X-Meridian Meditation, 12-Breaths to Enlightenment
Source details and larger version.
My collection of vintage hands is gripping.
Source details and larger version.
“The end?” Vintage “Finis” imagery.
Source details and larger version.
You be the judge of how my vintage wizard collection is materializing.
“To see was terrifying, and to stop seeing tore me apart from my forehead to my throat.”
— Maurice Blanchot, The Madness of the Day
One of the things I want to distinguish in all my work is the difference between the subtle and the manifest. The manifest is what can be held in the hand, in the eye or in the head; this is the explicate order. The other side of this is the subtle. To define something means to ‘grasp’ it, so that which cannot be grasped is undefinable, and whatever is beyond such limits has to be subtle. Infinity does not really mean more and more space, or more and more time – these are rather crude conceptions of it – but rather, it means more and more subtlety. The nature of the implicate order is that it is subtle, and within it there are many different levels of subtlety. These deeper things could be like vibrations that we can sense, as we might sense more and more subtle feelings, pointing to something out of which ideas and images emerge.
David Bohm, Wholeness, Timelessness and Unfolding Meaning, interview with Jane Clark and Michael Cohen, Beshara Magazine, Issue 14, 2020
Art by Koji Ikuta
'The Sorceress' by Jan van de Velde II, 1626
blackberry blossoms photographed by benjamin t. gault, c. 1890.
Oblivion Gate (Large)
Concept art for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
Art by R Todd Broadwater