Revised
and
Re-Posted June 12, 2013
For those
who have
enjoyed those funny circular cartoon-doodles
and
mandalas, also on my past
Christmas Holiday cartoons that I have made, here is
an explanation: They are spontaneous images that
communicate the following intuition: Existence emerges as a
manifestation of higher-dimensional dynamics. (My latest
explanation is that they are the thought-bubbles of the
inter-dimensionettes.)
Of
course, what
is being called out is a paradigm shift, a rather mythic and
unusual
perspective on the nature of existence. Actually, it
reflects one of
the oldest of ideas, that our world is in part an illusion,
that we are
more than we seem. The ancient Greek philosopher, Plato,
wrote in one
of his discourses what is known as the parable of the
cave–an attempt
to illustrate this idea by imagining a world wherein the
people in the
cave saw themselves only as their own shadows, and came to
believe in
themselves as two-dimensional beings–until someone escaped
from the
cave and discovered the three-dimensional, color and
light-filled
world; yet when this adventurer tried to explain his
discovery to the
people back in the cave, they thought him mad.
More
recently, a
sage speculated: What if instead of thinking that we as
physical beings
have occasional spiritual experiences, we recognized that we
are
essentially spiritual beings who are for a time having a
physical
experience?!
My
hunch is that
there are other dimensions–an idea also posited by recent
cosmologists
who are trying to explain a number of the mysteries of both
sub-atomic
and also astro-physics. What these folks can’t recognize,
because their
fundamental assumptions are materialistic and
reductionistic, is that
we might consider the possibility that some or many of those
“higher”
dimensions are more mind-like than extensions of space-time.
Once
Einstein
called time a dimension, he re-defined the idea of
dimension, away from
merely a spatial category and instead to a being a category
of
influence that affects all other dimensions. Were this shift
to be
further applied, the realm of mind could arguably apply to
this
metaphysical scheme. An extension of this idea of higher
dimensions is
that it might explain to some degree how psychic and
spiritual
phenomena operate in the cosmos, and how it is possible for
there to be
a different type of truth associated with myth, even though
it might
not apply to the realm of fact.
My
doodle-cartoon art that expresses mandala-forms, those
circular,
generally (but by no means exactly) symmetrical circular
drawings,
usually showing a center and elaborations of the center
towards the
outer rings, is meant to suggest our perspective of the
multi-leveled
nature of higher reality. These circles should be imagined
as if we
were able to peer upwards from the bottom of a
Christmas-tree like cone
of outflowing process.
In a
sense, this
sensibility also partakes of my discussions elsewhere on
this website
of the kabbalistic
tree
of life. The more central elements represent the
higher and
less distinctly formed outflow of creative energy, which
takes on form
as it moves “down” into our three-dimensional space-time of
manifest
existence.
Ideally,
I would
have the reader-observer imagine that these forms are also
in dynamic
movement, at times revolving, or giving the illusion of
flowing
outwards, like a kaleidescope; at times swirling, or
spinning off
associated fragments and forms. The symbolic significance of
this is
the intuition that in the higher dimensions of mind lie
insights,
inspirations, visions, mystical experiences that cannot be
expressed in
ordinary language (i.e., “ineffable”), the realms of
shamanic beings
(i.e., the “nagual”), visions of past lives and near death
experiences,
dreams, and so forth. Musical forms, mathematical forms, and
related
mind-like abstractions also find expression in these
artistic
expressions.
Each
moment, the
Divine creative unfolding occurs both with subtle
gradualness and also
near-instantaneous flickers, and at every level of size from
the
astronomical to the sub-atomic, at every level of energy
from the
star-exploding to the finest hum of a photon, at every level
of speed.
Add to these the trans-space-time-energy-matter dimensional
qualities,
aesthetic qualities, from the novel to the familiar, the
profound to
the superficial, the integrated to the isolated, and so
forth.
In
other art
form expressions I use, I suggest also angels and their more
focused or
rudimentary counterparts, faeries and elves and sprites,
suggesting
that “resonant psychic energy fields”–for that is what I
think they
are–occur in harmonic overtones with all physical forms of
existence.
If you
could
watch the autumn leaves change on a tree with time-lapse
photography,
so the whole month or two-long process could be viewed
leisurely over,
say, twenty minutes, and then imagine you could see all
those forms and
colors translated also into perfect musical accompaniment–as
Disney’s
artists did in their movies, Fantasia (and Fantasia 2000),
you might
appreciate some of the intuitions and influences on my art.
