Mathernes

Extensive selection
Comprehensive particular
Fashionably nostalgic

Every sign refers to another signal in a regime that validates redundancy. Although the conceptual map is composed of finite marks, continual interpretation is indicated as meaning cascades across a slippery cultural surface.

“Let us consider the three great strata concerning us, in other words, the ones that most directly bind us: the organism, signifiance, and subjectification.” – Deleuze & Guattari

Crosstown

Signals turn
Get through
Other side

It is germane to consider unexplored magnitude during urban expeditions, implicit by reference to larger alternate immensities.

“The conceptual entertainment of unrealized possibility becomes a major factor in human mentality.” – Alfred North Whitehead

Bentley

Unified vision
Brand identity
Tangible expression

Decorative cast iron and brass security identification grates cover the ground level windows of the Bentley Hotel. Accuracy and precision help delineate forms of communication, as in all systematic thought there exists a trace of pedantry.

“A brand is no longer what we tell the consumer it is–it is what consumers tell each other it is.” – Scott Cook

Thoroughgoing Mechanism

Volition affects
Arbitrary assumption
Successively subordinate

Interesting graphical relationships can be both found and constructed in the street, as material things proceed by a gradual accumulation of alteration effects. The entirety of nature is involved in the tonality of the particular instance.

“The doctrine which I am maintaining is that the whole concept of materialism only applies to very abstract entities, the products of logical discernment. The concrete enduring entities are organisms, so that the plan of the whole influences the very characters of the various subordinate organisms which enter into it.” – Alferd North Whitehead

Transpositions

Physical dialectics
Imaginary intimacy
Short-lived projection

Although plants make for good roommates, they do demand a measure of responsibility. In such relationships, the function of inhabiting under ambient conditions constitutes the connection between full and empty.

“I am the space where I am.” – Noel Arnaud

Of the Transference

Analytic practice
Certain coherence
Temporal pulsation

We experience the exterior world as personally entangled within our own nature. Unconsciously vibrant sensations become part of a complex self-identity unity.

“Expression is the diffusion, in the environment, of something initially entertained in the experience of the expressor.” – Alfred North Whitehead

Geaux

Promised land
Morning happening
Already immersed in it

Establishing territory in a public space is fraught with anxiety. As part of the mix, territorial structures offered in the built environment affect spatially delimited control as a part of an ongoing sequence in daily life.

“We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.” – T. S. Eliot

Extensity Amplification

Unequal spaces
Superposed series
Intense succession

Spatial relations, being so fundamental to our experience of exteriority, tend to structure thoughts of things that exist without extensibility. Nevertheless, qualitative alterations in psychic states are not quantitative.

“The idea of the future, pregnant with an infinity of possibilities, is thus more fruitful than the future itself, and this is why we find more charm in hope than in possession, in dreams than in reality.” – Henry Bergson

Horace Wilkinson Bridge

Balanced cantilever
Mississippi River
Baton Rouge

Notorious traffic jams plague the highest bridge over the Mississippi River. Some things are best experienced from an observable distance.

“The Cosmological Principle postulates that at each location in the universe one can define a hypothetical observer to whom the universe appears isotropic and homogeneous.” – Pulsar

Nature of Order

Inextricably connected
Inner feeling
Incalculable depth

To establish a reasonable grasp of the universe and our place in it, in a single theory Alfred North Whitehead united the experience of the inner self and the mechanistic character of external matter. Awareness of this interplay yields-up concise surrealist ruminations.

“The mystery is what makes it interesting, isn’t it?” – Walter Becker

End of content

No more pages to load