Citations:rhizomatical


 * 2000: Annette W. Balkema and Henk Slager, Screen-Based Art, page 23
 * No doubt, artists resent their work being placed in categories, let alone in one category, although no theorist will even dare to propose that in our age of postmodern fragmentation and criss-crossing of borders. I truly believe, though, that an archeological and rhizomatical structuring of the existing body of screen-based art could be very interesting and might enhance ways of perceiving and understanding it.
 * 2004: Ewa Kębłowska-Ławniczak, Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis, issue 2,629: “The Visual Seen and Unseen: Insights into Tom Stoppard’s Art”, page 157 (Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego; ISBN 8322925255, 9788322925256)
 * In an attempt to read Magritte anew and to go beyond endeavours focused on disentangling similitude from resemblance, Lipinski proposes a new term to name this proliferation of words and images relieved from the disciplining control of language and deterritorialising representation, i.e. rhizomatical movement.