Similarly,
if
you could capture as a drama the subtle changes in attitude,
maturity,
shifts in values, priorities, and relationships over a ten
year period
in an adult’s life, you might again sense the similarity to
the
blossoming of a flower, or its conversion into a tasty (or
bitter)
fruit. The mandalaforms again suggest these unfolding
multiform
processes.
The
theme of
differentiation is noticeable–the “petals” of many of my
mandalas are
different from each other, yet often reveal a certain
similarity of
gesture or format, much as a modern alphabetic design should
have the
letters, though different, seem to suggest a generally
similar font
quality. (This interest in the evolution of letterforms is
another
theme in some of my art and at times manifests also in the
mandalas.)
Further
Themes
A
common
motif in these mandalaforms is the yogic “yantra” diagram
called the
Shree Yantra, a mixture of five downward and four upward
interlocking
triangles that I find most evocative and appealing.
Another
motif is
a six-pointed interlocking star-figure that I call “the star
of the
heart,” a personal symbol that tumbled out of a dream in
1972. Though
generally portrayed head-on, in fact this can be formed with
pipe
cleaners in three-dimensional space, and has a number of
associated
features: From the top, it makes a triangle. From one side,
it could
fit into almost a square-shaped rectangle. In construction,
it
vibrates. At one tipped angle, it almost looks like a
pentagram with
one hinted point in the mid-cross bar in fact projecting
backward (or
forward)–beyond the general plane of the rest of the star.
This
expresses the idea that, as I am describing in this paper,
we are
better appreciated as multi-dimensional beings living within
the
illusion of three-dimensional space-time-matter-energy (as
if that were
all there is).
Protozooa,
one-celled
animals, offer another theme I explore in my cartoon-art, as
they represent the incredible richness of possible variety
available to
a single independent cell. Some of these independent cells
can at times
colonize with each other–as do those of the slime mold
called
“dictiostylium”–and again this symbolizes the tension in our
world
between those caught up in the illusion of individualism and
those
caught up in the illusions of communitarianism.
Finally, some of these might be imagined to be living
trans-dimensional
beings whose appearance seems like a mandala, as explained
by a little
mandala-form and improvisational melody-oriented sprite
named "Kaboodley-Doodley-Doo."
Eventfulness
A
parallel theme–and more may emerge as I continue to
contemplate this
relatively spontaneous mode of art–is that of eventfulness,
the growing
awareness that the most minute phenomenon may yet partake of
a
near-infinite series, waves, overlapping categories, of
history,
implications, resonances, influences, and so forth. In our
material
universe, too much is described as if a thing was (only)
what it was–a
combination of a finite number of more relevant categories.
What is
ignored is the history of those categories, and also the
often multiple
uses to which a given item may be applied–i.e., what
Aristotle called
the “formal cause” of a thing or event. To this, we must add
that the
mind can entertain multiple frames of reference, including
the
spiritual, magical, symbolic, artistic, humorous,
collectible,
economic, political, and so forth–and each of these
categories are by
no means neatly compartmentalized. Often something takes on
significance in multiple categories, and new ones, or
refinements or
offshoots, emerge. A simple item may become the root of a
whole field
of endeavor, as happened with the sparks generated by static
electricity in the 17th and 18th century–leading to
electronics in all
its forms.
Each
event is
chock full of other events, including the life stories of
the people
involved in manufacturing, selling, delivering the simplest
thing, the
unexpected uses that thing may have in your household, the
memories it
evokes, and so forth. Beyond that, anything you perceive
calls into
awareness (if you are willing to take this ride) all the
events that
involve your perception, awareness, and being, the food you
eat, the
people you know, and so forth.
You are
a nexus,
the interacting focus of innumerable influences. Your being
is further
illuminated in ways you probably don’t know, by
neuroscientists,
physiologists, cell biologists, chemists–and that’s just the
physical
dimension! Your reading this at this moment is influenced by
all you’ve
experienced, and how you’ve interpreted those experiences,
and how
those interpretations have been influenced, in an almost
infinite
regress of other influences and causative events. Add to
this those
events we can’t easily explain by cause-and-effect, and
attributed to
chance, synchronicity, Grace, or Divine Providence.
All
this
suggests to me a delicious and glorious prolific generosity
of the
Divine and Natural unfolding, perhaps even a degree of
profligacy. It
suggests a call to dance with it, sing with it, draw it,
improvise and
co-create with it. Hence, these drawings.
(I am
in the
process of planning a kind of coloring book of selected
mandala-form
cartoon -doodles, and if you’re interested, I’ll work out a
modest
price and make them up and send them to you. Let me know.)
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For
further correspondence, email to
adam@blatner.com