On a Wall

Fragmentary march
Assumptions connect
Transport details

A change agent encourages us to experience the world in a more immediate and direct way.

“Art can help us to understand ourselves better. By looking at art, we can come to see ourselves reflected in the work. We can see our own hopes, dreams, and fears embodied in the art.” – Mikel Dufrenne

Meniscus Lens

Crown glass
Flint glass
Achromatic doublet

This early-spring image was captured with a classic single element lens, convex on one side and concave on the other. Invented in 1804 by William Hyde Wollaston as a lens for eyeglasses, he adapted it as a camera obscura lens in 1812. Later the design was used by Niépce and Daguerre in their early photographic cameras.

“I have captured the light and arrested its flight. The sun itself shall draw my pictures.” – Louis Daguerre

Open

Luck Kee
Hair
We are open

We are constantly in flux, resonating with our own experience of always being in the world.

“The bright colors merged into one another, and the music rose and fell.” – Joan G Robinson

Constantly in Flux

Damp texture
Coolness in the air
Muted scent of decay

Phenomenology encourages us to return to the world before interpretation.

“The body is not an object among objects, nor a substance endowed with properties, but a way of being in the world.” – Mikel Dufrenne

Clutch Cargo

Motorized movement
Dangerous assignments
Transcend materiality

Phenomenology seeks to understand the essence of experience through a rigorous examination of how objects and events appear to us in consciousness.

“The key to growth is the introduction of higher dimensions of consciousness into our awareness.” – Lao Tzu

Proportions

Space time intersect
Infinite dialogue
Utterances

A silent prompt that beckons the passerby to enter and participate in the grand conversation of humanity.

“We inhabit a world of signs…already saturated with the social and ideological voices of countless past others.” – Mikhail Bakhtin

Bamboo Thicket

Complex web
Vertical striations
Lived experience

By bracketing out, or suspending, our assumptions about the world, we can focus on the phenomena themselves, and how they appear to our consciousness.

“The world is the correlate of consciousness.” – Edmund Husserl

Purely Optical

Pre-conceptual
Physical world
Projection impression

Optical elements can be arranged to bend light with precision.

“Concision in style, precision in thought, decision in life.” – Victor Hugo

Experience of the Space

Clear proposition
Evoke particular feelings
Ongoing nature

Experience is filtered through the imperfection of our senses and the limitations of our perception.

“An event prehends its past, both by way of feelings and by way of propositions. By feelings I mean the bare entertainment of elements. By propositions I mean the entertainment of elements together with their modes of ingression.” – Alfred North Whitehead

Densely Packed

Advantageous lighting
Valuables offered
Sale presentation

Successful organization of clutter confusion can be satisfying.

“Anyone who isn’t confused really doesn’t understand the situation.” – Edward R. Murrow

End of content

No more pages to load