedia of the planet and all that is in it, where nothing, absolutely nothing, is left out. – 92 biological elements that constitute the genetic recipe for human existence and evolutionary development. His delight in this coincidence – was it a coincidence? – sharpened and developed his fascination with this number. The drawings presented here in this catalogue were exhibited in the summer of 2010, at the Rivelino Gallery in Locarno, Switzerland, whose architectural foundations were designed by Leonardo da Vinci. The drawings are all associated with the ambitious project of The Tulse Luper Suitcases and are part of a very large series of drawings that represent and acknowledge in graphic form that encyclopedic endeavour. mer of 2010, at the Rivelino Gallery in Locarno, Switzerland, whose architectural foundations were designed by Leonardo da Vinci. The drawings are all associated with the ambitious project of The Tulse Luper Suitcases and are part of a very large series of drawings that represent and acknowledge in graphic form that encyclopedic endeavour. credits THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES THE SUITCASE LIST PETER GREENAWAY 92 TULSE LUPER SUITCASES drawings SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE 17.07 >12.09.2010 Il Rivellino LDV Locarno Progetto a cura di / Project by Franco Laera Con / with Arminio Sciolli Paolo Sciolli Michele Lamassa Riccardo Carazzetti Yanik M. Marcolli Jean Olaniszyn Allestimento a cura di / installation by Change Performing Arts / Andrea Bianchi Matteo Massocco Marco Teatro Con / with Adrian Sciolli Montaggio video / editing Irma de Vries Gradica / Graphic design Maarten Evenhuis A SUITCASE ON A PEDESTAL The major years of Luper’s life cover what we could call the Prologue – 1920 to 1945 – and the First Chapter – 1945 to 1989 – of Uranium, the element with which we could now, through nuclear fission, destroy the world, or with which we might be able to re-make civilisation. Uranium was first seriously mined in the 1920s in the West in Moab, Utah, where Luper’s adventures essentially begin. Uranium created the most significant political activity of the world in the Cold War lasting some fifty years, reached its full Armageddon apotheosis in Hiroshima in 1945, and became at least temporarily defused with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989. So The Tulse Luper Suitcases could also be regarded as a history of uranium in the 20th century. The atomic number of Uranium is 92, hence the project is governed by that number; there are 92 major characters, 92 major events and 92 suitcases, and inside each suitcase are 92 items, ideas, objects or events. Tulse Luper learnt that the human genomn contains 46 paired genes 91 ELR Edizioni Le Ricerche A cura di Jean Olaniszyn © 2010 by Peter Greenaway © 2010 by Change Performing Arts 1 COAL 2 TOYS 3 LUPER PHOTOS 4 LOVE LETTERS 5 LUPER’S CLOTHES 6 LUPER’S CLOTHES 7 VATICAN PORNOGRAPHY 8 FISH 9 PENCILS 10 HOLES 11 PHOTOGRAPHS OF CRIMINALS 12 FROGS 13 FOOD DROP 14 DOLLARS 15 COINS 16 LUPER’S LOST FILMS. 17 ALCOHOL 18 PERFUME 19 PASSPORTS 20 BLOODIED WALLPAPER 21 CLEANING FLUIDS 22 DENTAL TOOLS 23 CHERRIES 24 HONEY 25 NUMBERS & LETTERS 26 LUPER’S UNIFORMS 27 DOG BONES 28 LOCKS & KEYS 29 LIGHT BULBS 30 PLACE NAMES 31 BOOTS & SHOES 32 ZOO ANIMALS 33 IDEAS OF AMERICA 34 ANNA KARENINA NOVELS 35 CANDLES 36 RADIO EQUIPMENT 37 CLEAN LINEN 38 WATER 39 CODES 40 A SLEEPER 41 EROTIC PRINTS 42 92 OBJECTS FOR THE WORLD 43 RAINBOWS 44 PRISON MOVIE FILM-CLIPS 45 MANUSCRIPTS FOR STRASBOURG 46 HOLOCAUST GOLD SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE 47 CHILDREN 48 DEAD ROSES 49 TRAINS 50 NEEDLES 51 SHOWERHEADS 52 55 MEN ON HORSEBACK 53 CHINA DOGS 54 BRUSHES 55 DRAWINGS OF LUPER 56 