Flemish Painting

Self Digestion by Justin Harrison

(Image my own)


I discovered in researching Autolysis, that this is a reason for hanging game birds, as found in the Flemish Game Painting I’ve previously looked at. The process is used to ‘tenderise the meat’. So that which gives the meat its flavour, is basically ‘self digestion’. Which kinda puts me off that type of meat, consuming partial decomposed/digested food.

But this then loops back language and structure. I can’t quiet pin it down, but there is a commonality of impossibility/contradictory duality - non binary. Death is destructive and generative at the same time. The centre of a structure can have no natural locus but exists outside of itself - denying structure it’s structure. Deconstruction cannot escape it’s own deconstruction????


”Autolysis - a process of self-digestion, when the enzymes naturally present in what had been a living organism proceed, after the death of the organism, to break down its cells or tissues. For example, when game birds are hung to tenderize them, autolysis of the connective tissues occurs. This is most relevant to crustacea (crablobster, and prawns) where the enzymes in their ‘liver’ or midgut gland flood ‘the muscle tissue and break it down into a mush’ (McGee, 2004) if they die before they are cooked.” The Oxford Companion to Food https://search-credoreference-com.arts.idm.oclc.org/content/title/oupof?tab=contents


 

Passage between the binary and self-decomposition by Justin Harrison

Image my own


This ia an image I took some time ago, but it came to mind after my last blog entry. It’s the limp bird from the game paintings and the glove at the road side.

I previously posted it on Instagram back in October 2019. What’s curious is the entry I made. I wrote “…it’s a preoccupation with transition and being in ‘passage’ - that perhaps there’s a moment between binary markers’

This really is a preoccupation of mine. But why? Why do I focus on this area?

The bird will soon be rendered down to it’s constituent parts, as it gives itself up to the soil, feather and bone to minerals and proteins. Carbon dioxide, water, simple sugars and mineral salts.

I looked up what happens to a body that is decomposing. Breaking down to simpler elements. Then I discovered this delicious passage.

“Decomposition begins several minutes after death, with a process called autolysis, or self-digestion. Soon after the heart stops beating, cells become deprived of oxygen, and their acidity increases as the toxic by-products of chemical reactions begin to accumulate inside them. Enzymes start to digest cell membranes and then leak out as the cells break down. This usually begins in the liver, which is enriched in enzymes, and in the brain, which has high water content; eventually, though, all other tissues and organs begin to break down in this way. Damaged blood cells spill out of broken vessels and, aided by gravity, settle in the capillaries and small veins, discolouring the skin.”

Mo Costandi - 25 May 2015 Guardian Online.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/neurophilosophy/2015/may/05/life-after-death

It’s like poetry.

Still Life with Dead Game, a Monkey, a Parrot, and a Dog
Frans Snyders