Artist's Interview: Part 2
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Artist's Statement | Biography
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| Q:
Your work seems to deal
extensively with geometric shapes. Through my studies, I've seen many
references to sacred geometry. One definition of sacred geometry is
as follows:
"All things throughout our universe seem to follow the same fundamental blueprint or geometric patterns. These geometrical archetypes, reveal to us the nature of each form and its vibrational resonances. They are also symbolic of the underlying metaphysical principle of the inseparable relationship of the part to the whole. It is this principle of oneness underlying all geometry that permeates the architecture of all form in its myriad diversity. This principle of interconnectedness, inseparability and union provides us with a continuous reminder of our relationship to the whole--a blueprint for the mind to the sacred foundation of all things created. We call this blueprint 'Sacred Geometry'." Another description begins with: "Sacred geometry is NOT a branch of mathematics. If anything, it's the other way around. All through the ages, and all over the planet, people have understood that the manifested universe that we experience was created out of the Great Void by Pure Spirit moving in certain simple geometric patterns. For thousands of years, this knowledge has been passed among initiates in secret societies. As we approach the Consciousness Shift, this knowledge is being revealed openly.... All through the ages, all over the planet, Sacred Geometry has been taught as a special understanding about the process of Creation. " This leads me back to your work. In the previous question I asked how your work deals with creation. What conscious connections exist between your paintings and the study of sacred geometry? Your Ode to Nature series reflects many of the ancient symbols such as the flower of life, tree of life, fruit of life, seed of life, etc. Are you knowingly using ancient symbols of creationism in your work? Also, the above definition of sacred geometry mentions "archetypes." Your Rhapsodies series "...celebrates the process of creation from the metaphysical level of archetypes to their material manifestation in the universe of form." It's these similarities that lead me to assume links between your work and the study of sacred geometry. If possible, could your explain in a bit of detail your perception of sacred geometry and its relationship with your work? A: In
the late 70's and early 80's I was much taken by sacred geometry and
its promise of holding, and perhaps even yielding the keys to creation.
As part of that I was interested in and studied, as well, the
morphology of natural forms in relation to sacred geometry. The
correspondences I found between natural forms and geometrical and
mathematical figures such as spirals, fibonacci sequences, close packing
of two- and three-dimensional forms, spheres, star shapes, wave forms
and so on was excruciatingly tantalizing and intoxicating. I
felt there was intrinsic meaning in these relationships and manifestations:
a kind of code that could be deciphered, and which if properly
understood would reveal the secrets of creation and God knows what
else. I spent
much time contemplating these beautiful forms and resonances, and
admiring the harmony, formal economy, purposefulness and elegance
that as an artist I found there. I spent further time speculating
on and finding meaning in them, distilling my findings, putting them
through a process of a kind of multi-generational feedback loop, inbreeding
and hybridizing the forms and ideas, reducing them, combining them,
dividing them, multiplying them, and then distilling them some more,
finding basic principles and correspondences in them to such things
as alphabets, DNA molecules and a host of other archetypal-type systems.
As to sacred
geometry, I never came to firm conclusions about its ultimate meaning
aside from its beautiful and beguiling symbolic constructs which seem
to appear everywhere in creation, from sub-atomic particles to galactic
spirals to inspired visions, and which seem to carry profound mystical
and esoteric revelations. The question, for me, of sacred geometry's
position in the scheme of things as the master code of creation did
not resolve itself beyond the poetic/artistic range of simili, metaphor
and correspondences. In the Beginning
there was Formlessness, then Rhythm, then the Directions: the
Horizontal, the Vertical, the Diagonals, the Top, the Bottom,
the Left, the Right.
A: Whatever time element might be implied in my works would be of a now-time nature, that is, as a comprehensive whole, where everything is happening simultaneously. Although my works tend to come in related series I do not ordinarily think of them in terms of time. In some series the sequence of the artworks is important to the degree that a key element in the suite is a developmental evolution from one piece to the next, as for instance in some suites of prints (eg: In the Beginning, a suite of twelve large drypoint-monotypes metaphorically tracing the manifestation of the universe of forms from its initial state of formlessness, or The Marriage of Heaven and Earth 1 a suite of 60 drypoint-monotype prints suggested by the "Increase" hexagram from the I Ching). Perhaps The Easter Cycle paintings may also imply a kind of stations-of-the-cross sequencing, beginning with the first painting, a serene, Appolonian image, and ending with the last one, a kind of transcendent, insubstantial one, primal and archaic; suggesting the transmutation of flesh into spirit; the other paintings in-between perhaps indicating different phases, passions or mortifications. However, my other painting cycles tend to be more non-hierarchical and non-sequential, though sequential patterns may be always be found if one intends to. I do number the paintings within each series, but more to be faithful to the order in which they were created than to imply a chronological sequencing. In truth, I have felt this detail of keeping faith with the paintings’ chronological creation to be perhaps an interesting footnote for future scholars who may be interested in the development of my work in detail, much like Picasso’s habit of meticulously dating all his works, and even any subsequent changes to them. This numbering, however, is extrinsic to the works as such. In general, most of my series are intended to be seen either in part or in whole, and in any combination. In fact, I enjoy seeing the works in unexpected sequences or pairings as the different combinations can be surprising.
A:
My sense of historical repetition is that it is the effect of a kind
of dialectic operating in cycles which are rooted in human psychology.
Because we live in a polarized, duality-based reality we seem to be
continuously undergoing a process of swings between antithetical poles
resulting in new syntheses to which we then find new antithesis, and
so on. The mind's dissatisfaction with things as they are drives us
to seek their opposites until a wistful desire to return to our previously
abandoned "golden age" brings us to seek the original pole;
only now it's somehow changed: familiar, yet different. |
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E-mail: JMateo@Mateo.net
Copyright © Julio Mateo 1997,
2000
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