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Context
is Everything
Reprinted from Ylem Newsletter, January/February 1997
Looking
back 30 years, I am amazed at how I backed into working with patterns
in nature and science images. Some who realized Abstract Expressionism
was getting hackneyed were turning their sardonic eye to pop culture,
soup cans and pies. I dropped out, and only gradually restored my
faith in art-making by seeing images I really liked, the framework
for a new art vocabulary. Curiously, many of these were from the Scientific
American and a 1956 book by Gyorgy Kepes, The New Landscape,
which showed the affinity of science images and abstract art.I was
mining science for art for superficial reasons: “Hey, I found
pennies on the road no one has picked up!” But, reluctant to
simply copy these motifs, I looked for ways to combine them. I found
it humorous to combine snakes with river meanders. Suddenly, it struck
me that these resemblances touched upon a great mystery. It came as
no surprise to me when Peter Stevens' 1974 book, Patterns in Nature,
grouped these into six basic families. But when he said “Of
all the constraints on nature, the most far-reaching are imposed by
space. For space itself has a structure that influences the shape
of every existing thing,” my mind was blown....
My interests have expanded from merely playing with patterns to the
attempt to get some overall feeling about the universe in which we
find ourselves: creating context.
We have always tried to create a context, a story about where we are.
I am told that one reason Roman soldiers converted to the Asiatic
cult of Mithra was that it imparted secret knowledge about the stars
and planets, a knowledge which they could identify in the heavens
no matter where in the Roman Empire they found themselves.
One reason the study of these patterns inspires an almost religious
awe is that we feel we are touching on something fundamental, a ground
of all being that we have lost in our secular lives. We feel a kinship
with the ancients like Pythagoras who were fascinated by patterns
and regularities that they observed.
—Myrrh, 1997
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"An Essential Mystery:
Number Governs Form"
Acrylic
paint on clear plastic,
45" wide, backlit.
Crystals are engraved
with a power rotary tool.
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TO
A LONGER ARTICLE ABOUT PATTERNS>> |
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