Sunday, October 29, 2006

Welcome back fellow bloggers!

I have finished sifting through all my footage from my second artistic awareness trek. As you have read in earlier posts I chose two ideas to focus on and try to convey in images. The first was peripheral vision and the second was trees with no leaves on them. I hope you can take the time to read the caption for each clip below and then watch the clip. Enjoy!

Driving: The Peripheral Experience!


When you think about the eye and its many capacities, all allowing us to see and experience the world around us, it is always interesting to see the limitations of the eye. Seeing I believe is a very coordinated effort put on by both the eye and the brain. The eye takes in information and the brain sorts it out giving us sight. The way in which we see is also very interesting. The eye can only focus on one thing at a time, the brain is virtually unlimited in the processes it can work out, but the eye is only able to focus on one thing at a time. Realizing this I began to think how the brain compensates so much for the eyes, you could say, short-comings. The eye, only able to focus on one thing at a single time relies on the peripheral vision, the brains ability to make us aware to what we are not focusing on. Then I thought, “When I drive, I am really relying on my peripheral vision more than my main vision.” Then I thought what a scary concept that this is. When we drive and interact with other cars on the roads, we are all involved in a, agreed upon, system of not seeing things clearly. While you watch this clip, focus on the area of the screen that you would normally watch if you were driving. Then come up with a list of everything that you are recognizing with your peripheral vision. When you drive you are taking in a lot more than just what is twenty feet in front of you. It’s a wonderfully orchestrated symbiotic exercise, with the eyes and the brain, allowing us to drive. I hope that next time you drive you will realize what a wonderful system of organic machines allows us to get from point A to B.


Enjoy the Peripheral Experience!

The Tree Music Video


We see trees everyday in nature, this commonplace fact often makes it difficult to stop and realize that all of creation is on display for the rest of creation. So the next time you stop and see a tree that has differing angles and warped branches, take a minute and imagine the song and dance that it is trying to put on for you. Watch this a few times and imagine a familiar song while watching it.

The Tree Music Video!

Beauty In Falls Deathly Grasp.


In the Midwest area of America, we realize that our trees come to their inevitable end in the fall months leading to winter. In summer months we are reminded that nature is very beautiful in its leafy splendor, but why can’t it still be beautiful in death.

Beauty in Death.