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 57 SMOKED CIGARS 58 BODY PARTS 59 INGRES PAINTINGS 60 BROKEN GLASS 61 MOITESSIER GOWNS 62 CRABCLAWS 63 FEATHERS & EGGS 64 YELLOW PAINT 65 TENNIS BALLS 66 BOTTLE MESSAGES 67 GREEN APPLES 68 DOG 69 SPENT MATCHES 70 SAUCEPANS 71 FLOWER BULBS 72 RESTAURANT MENUS 73 92 ATOMIC ELEMENTS 74 VIOLIN SPLINTERS 75 STONES 76 LEAD 77 OBELISKS 78 ROMAN POSTCARDS 79 HOLY EARTH 80 GREEN FIGS 81 URANIUM 82 NOTES OF DROWNED CORPSES 83 MAPS 84 BOARD GAMES 85 INK & BLOOD 86 LUPER’S 1001 STORY MSCRIPTS 87 ICE 88 MEASURING TOOLS 89 THE TYPEWRITER 90 DOLLS 91 THE PHRENOLOGICAL BOOK 92 LUPER’S LIFE Empty Suitcases 2 3 4 5 from the series of ... 6 E M PTY SUITCASE S cessities – a toothbrush, a bar of soap, clean underwear, a child’s toy, a passport, and all the cash you can muster in ten minutes? And with the prospect of no return, what of your memories, obsessions, guilty secrets, sentimental associations, ephemeral treasures, all the portable items that define your life and existence, and more than just metaphorically have become your essential “cultural baggage”? We are now in the Age of Airports and Air Travel. Modern travelers have more choice in which to transport their belongings. The airports carousels of the world will readily display evidence of that choice in myriad materials, fabrics, and shapes and manufacture, and almost certainly now on wheels. And so much of our possessions can now travel in other ways, minuterised electronically and digitally. “Have suitcase, will travel”. Here are thirteen empty suitcases, from a series of 92, for you to chose to fill with your literal and metaphorical cultural baggage. Bon voyage. Empty Suitcases: Six Hat-Boxes Throughout the period of Tulse Luper’s life, from 1911 until at least the 1980s, the suitcase, a basically rectangular and stiff-backed box with a hinged lid and one or more handles, very often fashioned from leather, and made moderately safe with clasps and a simple lock, was a ubiquitous item all over the world. The first eighty years of the 20th century was the democratic Age of the Train, and the suitcase seems to be almost inseparable from a travelingby-train experience. Practically everyone had a suitcase and it has become a symbol of travel, hopefully travel for voluntary movement, for pleasure and vacation and positive experience and memory, but the huge exodus of people from Greater Europe to the New World, the displacement of peoples all over Asia, the two World Wars and the Holocaust, and the millions of involuntary travelers in the 20th century have made the simple suitcase an image of disturbance, pathos, loss, grief, displacement and tragedy. What would you put in your suitcase when the rapping came on your door in the middle of the night, accompanied by the order, “You have ten minutes to pack a suitcase!”. Could the answer have been more than the most basic practical ne- 7 8 Empty Suitcases: The Dutch Orange Suitcase Empty Suitcase: “Ten Minutes to Pack” Empty Suitcase: Obverse of “Five Minutes to Pack” Empty Suitcase: “Five Minutes to Pack” 9 from the series of ... 10 WATER Suitcase 38: A Suitcase of Water It can surely never be a surprise that water would be a ubiquitous image in any one’s life. For Tulse Luper it was certainly ever-present. His associations with seas and oceans, ponds, rivers and lakes, running and still water, salt-water and fresh-water, steam and mist, fog and ice and clouds trickled, ran, sped and flooded into most things he did and dreamt of doing. Here is just a little evidence of that fascination and experience, certainly of the act of drowning and of the Great Biblical Flood and of the certain floods to come. 11 12 Suitcase 38: A Suitcase of Water Suitcase 38: Three Suitcases of Falling Water 13 14 Suitcase 