Invitation to "A Spectrum Of Jewels"
Here is a blurb from the gallery
Thanks!!
Here is a blurb from the gallery
Thanks!!
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 11:46 PM 0 comments
Labels: A Spectrum Of Jewels, Dodecaorthogonal Space Poem, orthogonal space poem, Roger Smith Labs
Here is the press release from the Roger Smith Labs for my upcoming show at their gallery. If you are in New York City in March then please come by and check it out.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 9:03 AM 0 comments
Labels: A Spectrum Of Jewels, Roger Smith Labs
Roger Smith Lab Gallery Announcement
“A Spectrum Of Jewels” is the title for the new art installation by Kaz Maslanka that will be featured at the Roger Smith Labs located at 47th and Lexington in New York City. The Show, Curated by Robert C. Morgan, will run from March 5, 2010 to March 26th 2010 and will feature what Maslanka calls a ‘Dodecaorthogonal Space Poem’. This type of ‘mathematical poem’ is constructed with twelve ‘orthogonal space poems’ arranged contiguously within a Cartesian coordinate system. Orthogonal space poems are always in the form of ‘A’ equals ‘B’ multiplied by ‘C’. What is different in this new work is that one of the variables in each poem is a fabricated word whose meaning comes from the mathematical operation applied to the other two variables (words). The words were carefully chosen to point to a spectrum inspired by Zen teachings. Thus, the aesthetic value of the piece is derived from visualizing the meaning of all the concepts spread throughout the entire three dimensional space.
The following URL will take you to a “computer aided design mockup” showing the main structure of the installation: http://www.kazmaslanka.com/RogerSmith.html
The following statements are to help navigate the installation:
The yellow ball is the point of origin for the entire system.
The green balls are points in space which represent the meaning of a concept which lies on one of the ‘word axes’. A word axis is a one dimensional line drawn between two concepts in space. In a three dimensional space you may have three ‘word axes’. The three word axes in this installation are “Emptiness / Thinking”, “Existence / Non-existence” and “Monasticism / Urbanity”
The red balls are points in space to delineate the coordinate pairs for which the orthogonal space poem starts. The poem lies on the planer space that lies between the red ball, the two adjacent green balls and the yellow ball.
For a better understanding of visualizing these poems you may want to Google “verbogeometry” and “Orthogonal Space Poem”
The twelve orthogonal space poems are as follows:
Emptiness times Urbanity = Socrastival
Emptiness times Monasticism = Apecksuval
Emptiness times Existence = Doalldoxuval
Emptiness times Non-existence = Nonalldoxuval
Thinking times Urbanity = Selcrasaval
Thinking times Monasticism = Taoodoxuval
Thinking times Existence = Wastconditival
Thinking times Non-existence = Dreemholeval
Existence times Urbanity = Natucrasaval
Existence times Monasticism = Onkeval
Non-existence times Urbanity = Boidasval
Non-existence times Monasticism = Onkeval
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 2:41 AM 4 comments
Labels: Dodecaorthogonal Space Poem, orthogonal space poem, Robert C. Morgan, Roger Smith Labs
Robert C. Morgan is an international art critic who has written numerous books on art and aesthetics as well as published countless reviews on artist works for such publications as New York Arts, Artscribe, ARTnews, Art in America and many others. He has rewritten my 13 delineations and sent them to me. I have posted them below.
Response to Delineations by Kaz Maslanka (6-Jan. 2010)
Delineation #1:
Mathematical truths are discovered Artistic truths are mediated.
.
Delineation#2:
Artists generally agree on what is mathematically correct. Mathematicians generally have no idea what is artistically correct.
.
Delineation#3
Art illuminates the supportive skeletal structure of thought whereas Math illuminates the metaphoric wind, which blows through that structure.
.
Delineation#4
Art reveals the body of God and Science reveals God's mind -- or is it the converse?
.
Delineation#5
Pure Mathematics has no expression for poetic metaphor however; it does provide us a structure that can be used for it.
.
Delineation#6
In general, the artist is not interested in finding truths through nonsense (except for Dada) as opposed to the mathematician who is. Therefore, we have Dada math instead of an After math.
.
Delineation#7
The goal of mathematics is to go beyond language. Art is a language to describe what is beyond us.
.
Delineation#8.
Mathematicians have an insouciant tendency to get lost in their imagination. Conceptual artists have an attentive tendency to map their imagination
.
Delineation #9
A artistic theory seems to come in a flash of intuition before the final product is rigorously constructed. An mathematical theory seems to come much after the artwork that has been constructed in a flash of intuition.
Delineation #10
Artistic creations are not unique in the sense that they could be discovered by anyone.
Artistic creations are uniquely invented by individuals.
Delineation #11
Art, among other things, is a language.
Art, among other things, uses language.
.
Delineation#12
In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But in poetry, it’s the exact opposite. —Paul Dirac
.
Delineation #13
Art is the expression of culture.
Pure mathematics is independent of culture, and therefore, closer to what art strives to be.
Robert C. Morgan
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:58 AM 6 comments
Labels: aesthetics, math art moment, mathart, Robert C. Morgan
Analytic Geometry Is The Ballet Of Thinking.
