Barmaid

Serving needs
Good impression
Complete attention

Extending art into all domains, the fusion of empirical concepts within a perceptual field produces aesthetic delight by imparting reality to abstract understandings.

“As adults, we all create a persona based on our experiences, where we grew up and how we want to be perceived.” – Ryan Lambie

Segmentary

Quantum flow
Molar converter
Economic transaction

What is real? What is not? An iterative feedback loop revolves around an occupation engaged with interest and care, embedded in the phenomenology of artistic creation. Traveling across the landscape’s infrastructure, you are still going forwards.

“The material must be sufficiently deterritorialized to be molecularized and open onto something cosmic, instead of lapsing into a statistical heap.” – Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari

Urbanistic

Different forms
Necessary pressure
Human geography

For Schelling, the reality and ultimacy of nature approached from an idealistic perspective builds upon a model of human freedom. This freedom invokes action as initiated by the subject, not deterministic but still in response to external contingencies. Part of the puzzle centers on the praxis of creative intuition as a function of action.

“There’s something about arriving in new cities, wandering empty streets with no destination.” – Charlotte Eriksson

Developing Awareness

Quietly mutating
Material constructions
Non-illusionistic domains

Randomness organized, extracted, and reassembled into a coherent whole over time echoes the process of experiential manifold perception. Each unique encounter has its own characteristic chorography and modulation that develops through acquaintance.

“I believe we are a field of energy, dancing for itself. There is no me. There are just things happening and there are clusters of tetrahedrons moving around together.” – Jim Carrey

Perceptual Field

Elements existing
Individual objects
Particular universal

Choice is conditioned by natural inclination emanating from ambient conditions. For this reason, Schelling prefers an idealistically motivated realism that preserves complex phenomena over any metaphysical idealism which would reduce and simplify the richness of experience.

“Artists do not isolate their concepts or free them in pure abstraction from all traces of other mental elements. They exist buried in the general mixed content of consciousness.” – W.T. Stace

Kinetix

Collaborative space
Competitive edge
Walking distance

On an evening walk around Alexandra, the light became magical as the local birds activate.

“Anything in existence, having somehow come about, is continually interpreted anew, requisitioned anew, transformed and redirected to a new purpose.” – Friedrich Nietzsche

Gathering Together

Retention space
Standing reserve
Future consumption

During an extended expedition across the southland, a non-transitory, semi-permanent containment repository passes by. These bins hold previous harvests with the intention of retrieving them for future use. Heidegger argues that we now view nature only as raw material for technical operations.

“Strictly speaking I myself never observe the landscape. I experience its hourly changes, day and night, in the great comings and goings of the season.” – Martin Heidegger

Full Temple

Believe in absurdities
Persistent delusion
Potent force

Religious marginalia found during an urban exploration illustrates basic questions of existence. Mystery is inherent in both the nature of things and the nature of rationality, as explanations consistently exceed the limits of comprehension.

“The easy confidence with which I know another man’s religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also.” – Mark Twain

Extremity

Synthesize insights
Chance opportunism
Combinatorial creativity

Circumscribing the immediate predicament during an excursion through the airport terminal, the available visual information is marshaled, correlated and reduced into specific inquires. In active imagination, intelligent conjectures respond by considering many possible hypotheses.

“Anyone with an alertness of mind will encounter during the course of an investigation numerous interesting side issues that might be pursued.” – W. I. B. Beveridge

Bentley Hotel

Mostly symbolic
National register
Preservation import

The question is not whether and how the assemblage of phenomena and the series of causes and effects, which we call the course of nature, has become actual outside us. The question rather relates to how succession becomes manifest for us.

“The reason why men enter into society is the preservation of their property.” – John Locke

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