‘We know that there exists two types of sleep, which are scarcely less different from each other than they are from the waking state. The first type, which occurs in periods of roughly ninety minutes, is characterized by rapid eye movements; experiments have established that in this the eyes follow the movements of objects hallucinated in the dream…. dreaming is confined to this types of sleep which is called ‘paradoxical’ …the second type of sleep, called ‘orthodox’, has physiologically entirely different characteristics, and the thought activity associated with it is much closer to waking thoughts. In this phase, problems of the previous day can be dealt with logically, though the path leading to their solution cannot be remembered after waking.’[1]
Lots of fragments of information all on different layers, some hidden by mistake, and others hidden on purpose. We as humans only use ten percent of our brain; we have a great imagination and a history of lost baggage. We dream, and we dream and we dream; though we do not seem to make life easy for ourselves from the word go. Life seems to be taken too seriously, we are playing a game with many parts missing. Being lost and confused is to be taken very seriously. Searching my soul for philosophical and scientific explanations for the answers of how I make what I make. Weaving together narrative and ideas into a space of fact and adding in a lot of fiction. Does it matter what is true or false, as long as there is belief and a smile? Since when has works of fiction been taken so seriously? ‘If people didn’t do stupid things nothing intelligent would ever get done.’[2] John Baldessari quotes from the philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein. I believe this is correct. Though I worry about playing the role of the idiot, believing if I am serious I will be taken seriously, I am starting to understand this is not a fact but a fiction.
‘If you approach work with sense of humor. People immediately assume you’re not to be taken seriously, but I think the truths about society and human existence can be approached in different ways. You don’t always have to be deadly serious. Sarcasm and humor can help you see things in a lighter vein,’[3] explains Eurwin Wurm, a further artist who uses humor to great avail in his work.
I am the creator in this world, this surface of an image. I have power to make and create its life, their own memories, their own vibrations that will live far past my own morality. Stuck in a present moment in the past, always moving forward, always heading into the future. I take these memories that have been molded, and physically try to react to them using my dreams and imagination, feeling all the vibrations around me. Relying on my five senses to guide me, and my six sense; my intuition to writes in the rest.
As with all creators, there will be a point where I die, my own existent being my damning. A serious god of a world of my own, believing I have control on the outcomes but finding no answers, no truth and a world and a body that will turn against me. I will always believe in my own in mortality.
That is just one side, the creator, the god. There also lays in these pictures the child, the idiot, the joker. This part of me is in the physical planes, I am the source of the vibrations of my work and its target. Acting out silly tasks and roles, make them laugh the silly things you do, but also make them praise.
[1] Freud, p.78
[2] John Baldessari, Baldessari: While something is happening here, something else is happening there; works 1988-1999/ Texte von Meg Cranston, Diedrich Diederichsen und Thomas Weski (Köln: W. König, 1999), p. 17.
[3] Erwin Wurm, Pretty Cool People Interviews <http://prettycoolpeopleinterviews.submarinechannel.nl/interviews/item/25> [Accessed 25th May 2010]