Tuesday, 10 July 2018

The Universal Art OF SEEING......dots & lines, then and now.



The Universal Art OF SEEING......dots & lines, then and now.




The Art OF SEEING......dots & lines.

One doesn't need to refer back to their childhood to see the dots or the dashes they are all around us, you just need to look for them.

I use these marks in my everyday working process as a fine artist & prehistorical researcher.

The sky is full of dots some call them stars, I just see them as dots that direct me at night like the Sun dot directs me in the day.

The earth is covered in dots from sand to huge Ice age boulders or even older boulders.
It is is a way of seeing what's really out there and understanding the building blocks naturally, how man has used these building techniques we find all around us in nature..

Yeah, you could go into the 'physic's' of it all, but you'll only ever come back down to the 'dot' and the ----space' that joins the next dot.

Be it from the ice age or any other age.

The aboriginals of the outback's know all about dots and dashes as they have the oldest rock art on earth.

Art is special because it takes a small number of people to create a beautiful global picture of many many themes.
It takes generations of artists to record our ever-changing steps of human history & evolution.
Earth is constantly changing as we evolve, we record the movements, the animals, the tragedies and mistakes, this is OUR HUMAN NATURE.
Here we can all view this 50,000-year-old record.
Each tiny stone 'DOT' has a mark or picture.

Can you see it? Great now that means you can see again!
So many folks are losing the ability to see naturally, once they are shown again the 'basic's' they see straight away, it's the most natural thing for us to see. 
We have preserved this for over 50,000 years of human history and in less than ten years man has almost destroyed it with his industrial acid and chemicals.

So let's make contact and understand how we not only see the dots and the dashes but how we look at each other.
Here is a video I recently watched and I found it interesting how Stumpy Brown recalls seeing her 1st white man.
I guess it would have been just before the time I recall seeing my 1st aboriginal man.  

First Contact - Seeing white man for the first time.

Stumpy Brown is a Wangkujanka woman who lives at Christmas Creek in the Kimberley. Stumpy has seen many changes throughout her lifetime but nothing so dramatic, when as a teenager, she saw a white man for the first time.
see link

First Contact - Seeing white man for the first time


All our bones are made up of dots and dashes, from eyes to leg bones.




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