 |
VENICE SERIES (ongoing)
30 x 30 cm (12" x 12"), Acrylic/Canvas, 2003 |
|
 |
The Relativity of Our Concept of Reality
The fact that we inescapably see the world through the sunglasses
of our own culture makes our reality and concept of "truth" amorphous.
"My language is vibrant color and line...
Color makes my heart sing.
Painting is about color. Pure pigment, intensity, light...
I want to do paintings that give the same feeling
to the viewer as a gaze upon an open landscape: to rest, to
open the mind and the senses, to see, to feel/to fuel one's
own life flow."
Being an artist led me to ask many questions such as what is
reality, and to what extent is "what we see" shaped
by our cultural backgrounds? Taking the relativity of our perception
of "truth" as a starting point, I try to identify cultural
assumptions in order to go beyond them. Living abroad and immersing
myself deeply in foreign cultures I have become very aware of
my own roots, my own cultural matrix.
I believe that in difficult times like ours it is of importance
to see things "clearly". The fact that we inescapably
see the world through the sunglasses of our own culture makes
our reality and concept of "truth" amorphous, a fact
being enforced even more by globalization. Our only chance is
to learn to really see things and to take them for what they
are instead of projecting our own cultural perceptions onto them.
Because the fact that something is "foreign" to us,
does not automatically make it "bad" or "wrong".
Sometimes it is even enriching to follow foreign ways of dealing
with the world, as foreign cultures, just as our own, follow
an inner logic and often offer surprising solutions.
|