38: A Suitcase of Heavy Water Suitcase 66: A Suitcase of Messages in a Bottle 15 16 Suitcase 85: A Suitcase of Blood and Water Suitcase 85: A Suitcase of Ink and Blood Suitcase 38: A Suitcase of Water Survival Suitcase 38: Obverse of a Suitcase of Water Survival 17 18 19 Suitcase 38: Page 39 from the “Illustrated Flood” Suitcase 38: Page 42 from the “Illustrated Flood” 20 21 Suitcase 38: Page 59 from the “Illustrated Flood” Suitcase 38: Page 63 from the “Illustrated Flood” 23 Suitcase Display Suggesting Sleep A U TUMN LEAVES 22 Suitcase Display from the series of ... A Suitcase of Autumn Leaves Obverse of a Suitcase of Autumn Leaves 24 A Suitcase of Displaced Possessions Obverse of a Suitcase of Displaced Possessions 25 A Camouflaged Suitcase Obverse of A Camouflaged Suitcase 26 A Forgotten Suitcase Obverse of A Forgotten Suitcase 27 from the series of ... 28 Tulse Luper had a great curiosity about birds, creatures twice blessed by being able to sing and fly. There was a time when he collected bird-eggs, and when that became ecologically unacceptable, he drew the eggs instead. There are many collections of his drawings of eggs and here are two of them. The second – the eggs with associated texts – is a compendium of bird-associated facts as regards ornithological species, metaphorical ornithological language, rhymes, chimes, synonyms, puns, or direct or indirect ornithological resonances, thus, raven-haired, Leda, eggbound, fried sunny-side up, a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, crow’s feet, crow’s nest, a dead duck, a robin in a cage keeps all heaven in a rage, as dead as a dodo, etc. Suitcase 63 The Suitcase Introducing Eggs F E ATHERS & EGG S 29 30 Suitcase 63: 92 Plain Numbered Eggs One of Four Suitcase 63: 92 Plain Numbered Eggs Two of Four 31 32 Suitcase 63: 92 Plain Numbered Eggs Three of Four Suitcase 63: 92 Plain Numbered Eggs Four of Four 33 34 Suitcase 63: 92 Numbered Eggs With Texts One of Four Suitcase 63: 92 Numbered Eggs With Texts Two of Four 35 from the series of ... AS SEEN FROM THE MOON Suitcase 63: 92 Numbered Eggs With Texts Three of Four Here are nine drawings from a series associated with a Tulse Luper project called AS SEEN FROM THE MOON, in surprise and fascination at the idea that it might not be impossible one day to deliberately make man-made structures on Earth that should be seen from the Moon as art-works – and vice-versa. As Seen from the Moon Obverse: As Seen from the Moon 36 As Seen from the Moon As Seen from the Moon 37 38 41 39 40 As Seen from the Moon Obverse As Seen from the Moon 42 43 44 As Seen from the Moon As Seen from the Moon Suitcase 36: A Suitcase of Radio Equipment Suitcase 36: Obverse of A Suitcase of Radio Equipment 45 from the series of ... 46 Suitcase Number 4 in The Tulse Luper Suitcases Collection contains an archive of 92 love letters written by Luper’s father, Ivor, and sent by him from the trenches of the First World War in Flanders in 1916 and 1917 to Carrie Ashdown, Luper’s mother in Newport, South Wales. How many letters in total were sent and received, how many were lost or did not get passed the army censor, we do not know, but Martino Knockavelli, Luper’s friend, archivist and biographer, eventually finalised the collection to 92 items, complete with envelopes. Martino arranged the letters according to a plan that Luper had made for an exhibition of texts we have never found, that was drawn on the back of a section of typescript pages that referred to the contents of Suitcase 86 – a new One Thousand and One New Tales of the Arabian Nights. The love letters were full of texts and drawings and visual conceits, and they recorded Ivor Luper’s erotic love and great longing for his wife, re-living memories of a courtship in the