- Murray Gell-Mann (1929 - 2019)
Saturday, December 23, 2023
Complexity
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Full of Fire
- Edward Fredkin (1934 - 2023)
A New Cosmogony
Monday, December 18, 2023
Be Still With Yourself
first be still with yourself until the object
of your attention affirms your presence.
Then don't leave until you have
captured its essence."
- Minor White (1908 - 1976)
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Lily Math
- Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642)
Il Saggiatore
Thursday, December 14, 2023
Orderly Action Within the Whole
a consideration of time as a
projection of multidimensional
reality into a sequence of moments.
- David Bohm (1917 - 1992)
Monday, December 11, 2023
Illimitable Spirit
admiration of the illimitable superior
spirit who reveals himself in the
slight details we are able to perceive
with our frail and feeble mind."
- Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955)
by constantly shattering our
mental categories, force us to go
ever further and further
in our pursuit of the truth."
- Teilhard De Chardin (1881- 1955)
"What matters most:
What he had yearned to embrace
was not the flesh but a downy spirit, a spark,
the impalpable angel that inhabits the flesh.
Wind, Sand and Stars."
- Richard Bach (1936 - )
Sunday, December 10, 2023
Walls of the Worlds
Friday, December 08, 2023
Disorder to Order
- Fritjof Capra (1939 - )
Patterns of Connection
Wednesday, December 06, 2023
It’s a Visual World
Leonora Carrington (asked if there had been other artists in the family): My mother used to paint biscuit tins for jumble sales. That’s the only art that went on in my household.
Interviewer: I wonder where it came from?
Leonora Carrington: I have no idea.
Interviewer: No other artists in our family? None at all?
Leonora Carrington: Why are you fixed on the idea of heredity? It’s not hereditary … comes from somewhere else, not from genes. You’re trying to intellectualize something desperately, and you’re wasting your time. That’s not a way of understanding, to make a kind of intellectual mini-logic. You never understand by that road.
Interviewer: What do you think you do understand by then?
Leonora Carrington: By your own feelings about things …if you see a painting that you like… canvas is an empty space.
Interviewer: If I got one of your pictures down from upstairs and said to you what were you thinking when you painted this…?
Leonora Carrington: No. It’s a visual world, you want to turn things into a kind of intellectual game, it’s not… the visual world, it’s totally different. Remember what I’ve just said now, don’t try and turn it into a …kind of intellectual game. It’s not… It’s a visual world, which is different. The visual world is to do with what we see as space, which changes all the time. How do I know to walk –that’s one concept– to this bed and around it without running into it. I’m moving in space. Or I can have a concept of it and then I can see it as an object in space…”
- Leonora Carrington (1917 - 2011)
Don't try to intellectualize art









