Next gallery show coming Saturday...
Here's the info (sorry this isn't as personal as usual...soon!)
Hi everyone!
I’m pleased to announce my third gallery/alternative space exhibit this year! With two more to come, look for upcoming info as we get closer to the dates…
I realize Long Beach might be a stretch for some of you in terms of miles driven, but I would be most pleased to see you at the reception for all those who can make it. As many of you know, this is a great opportunity, because art and science are my two favorite subjects!
Please scrolll down both for the image (42 inches square) and my Artist Statement regarding the piece.
Hope this finds you healthy and happy,
2nd City Council Art Gallery + Performance Space
435 Alamitos Avenue
Long Beach, CA 90802
(562) 901-0997
Wednesday – Sunday, Noon – 5 p.m.
ART & SCIENCE
Juried by Corby Waste, senior artist @ JPL
Exhibition runs July 28 – Sept. 6, 2007
Free Artists’ Reception
Saturday, August 4, 2007, 7 – 9 p.m.
Performance by Marc Nimoy, Laptop Rockstar
Arty Science Bar where you can perform experiments
Artists
Brian S. Asdell, Debra S. Babylon, Lee Balan, Teresa Blatt, Winifred Johnson Brewer, Carl Burmeister, John Chwekun,
Bill Collins, Linda Frost, Nuvia Crisol Guerra, Tim Harlan, Frank W. Higley, Judy Hiramoto, Jim Hornung, Karl William Johnson,
Michael Krapes, Melissa Lambert, Benjamin James Powell Lavender, Stacie B. London, Ken Marsh, Lisa Medlen, William A. Tuggle,
David Eli Vaughn & Glenn Waggner.
STATEMENT
“My brain, which resembles a Jellyfish, is situated in the night sky. My eyes spew DNA like code into a spiral galaxy. A butterfly floats serenely toward “The Hologram.”
We’ve evolved from a worldview containing closed systems and boundaries, reflective of a reductive dualism/linearity and imposing a contiguous range of naturally occurring phenomena. New intersections between art and science manifest as serendipitous resonance between artists and scientists exploring complex systems.
Holonomic brain theory, quantum physics, chaos theory, the butterfly effect, etc. have come to show the implicate order, explaining that space and time are no longer dominant factors in determining relationships. Each element in a hologram contains information about the whole, as the whole contains information about each piece. Our amazing brains are holograms.