streets, towns, villages and countryside of Monmouthshire, South Wales. Carrie Ashdown carefully treasured these letters, and when Luper was a child, she amused him with the counting games, the listings, the maps and diagrams, family genealogies and complex fantasies, and they became a significant introduction to a world of words, classifications, counting, numbering and chronology, associated all the time with his parent’s love for one another. The letters were a stimulus for Luper towards an invigorating imaginative life, and served as a model for a fully emotional future. SUITCASE 4: Love Letter 47 “ Dear Cissie, Imagine the edge of a city stopping short… “ LOVE LET TERS SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse for Sections 1 to 16 of “a plan to exhibit texts” SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – Sections 1 to 16 of “a plan to exhibit texts” 47 SUITCASE 4: Love Letter 23 “ Dear Cissie, We have coughed in fog for four days…” SUITCASE 4: Obverse drawing of Love Letter 23 48 SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse for Sections 17 to 32 of “a plan to exhibit texts” SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – Sections 17 to 32 of “a plan to exhibit texts” 49 SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse for Sections 33 to 48 of “a plan to exhibit texts”. SUITCASE 4: Love Letters –Sections 33 to 48 of “a plan to exhibit texts”. 50 SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse of Sections 49 to 64 of “a plan to exhibit texts”. SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – Sections 49 to 64 of “a plan to exhibit texts” 51 52 53 SUITCASE 4: Love Letter 54 “ Dear Cissie, I have counted 15 colours in your hair…” SUITCASE 4: Love Letter 61 “ Dear Cissie, The rain has been pouring down my neck …” SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse typescript of Sections 65 to 80 of “a plan to exhibit texts”. SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – Sections 65 to 80 of “a plan to exhibit texts” 54 SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – obverse typescript of Sections 81 to 92 of “a plan to exhibit texts”. SUITCASE 4: Love Letters – Sections 81 to 92 of “a plan to exhibit texts” 55 from the series of ... A HISTORY OF T H E WORLD 56 57 The history comments on all the theories, old and new, biblical, mythological, astrological, astronomical, mechanical, fictional and fanciful of the formation of the planet and its early pre-human history, and proceeds with a fascination for the ways we have conceived the writing of history - the divisions of the geological periods, the archaeological ages, the epochs, centuries, dynasties, the cultural and political categorisations that are relevant to all the ways we count, organise, and classify our presence here on Earth. From the series A HISTORY OF THE WORLD ???? drawings from a Tulse Luper series called A History of the World, an ironic fascination with the new fashionable genre of the historical overview of the planet Earth now that the Information Age is upon us. The drawings are designed with a view to be entertaining and self-sufficient in themselves, but also to form the basis for an animated film, hence the storyboard format, with, in each case, the drawings conceived as a discrete unit of nine pictures that suggest growth and movement. 