KM010207
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:43 AM 0 comments
Labels: Analytic Geometry, Thinking, Verbogeometry
Here is a new'Mathematical Visual Poem' by Karl Kempton - first published in Turkey here
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:24 AM 0 comments
Labels: Karl Kempton, mathematical visual poetry
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 7:10 PM 7 comments
Labels: math art moment, Peter Turney
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:41 PM 2 comments
Labels: Aperceptual, math art moment, Peter Turney
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 3:40 PM 25 comments
Labels: Culture, math art moment
Here is the full image of my piece, 'Salvation'. The two houses you see in the image are bath houses just outside the temple bridge at Songgwangsa temple in Korea. These bath houses are used to bathe the ghosts of our ancestors as a requirement before they are allowed into the temple. A detail of the Proportional Poem is below.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:09 PM 2 comments
Labels: proportional poems, similar triangles poems, Songgwangsa
Here is a Proportional Poem titled "Salvation". This was inspired by my recent visit to the Korean Zen Temple Songgwangsa
The image above is a detail from the image below
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:07 AM 3 comments
Labels: Buddhism, proportional poems, salvation, similar triangles poems, Songgwangsa, Zen
I have created another blog to collect Proportional Poems made by you. Proportional Poems are probably the easiest mathematical poem to make because you don’t have to be a math person to make one. Check out this link for an understanding of Proportional Poems and check out this link for the blog.
Please contribute!
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 2:37 PM 2 comments
Here is a Proportional Poem by Charlotte Whatley
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 2:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: Charlotte Whatley, proportional poems, similar triangles poems
Here is a proportional poem by Jean M Kelley
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 2:28 PM 0 comments
Labels: Jean Kelley, proportional poems, similar triangles poems
John Sims has been putting together a series of mathart events in NYC which will occur at different times throughout the year. I am looking forward to an event later this next summer for which Richard Kostelanetz, Gregory Vincent St. Thomasino, Bob Grumman, Stephane Strickland and myself will be involved. To get on Johns Mailing list - contact him @ RhythmOfStructure@gmail.com
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:19 AM 0 comments
Labels: Bob Grumman, Gregory Vincent St. Thomasino, John Sims, Richard Kostelanetz, Stephane Strickland
Here is a new proportional poem that I created titled Whispers.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 1:54 AM 1 comments
Professor St. Thomasino has developed a new structure for Mathematical poetry that I will add to the taxonomy in the side bar of this blog. What he has done is mapped the decimal notation system “onto” a sentence or set of phrases to “Place value” on the phrases. Focusing attention to the syntax of the poem. Here is an example of one of his poems called “Molotov’s Sister”:
a blonde bomber,she.smokes filterless,plays upright bass & writes haiku
Notice the decimal point and the commas. The commas delineate the digit/phrases in the poem and the decimal denotes where the decimal exists in this number. In essence we have the set of phrases that would equate to the following 100 x a blonde bomber, 10 x she . 1/10 x smokes filterless, 1/100 times plays upright bass & writes haiku
I have created a visual counter-part to the poem so that you can see the dynamic range of meaning mapped to each phrase. (images above)
The first image gives you the size differences in each decimal place and the second image groups the poem in detail so that it is readable.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 11:30 PM 1 comments
I just ran across a new math poet who seems to be getting some good attention and has an interview featured here. Much of Craig Damrauer’s work seems to be inspired by his relationship to his family and his surroundings. I find a lot of his stuff to be whimsical yet there are a few that are philosophical. Most of the work is arithmetic yet there are a few orthogonal space poems which would fit under the category of algebraic pieces. (This reminds me I need to put a category in my taxonomy for arithmetic poetry)
I have some examples below of his work:
I think my favorite is the one below.
some exponents for your consumption
Here (below) is an orthogonal space poem
The next one reminds me of one of my pieces which equates value proportional to need.
400 bucks?
To see more of his work check out his site here at this link
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 7:24 PM 4 comments
If you are not familiar with "Similar Triangle Poems" please read this link before going further.
One of the things that excite me the most about mathematical poetry is the fact that one can mathematically merge poems into each other. The results of these operations are extremely interesting in how the context of the common variable disappears. Or in other words the common context that both poems share … disappears. This is a feature that no other poetic form can accomplish and we are going to accomplish it in this blog entry. One can perform this feat on multiple mathematical poems however we are going to show how it is done on just two. The first thing that one needs to have ready is at least two poems that share a common “variable” or “term.” In our example (above) we have the common context of “money”. In other words both mathematical poems share a common term in the form of a word, in this case money. In the first poem we have the idea that Man is to Blood as God is to Money and simultaneously we have the idea that Man is to God as Blood is to Money.** In addition we have the second poem which states that The Victor is to “Honor in War” as Money is to “Righteous Effort” And Simultaneously it says The Victor is to Money as “Honor in War” is to “Righteous Effort”
Now let’s solve both poems for the term “Money”
The image above shows both poems ‘solved’ for money. Since both poems are now in the form of being equal to money then we now must set both poems equal to each other. By setting them equal to each other we have merged the two poems together and everything is still logically intact. The image below shows both poems set equal to each other.
Now that we have the two poems merged into one let’s look at how the meaning has been changed by the reformation. Let us solve the new poem for the term “Honor in War” and see how it reads.
Wow! This poem reads right out of a Patriots Bible yet the two poems that created it were both cynical and possibly sarcastic in relation to the Patriot's beliefs. Once the context of money was taken out we have an entirely new situation. This reminds me of how a person can be consciously holding back a lie yet, speaks dancing truths all around the lie. In this case the money is the lie.
**Also an interesting feature of Mathematical Poetry is that all the different possible syntax structures in a poem exist at the same time therefore when you read a mathematical poem, in each of their different syntax states, the temporal meaning of the poem fills up much like a glass of water when you turn on the faucet.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 9:42 PM 4 comments
Labels: collaborative substitution poem, Mathematical substitution