Novel Possibility Conditions

Aim of living
Uncovering limits
Inherent within

It is provocative how you can pass-by latent opportunities many times before seeing the innate potential.

“It is time to restore the pendulum to a more balanced state.” – Philip Rose

Flash of Color

Red berries
Thorny plant
Lakeside growth

Transitional areas are almost always full of interesting entities.

“Some of the most beautiful things worth having in your life come wrapped in a crown of thorns.” – Shannon L. Alder

Moonrise Overflow

Force of habit
Multiplicitous complexity
Undecidability connections

Although it is impossible to fully grasp a total sense of place, repeated visits over a durational expanse helps to cultivate appreciation.

“Durational force, the force of temporality is the movement of complication, dispersion or difference that makes any becoming possible and the world a site of endless and unchartable becomings.” – Elizabeth Grosz

Vortexing

Old dirt road
Follows the path
Duck to Corolla

Although mostly enjoyable, this hike did not offer the expected scenery variety, thus becoming a slow slog near the end.

“After a day’s walk, everything has twice its usual value.” – G.M. Trevelyan

Invention Appeals

Mechanistic expression
Essential staticism
Closure aim

Diptychs can play with perspective. Subject to occasional sudden transformations, most of the time the human world is an assemblage of enduring re-identifiable objects that change gradually.

“The world is not static and the status quo is not sacred.” – Harry S. Truman

Interdependence

Mutual conditioning
Contributory role
Within the whole

Emerging from a period of darkness, early morning light transitions are a temporal gift from the universe.

“Our style of thinking, pragmatically bent on facilitating our action, has been engendered in concert with matter’s tendency to externalize into spatially discrete parts and exhibit a kind of geometry.” – John S. Meechan

Slowly Seeking

Standing motionless
Staring intently
Into shallow water

Stalking the stalker, patient slow deliberate movement pays off.

“To me, the great blue heron looks like a leftover primordial creature with its long spindly legs, its equally long curved neck, its flowing plumage, and its sharp dagger-like bill, which it uses to stab its prey.” – John Adamski

Overlapping Orientation

Multiple points
Intersection across
Particular reference

Foggy mist in the early morning is uniquely suited for softly mystical photography. These elusive weather events conjure experimentation.

“There are no facts, only interpretations.” – Friedrich Nietzsche

Scratch Thorny

Sharp touch
Self sustaining
Prickly pear

Adapted to conserve water, cacti occur in a wide range of shapes and sizes. They are fond of well-draining sand.

“How’d you manage to get tangled up with a cactus?” – Karen Witemeyer

Mutual Action

Laws of light
Generate perspective
Mass object integration

Certain locations along the way slowly divulge and revel themselves as worthy aesthetic subjects, emphasizing released sensual pleasure.

“And as the eye is the best composer, so light is the first of painters.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

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