Page 21 - Vol. VI #1
P. 21
Footbridge
casein on panel 18'' x 24''
“It is among the intricate structures of phenomena that I look for an innate order of things. It is the branching pattern
of trees, the drifting of snow, the meanders of owing water, the sway- ing of grass in the wind, or the conjoining of ripples on the surface of
a pond that imparts to a place and a time its particularity. To become
a vital part of that particularity is to achieve familiarity, an intimacy and affection that serves to reorder the experience of a place. When I slow down and give myself up to a place or a phenomena, it is to enter into a reductive state where all incidental details are eliminated and what ap- pears to be chaos is organized into pattern.”
courtesy of the Garvey/Simon
allery G
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