Movement Empathy

Elemental components
Physiological responses
Minds and bodies

Capturing movement is always a function of a relative reference frame within a distinct environment.

“Life is a movement, a constant movement in relationship; and thought, trying to capture that movement in terms of the past, as memory, is afraid of life.” – Jiddu Krishnamurti

Susceptibility to Beauty

Absolute curiosity
Existence constitution
Enriching of life

Relative importance rests on perceived need. We empathize with certain objects and associated events that are interesting because we care about them.

“We are satisfied only when we fancy ourselves surrounded by objects and laws independent of our nature.” – George Santayana

Mud Variegation

Soil combination
Minerals and water
Fine-grained earth material

Mud consistency depends on the contents of the soil as well as the amount of water present. As a solid-fluid suspension composed of particles in a fluid, higher clay content increased the stickiness.

“The world is mud-luscious and puddle-wonderful.” – e. e. cummings

Morning Undulations

Incoming waves
Surf murmur hiss
Wonderful day

Many substantially motivated artists share a common trait: they wake up early in a relaxed and intentional way. The quiet early morning is a fantastic time to be alive.

“When you’re wide awake say it for goodness sake, it’s gonna be a great day.” – Paul Mccartney

Spatial Purpose

Mental experience
Consciousness governing
Causation existence

When driving on an interstate highway, the realm of metaphysical philosophy comes into play. Without evident causation it would be pointless to mark roads with locational guidance decision advice.

“You are an aperture through which the universe is looking at and exploring itself.” – Alan Watts

Naive Realism

Direct awareness
External world
On the move

Qualities of objects and events are perceptual abstractions which are synthetically recognized as objective truth. A shared cultural inventory of accepted theories are foundational to understanding.

“The chief vestige of subjectivity is the fallacy that everybody else also cares about the same things as the observer, and/or lives in his/her exact same state of mind.” – Stephan Attia

Fleeting Moment

Fragile glimpse
Sacred epiphany
Eloquent occasion

Alert to spiritual dynamics, a walk on the beach points to realities that are ineffable. Participation in certain experiences helps to render life more alive.

“Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.” – Thomas Merton

Morning Release

Ascending hot vapor
Geothermal proceedings
Airborne minute droplets

Early morning exploration richly rewards with stunning light raking across the Norris Geyser Basin. Here two faults intersect with the ring fracture zone of the Yellowstone Caldera, resulting in dynamic surface heat activity.

“Life has evolved to thrive in environments that are extreme only by our limited human standards.” – Jill Tarter

Repetitive Consequence

Light ray
Action sequence
Surface inclination

Built to control wind and wave action involving small particle distribution, beach sand retaining fences also affect radiation illumination patterns.

“We cast a shadow on something wherever we stand.” – E. M. Forster

Crowd Waiting

Enclosed spaces
Line row control
Social withdrawal

The perceived layout of the physical environment can be affected by emotional states, especially where throngs gather. All animals allocate their limited energy and time across necessary proceedings.

“We never live; we are always in the expectation of living.” – Voltaire

End of content

No more pages to load