Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 August 2012

two strands


Slate image by George Garson; catalogue prints, repeated

There seem two be two strands to my interests at the moment. In my head, they join up. In the painting, they don't quite, not yet, if they're ever going to....

The emergence of Indian art and the sculptures of the gods is discussed in some of the posts below, and is ongoing. It's intense and difficult, and I find I can only take so much of it at a time. It's very conceptual, albeit much of it conceptual about a particular approach to aesthetics (two terms that are often assumed to be contradictory in contemporary discussions about art...). The whole thing hinges on loosely and widely-conceived links between ideas of  'gods, God, man, and nature', in a way that I can't put into words. I perhaps should say, though, that God for me is an idea, not a personal reality.

The other strand of work eddies around a fascination for natural forms; fractals, repetition and novelty. I've just written a post on this on the Exploring Creativity blog. In terms of the images, there perhaps doesn't seem to be much link between these two areas. But in terms of the ideas and the feeling, somehow there is.







Let's see if I can unravel those links through time and working.


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Sunday, 19 August 2012

the body, the earth




http://www.art-and-archaeology.com/india/uda2.html


The most ancient (recorded) Indian hymns (c. 1200-900 BC) personify the earth as a goddess. Even before this, however, the earth itself is born from a goddess:

1. Let us now speak with wonder of the births of the gods - so that some one may see them when the hymns are chanted in a later age.

2. The lord of sacred speech, like a smith, fanned them together. In the earliest age of the gods, existence was born from non-existence. 

3. In the first age of the gods, existence was born from non-existence. After this the quarters of the sky were born from her who crouched with legs spread.

4. The earth was born from her who crouched with legs spread, and from the earth the quarters of the sky were born...


6. When you gods took your places there in the water with your hands joined together, a thick cloud of mist arose from you like dust from dancers.

7. When you gods like magicians caused the worlds to swell, you drew forth the sun that was hidden in the ocean.


(from The Rig Veda, translated by Wendy O'Flaherty, 1981

Note on 'legs spread': a position associated both with yoga and with a woman giving birth

The goddess of the earth at this stage is Pritvi, who has hymns written about her. David Kinsley suggests that ideas about Pritvi suggest 'the awesome stability of the earth itself and (it's)... apparently inexhaustible fecundity'.  Pritivi is a goddess, but also the earth in a literal sense.

According to Kinsley, 'an underlying implication of perceiving the earth as a great and powerful goddess is that the world as a whole, the cosmos itself, is to be understood as a great, living being, a cosmic organism'. James Lovelock 's concept of Gaia was not the first!  This makes me think of Native American writers, who also express the idea of the earth as a living body/being; seeing mining, for example, as desecration.

Later Hinduism continues with the idea of the earth as a goddess, in the form of Bhu. According to Kinsley, however, the earth as Bhu is no longer seen as a stable support for all creatures and a source of fertility, but is portrayed mythologically as being oppressed by demons and evil forces. In both of the images here she is being rescued by an incarnation of Vishnu:


From  Harle, 1986

There are other later goddesses who maintain the idea of support and fertility, but the goddess of the earth itself becomes oppressed. That's interesting. And, for me, not just an obscure fact about the history of a distant religion.  Here is our earth, in all her beauty and fecundity, in need of rescue. What's ancient about that as an idea?








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Thursday, 9 August 2012

the body adorned




I have an instinct towards this project that comes out of deep memory and association. It's a project that brings together, unasked, but quite perfectly, a number of different strands of interest and experience. A relationship with the colours, art, people, and land of India, which goes back thirty three years. An interest in ideas and in the philosophical, but the long-standing impossibility of finding a home in 'Western' politics, philosophy or art. A delight in writing and words as a means of exploring ideas. A surfeit of academic words relating to the social sciences, and an exhaustion with the disembodied theoretical. A craving for the aesthetic; for the felt and experienced rather than than the conceptual. An interest in movement and the body as an antidote to these things.

After over two years of struggling to return to my painting roots, the unexpected appearance of the Indian dancing human/godly form in my work was a big surprise. For the last couple of months I've been trying to follow this without asking too many questions. I've always been aware, though, that this dancing Indian image (as understood both within Indian textual traditions and within the lives and practices of living, earthly people) was some kind of still point which in brought together many things which are traditionally seen as separate in my own culture. The conceptual versus the aesthetic, for example, or bodily sensuality versus rarified philosophies. Most interestingly of all, for me, was an apparent stress on the primacy of nature - the vastness of the universe, human beings, the smallest flower - which sometimes involved a concept of God or gods, and sometimes did not.

It may seem strange to suggest that images of God/gods may not always be much to do with the idea of God/gods at all (at least as these concepts are understood in European and American cultures), especially in the context of traditions that seem to use images of gods and God in their every nook and cranny. But that's part of the intention of this project; to try to open up a space, physically and aesthetically, which questions or reframes what might be understood by  words like 'gods', 'God', man, nature - and the separations so often assumed to between such ideas.

In this wonderful book I've just received through the post, Dehejia talks about ''the extraordinary body-centred literary imagination' found in Indian art and literature.

'A stone inscription of thirty Sanskrit verses composed in the the late twelfth century speaks of the earth, the sky, and the temple in terms of human erotic love...:


First gratified...with the close embrace of the thighs of the earth, enjoyed by many princes, the surrounding sky, like a clever lover, accompanying his action with a smile of extreme love, eagerly, within sight of the damsels of heaven, kisses...the face of Fortune, this (temple) desirous of receiving on all sides the heavy embrace of bodies, trembling with pangs of love, of the women of the regions.' 


2009:6'

And this description from a 12th century Prakrit text associated with Jainism, of the river Jamuna:

Her upper garment was the globules of foam and her glorious breasts the sporting rahanga birds. Her romavali, effective in distracting the  minds of learned men, was the network of algae. Her beautiful ringlets of braided hair were the rows of bees, and her lengthy eyes, the petals of the blossomed lotus. Her navel, dispelling the heat of those with fever, was the whirlpool churned by the wind... Her buttocks were the wide, glistening sand banks.


romavali: fine line of hair running upwards from the navel and considered a mark of beauty


2009:8

My oh my.


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