A play on Magritte's The Treachery of Images, this painting uses a similar dynamic to point to the human capacity to engage abstractions. The image is an illusion of a three-dimensional object, yet a viewer sees an object that "holds" space, illustrating the framework of abstractions and creating a symbol without a sign.
At first glance, the strokes and colors seem chaotic, but they are exploding from the center. Reflecting the speed of life, itself chaotic and only manageable by calm engagement and processing. This painting is about establishing stillness, to secure balance and strength. The circle in the center is a metal semi-reflective mirror meant to draw and fix the eye. Achieving this, the view of the fragments of color and line are then relegated as external and observed from the platform of the framework of catwalks created by the X and circumnavigating frame.
Not visible in this photo is the reflective tape that catches light from a distance and only visible in darken rooms.
Day and night. Conscious and Subconscious. Inside and out. Our days are a constant recursive path where we navigate perceptions and phenomena.
“Mandala” is a Hindu/Buddhist illustration that maps the universe according to their spiritual symbolism . As America’s culture is changing dramatically, I tried to envision what a mandala without cultural iconography would look like. This painting is a description of that experience.
I started with the shape at the center, a tesseract, which is a mathematical model, which to me illustrates the movement of time. It has two cubes, one smaller and inside the larger. The smaller pushes through one wall with the larger constricting to become the smaller. This pattern continually repeats. Alternatively, the smaller continuously expands to encompass the larger cube through all six walls. This dynamic intrigues me in that it mimics the sense of my own growth. I remain the same but encompass new awareness and perspectives.
At the extreme center are two opposingly colored triangles. Though a static painting, I envision these as wrestling to control the cube by alternately touching three of the six internal sides of the cube, forever contorting and dancing, wrestling for position.
All these forms are again within multiple cubes and planar fields of various sizes. These frame and form the head and shoulders of a person.
Ultimately then, the painting is a map of my internal experience—reflecting, growing, observing, confronting, assimilating. A mandala. A mandala without symbols. A symbol without sign. A formula without terms.
Note at the top center is a square mirror. Comparatively, it is the only stable and evenly crafted element, meant to reflect the capacity of humans to know of perfection but never able to reify it completely.
In Moby Dick, there is a passage where the ship is caught in doldrums and the crew takes advantage of the down time to repair the ship's mats. The narrator compares the weft and warp of the repairs to the routines of the ship, as though the ship were the needle and the seas, nights, and days were the materials. The nights are eternally dark with stars only visible from the open sea, all mirrored by the the ocean creating an orb around the ship. And, the days are heavenly blue with dark seas below.
Note that the painting can be inverted as the title appears on both the top and bottom.
In communication, noise is a constant challenge that distorts and obfuscates messages. Every message can be warped, lost. and misunderstood.
This painting reminds that noise, in its infinite forms, can interfere with communication.
Note the mirror fragments.
A few years ago, as I was falling asleep I "dreamt" of seeing a dragon but the field of vision was like the snow/static on a television. I could just make out the dragon by the waves it created from its movement.
This perception has influenced my process ever since.
If you'd like to see more, here is a link to Google Drive with more paintings
northern california, artist, paintings, contemporary art, sacramento,