Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Matthew Swanlund; [email protected]
Name:
Jon Vogel; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Evelyn Alexander; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Todd Moster; [email protected]
Name:
Michele Mor; [email protected]
Name: Beth Hummer; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Eliot Ullman; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
Name:
Linda Krieger; [email protected]
Name:
Fritz Miller; [email protected]
Name:
Kate Pletcher; [email protected]
“The wave is not the water. The water merely tells us of the passing of the wave.” —Buckminster Fuller Physics describes the Event Horizon as the boundary of a black hole, a one-way crossing between the universe outside and an undiscovered state within, the point of no return between one reality and another. Einstein's theory of Special Relativity proved that different observers, in different states of motion, see different realities. The nearer one approaches the Event Horizon, the stronger the effect on space and time. Nothing – not even light – can escape its power. This book explores the nature of perception and reality. The photograph as a portal from one perception of reality to another, employing the Event Horizon as a metaphor for that passageway. A photograph can be such a passageway, where form is a place mark for other, more fundamental elements, like the movement of trees manifesting the wind. Seen in this way, a subject may be less important for what it is, or where it is, than for what it can reveal to us of its underlying, essential nature: a visual harmonic. Event Horizon seeks to explore such ideas.
Name:
Cory Baskin; [email protected]