|
Milos Vojtechovsky
Meanders, Pictures and the Forest
1. To exhibit a picture in a gallery or museum is a fairly doubtful endeavor,
neither pleasant nor a matter of course. The museum was established to
safeguard objects, most of which had been separated from their original
owners; the gallery as a site of the marketplace. The very first pictures,
however, most likely came into being quite innocently - as the trace of
a spontaneous movement of the hand on a moist and smooth cave wall, or
perhaps in the sand at the water's edge. In China the ancient tradition
of ink drawing without the use of a brush has been preserved to today.
The mythical blind inventor of this 'pure' technique created the first
Imago Mundi on the clay walls of his dwelling.
The first pictures - experiments, impressions, and signs - records of
residence and movement, must have been connected with ritual moments of
reflection and rest had underground. They were not integral to survival,
to an economy, to livelihood; they rather came into being out of feelings
of insufficiency, tedium, or fear. They originated in near darkness, in
isolation from the exterior world. They were gropings, formed into being
with palms and fingertips smoothing over the clay interiors of temporary
dwellings.
The first pictures - symbolic, pre-linguistic, and pre-ornamental - were
concealed within the intimacy of the abode: the underground quarters where
only reflections of sunlight fell and the flames of the fireplace drew
and instigated fantasy and the play of shadows on the stone walls.
2. In the age of hunters and gatherers images became infused with the
spontaneous and conscious movement of the human hand in contact with the
malleable material brought forth from the world. The faint idea of the
line - of a marking as an image of the world - was mulled over by those
who drew. A million years ago in southern Africa a scar, like a trace
of the index finger, somehow remained visible in the sand or in clay.
Upon that first symbolic relic of the sign, millions upon millions of
signs have been layered, forming boundless hypertext of the history of
civilization.
3. From this moment on the mysterious split between the world and the
image has developed in limitless variations and mutations. Every second
a myriad of signs, lines, and letters are distributed electronically and
"per pedes" from place to place, from a certain time to the
future, all finding their way to the halls of the archive. A continuous
and insistent line connects the past with the present, times long gone
with a brush and computer mouse, ornament on Paleolithic earthenware with
Silicon Valley's computer matrices. From that certain wondrous moment
of the Paleolithic, human genetic memory has retained the faint recollection
of the miracle of the pure; the magical trace of motion in the wavy line;
of the concentrated gesture; and of the ferment engraved upon the earth's
surface reflected in the tattooed body, in the melody and lyrics of song,
or in the rhythm of dance.
4. The notion of the First Picture carries with it the sense of lost purity
and melancholy to which the artist's subconscious must return during the
process of creation. The fossilized draughtsman was likely pleased with
the First Picture. It was at once meaningless and essential and burnt
with the brand of the hand's gesture, which belonged to neither the shaman
nor the artist, to neither the illusionist nor the illustrator. The single,
unsteady, inconstant, and ephemeral line has torn apart the universe above
and below, to the east and west; has divided time into past and present;
into a linear notion and a singular sequence; into the image of hurled
stone, its angle of incidence, and the feeling of stone held in the hand.
The mark of the line - with it we encounter the irreversible division
of the world into two: light and dark, dead and alive, fast and slow,
cold and hot; the separation of the face and mask, of thought, gesture,
and the word. The imaginary horizon of the image drawn by the human hand
onto the surface of the nomadic dwelling has estranged Nature of cyclical
repetition from our fear of the dark, from death, and from the magical
experience of existence.
5. Encoded within the curved line are echoes of the ocean's primary element
and the rhythm of the walking, running, breathing body, of the beating
of the heart, the ecstasy of the ritual dance or of sex. The wavy line
is the sum total of the circular and linear. Thought and body experience
the amplitude of the curved line as they would the fluctuating voice and
quivering strings during the delivery of songs long forgotten which, according
to their myth, had fused together the fissures of the world. The serpentine
line encompasses the meander, the current of the river in the lowlands,
the traces of waves reaching the shore, the flight of animals through
the high grass, the rhythm of the wind on the steppe. The sinuous line
is not solely nostalgic and archetypal: it is visible in the microstructures
of material, is repeated in the circular and curved motion of invisible
elements - the vibrations of electrons around a void, the waves of light,
or the interference of sound waves.
6. With the multiplication of waves the line becomes a network or a web,
which brings forth water and entraps bait. The curved line returns repeatedly
to its own axis and to its dynamic balance. It skirts around Euclidean
space and mathematical categorical imperatives of the shortest distance
between two points. The rippling space and surface is the mark of natural
organisms: schools of fish in the sea, labyrinthine paths of termites,
insect dwellings, trails of crabs in the sand. A drawing of meanders has
the character of an individual experience, but refers to collective events
unfolding throughout the common experience of ritualized time. One fluctuating
line corresponds with the countless others that conceal, dematerialize,
and induce the creation of others. The threads binding a picture together
become the flickering poles dissolving the discernible single element.
The web of this net seizes the gaze of the eye.
7. The magical power of the picture's surface - an infinitely complex
combination of elements and layers - arises from the sensual process of
the intrigued, meandering eye's search for order and sure footing on a
surface collapsing into the depths. The permeation and layering of sinuous,
colored lines within the picture's composition originates optically -
it is an aurally-minimal structure which the viewer approaches as if entering
a landscape or the forest. A walk through the forest or reeds - surroundings
of seemingly ceaseless repetition - demands heightened attention and a
sharpened sense of orientation, an adaptation of the senses to estimate
between what is distant and immediately nearby. It brings a different
type of experience to the body, one with indistinct boundaries. The unfamiliar
and restless Forest, an age-old metaphor for the subconscious, diffuses
sharp contrasts of light and shadow, color and sound, reality and imagination.
The image and the object experience mutual permeation and the expanded
conscious of the forest cleanses vision of the factual world, of incessant
stimulation and distraction, of objectivity, and of the three-dimensionality
of things. Here the silhouettes of moving tree trunks and branches lose
their materiality and singularity. The panoramic sensation of the forest
is projected into the mind of the wanderer as a hypnotizing environment
where hurrying and false identity can be forsaken. Because forests and
time are continuously vanishing it is necessary to cover a large canvas
every day with one circuitous line and paint a web of a picture that does
not end. If it is sufficiently large, it will be possible to enter its
forest and experience the Orphean-sinuous passage of time. For the sake
of this, the picture may be hung, after all, even upon the gallery walls.
|