58 60 59 61 From the series A HISTORY OF THE WORLD From the series A HISTORY OF THE WORLD 62 63 Suitcase 31: Boots and Shoes - Shit and Shoes A Dozen Pints in an Irish Bar from the series of ... Tulse Luper was fascinated by the quotation from Dante that suggested he wrote The Divine Comedy as an attempt “to unite the angels in their Heavens to the stones on the road”. To make indeed an encyclopedic compendium of everything known and unknown, from the sublime to the very humble. Luper constantly explored what “those stones on the road” might be. 68 69 SUITCASE 75: The Stones – 23 to 31 – 32 to 40 – 41 to 49 – 50 to 58 T H E STONES 64 65 SUITCASE 75: The Stones – 1 to 10 – 11 to 22 66 67 In this context at Locarno, they could be the stones that da Vinci used to build a castle. SUITCASE 75: The Stones – 59 to 67 – 68 to 76 – 77 to 85 – 86 to 95 SUITCASE 75: The Stones – 59 to 67 – 68 to 76 – 77 to 85 – 86 to 95 70 71 74 72 73 75 76 SUITCASE 67: A Suitcase of Green Apples SUITCASE 67: A Suitcase of Green Apples from the series of ... The very first suitcase of Tulse Luper’s 92 suitcase archive is a collection of lumps of coal from his father’s coalhouse in the mining community of Newport in South Wales, lumps of coal the 10-year old Luper carved and molded and fashioned to represent all the landscapes he hoped to travel in and explore, in his future long life. These 92 artificial miniature landscapes were a constant fascination to Luper and he repeatedly remodeled them in his mind’s eye, long after the original childhood suitcase of physical coal lumps had been lost, or stolen or, most likely, burnt. Here is one of the collections of the drawings of those 92 landscapes. SUITCASE 1: A Suitcase of Coal Landscapes – Numbers 50, 51, 53, 54, 56, 57 S U ITCASE 1: THE C OAL-MOUNTAIN S 77 78 81 82 79 80 83 84 SUITCASE 1: A Suitcase of Coal Landscapes – 1 to 12 – 13 to 24 – 25 to 36 – 37 to 48 SUITCASE 1: A Suitcase of Coal Landscapes – 49 to 60 – 61 to 72 – 73 to 84 – 85 to 92 from the series of ... 85 LO CKS & KEYS Tulse Luper was a professional prisoner, moving, only rarely voluntarily, from prison to prison. Although the prisons were not always of locks and keys and bars and unscalable walls, the images of the lock and the key were invariably in his memory and imagination. SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys “Life is a puzzle, A game of keys and locks, A mirror in a mirror, A box within a box, And we must do the best we can To stand up to the shocks”. 86 87 SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys 88 89 SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys SUITCASE 28: Locks & Keys 90 – 92 biological elements that constitute the genetic recipe for human existence and evolutionary development. His delight in this coincidence – was it a coincidence? – sharpened and developed his fascination with this number. The drawings presented here in this catalogue were exhibited in the summer of 2010, at the Rivelino Gallery in Locarno, Switzerland, whose architectural foundations were designed by Leonardo da Vinci. The drawings are all associated with the ambitious project of The Tulse Luper Suitcases and are part of a very large series of drawings that represent and acknowledge in graphic form that encyclopedic endeavour. mer of 2010, at the Rivelino Gallery in Locarno, Switzerland, whose architectural foundations were designed by Leonardo da Vinci. The drawings are all associated with the ambitious project of The Tulse Luper Suitcases and are part of a very large series of drawings that represent and acknowledge in graphic form that encyclopedic endeavour. credits THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES THE SUITCASE LIST PETER GREENAWAY 92 TULSE LUPER SUITCASES drawings SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE 17.07 >12.09.2010 Il Rivellino LDV Locarno Progetto a cura di / Project by Franco Laera Con / with Arminio Sciolli Paolo Sciolli Michele Lamassa Riccardo Carazzetti Yanik M. Marcolli Jean Olaniszyn Allestimento a cura di / installation by Change Performing Arts / Andrea Bianchi Matteo Massocco Marco Teatro Con / with Adrian Sciolli Montaggio video / editing Irma de Vries