Shraddah Image and object: Difference between revisions

From Fine Art Wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
After delving into the research of the 5 elements, Panchatattva. I realized there is such a deep history inside my body. Every cell, and its nucleus contains stories, information, jokes and remarks about time immemorial.  
After delving into the research of the 5 elements, Panchatattva. I realized there is such a deep history inside my body. Every cell, and its nucleus contains stories, information, jokes and remarks about time immemorial.  


I want to remember, like somewhere how that feeling has been stuck that I was a disappointment when I came out. A fourth child, a burden on my parents, an additional human in society and the worst part – a girl child, not a boy. How sad it made everybody, and how I have hung on to those ruthless remarks about my existence.  
I remember the day I was born, and before that the feeling in the womb. Those recurring dreams of the rolling drums, the resonance of the hammer from my days in the cradle. Its possible. I was there, and now I am here.  


If that’s possible, then what about the light? What about the fact, that I can go back to the Dadaist days, and remember what it was like to stitch clothes for Joan Miro, those passing days of strolling on the beaches of Spain, the world wars, the bunkers, the discoveries, the concentration camps and helping those children escape from Nazi regime. Yes, I can remember sometimes.  
If that’s possible, then what about deep cosmic time that resides in the collective cellular anthology of my DNA? And the wealth of information stored in the Tao? Its the same cloud that I pay for with the economy of my creative alchemy.  


Deep time, like the first time I saw movable type reproduced on a paper. When I looked up at the sky and saw Saturn, it’s the same planet, just a different eon, and another body. It still caries memory of the anthropocentric measure. Sun-Ra has taught me that.
It is possible. I can go back to my Dadaist days, and remember what it was like to stitch clothes for Joan Miro, those passing days of strolling on the beaches of Spain, the world wars, the bunkers, the discoveries, the concentration camps and helping those children escape from Nazi regime. Yes, I can remember sometimes.
 
Deep time, like the first time I saw movable type reproduced on a paper. When I looked up at the sky and saw Saturn, it’s the same planet, just a different eon, and in another body. It still caries memory of the anthropocentric measure. Sun-Ra has taught me that.


[[File:sunra.png]]
[[File:sunra.png]]

Revision as of 12:02, 15 March 2017

There is a famous saying in Hindi which is ‘Where even ‘ravi’ (the Sun) cannot reach, there will go a ‘kavi’ (poet.)’ But many sages say, ‘Where even a ‘kavi’ (poet) cannot reach there will go an ‘anubhavi’ (experiencer.)’

This image is the personification of THAT. Dark, light, the sun, moon, stars, dimensions, triangles, bodies, flux, motion, Saturn and the Unknown. After delving into the research of the 5 elements, Panchatattva. I realized there is such a deep history inside my body. Every cell, and its nucleus contains stories, information, jokes and remarks about time immemorial.

I remember the day I was born, and before that the feeling in the womb. Those recurring dreams of the rolling drums, the resonance of the hammer from my days in the cradle. Its possible. I was there, and now I am here.

If that’s possible, then what about deep cosmic time that resides in the collective cellular anthology of my DNA? And the wealth of information stored in the Tao? Its the same cloud that I pay for with the economy of my creative alchemy.

It is possible. I can go back to my Dadaist days, and remember what it was like to stitch clothes for Joan Miro, those passing days of strolling on the beaches of Spain, the world wars, the bunkers, the discoveries, the concentration camps and helping those children escape from Nazi regime. Yes, I can remember sometimes.

Deep time, like the first time I saw movable type reproduced on a paper. When I looked up at the sky and saw Saturn, it’s the same planet, just a different eon, and in another body. It still caries memory of the anthropocentric measure. Sun-Ra has taught me that.

Sunra.png