Gradica / Graphic design Maarten Evenhuis A SUITCASE ON A PEDESTAL The major years of Luper’s life cover what we could call the Prologue – 1920 to 1945 – and the First Chapter – 1945 to 1989 – of Uranium, the element with which we could now, through nuclear fission, destroy the world, or with which we might be able to re-make civilisation. Uranium was first seriously mined in the 1920s in the West in Moab, Utah, where Luper’s adventures essentially begin. Uranium created the most significant political activity of the world in the Cold War lasting some fifty years, reached its full Armageddon apotheosis in Hiroshima in 1945, and became at least temporarily defused with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989. So The Tulse Luper Suitcases could also be regarded as a history of uranium in the 20th century. The atomic number of Uranium is 92, hence the project is governed by that number; there are 92 major characters, 92 major events and 92 suitcases, and inside each suitcase are 92 items, ideas, objects or events. Tulse Luper learnt that the human genomn contains 46 paired genes 91 ELR Edizioni Le Ricerche A cura di Jean Olaniszyn © 2010 by Peter Greenaway © 2010 by Change Performing Arts 1 COAL 2 TOYS 3 LUPER PHOTOS 4 LOVE LETTERS 5 LUPER’S CLOTHES 6 LUPER’S CLOTHES 7 VATICAN PORNOGRAPHY 8 FISH 9 PENCILS 10 HOLES 11 PHOTOGRAPHS OF CRIMINALS 12 FROGS 13 FOOD DROP 14 DOLLARS 15 COINS 16 LUPER’S LOST FILMS. 17 ALCOHOL 18 PERFUME 19 PASSPORTS 20 BLOODIED WALLPAPER 21 CLEANING FLUIDS 22 DENTAL TOOLS 23 CHERRIES 24 HONEY 25 NUMBERS & LETTERS 26 LUPER’S UNIFORMS 27 DOG BONES 28 LOCKS & KEYS 29 LIGHT BULBS 30 PLACE NAMES 31 BOOTS & SHOES 32 ZOO ANIMALS 33 IDEAS OF AMERICA 34 ANNA KARENINA NOVELS 35 CANDLES 36 RADIO EQUIPMENT 37 CLEAN LINEN 38 WATER 39 CODES 40 A SLEEPER 41 EROTIC PRINTS 42 92 OBJECTS FOR THE WORLD 43 RAINBOWS 44 PRISON MOVIE FILM-CLIPS 45 MANUSCRIPTS FOR STRASBOURG 46 HOLOCAUST GOLD SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE SUITCASE 47 CHILDREN 48 DEAD ROSES 49 TRAINS 50 NEEDLES 51 SHOWERHEADS 52 55 MEN ON HORSEBACK 53 CHINA DOGS 54 BRUSHES 55 DRAWINGS OF LUPER 56 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 57 SMOKED CIGARS 58 BODY PARTS 59 INGRES PAINTINGS 60 BROKEN GLASS 61 MOITESSIER GOWNS 62 CRABCLAWS 63 FEATHERS & EGGS 64 YELLOW PAINT 65 TENNIS BALLS 66 BOTTLE MESSAGES 67 GREEN APPLES 68 DOG 69 SPENT MATCHES 70 SAUCEPANS 71 FLOWER BULBS 72 RESTAURANT MENUS 73 92 ATOMIC ELEMENTS 74 VIOLIN SPLINTERS 75 STONES 76 LEAD 77 OBELISKS 78 ROMAN POSTCARDS 79 HOLY EARTH 80 GREEN FIGS 81 URANIUM 82 NOTES OF DROWNED CORPSES 83 MAPS 84 BOARD GAMES 85 INK & BLOOD 86 LUPER’S 1001 STORY MSCRIPTS 87 ICE 88 MEASURING TOOLS 89 THE TYPEWRITER 90 DOLLS 91 THE PHRENOLOGICAL BOOK 92 LUPER’S LIFE VOLUME ONE THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 1 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES Greenaway C a t a l o g u e 22 of 92 THE TULSE LUPER SUITCASES 92 92 DR AWINGS VOLUME ONE PETER GREENAWAY THE RIVELINO GALLERY LOCARNO The Tulse Luper Suitcases, 2002 to 2005, is an ambitious multi-media project deliberately made for the Information Age sharing manifestations in feature-films for the cinema, DVDs, websites, published fictional texts, exhibitions, video-games, VJ-events, theatre, opera, paintings and drawings. The project covers the adventures of Tulse Luper – born 1911 and possibly still alive (he was 92 in 2003) – writer and collector and professional prisoner, who travels the world, leaving evidence of his fascinations and works in a collection of 92 packed suitcases that purport to include by object, event and idea, everything that is in the world – an entire encyclopaedia of the planet and all that is in it, where nothing, absolutely nothing, is left out.