Paintings & Essays by Jason Blasso CONFLICTING COSMOLOGIES
Paintings & Essays by Jason Blasso
CONFLICTING
COSMOLOGIES
BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS BLACK GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK K GESSO BLACK GESSO BLACK GESS
CONFLICTING
COSMOLOGIES
Paintings & Essays by Jason Blasso
C H A R Y B D I S P R E S Sn e w y o r k
Published by Charybdis Press405 E 82nd StreetNew York, NY 10028www.charybdispress.com
© 2012 Charybdis PressAll rights reservedPrinted and bound in the USA15 14 13 12 4 3 2 1First Edition
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission from the publisher,except in the context of reviews.
Image Copyright © 2012 Jason BlassoText Copyright © 2012 Jason Blasso
Layout & Design: Jason BlassoPhotographs: Susan Alzner
ISBN 978-0-9860027-0-0
Cover: Detail of “In the Beginning”
For more information regarding paintings: Please visit www.blackgesso.com or e-mail [email protected]
For more information regarding publication: Please visit www.charybdispress.com or e-mail [email protected]
Jason Blasso would like to thank his mother and father for their love and support,Kristen Youngman for her guidance, Jacky Yoon for the first purchase, the Twohig Brothers for their encouragement, Susan Alzner for the photographs and Professor William Campbell and Dr. William Provine for showing the way.
SER
IES 1 : F
OR
EW
OR
D : G
NO
STIC
SCIE
NC
E
Chaos & Order
9.25" x 14" x 2.75"
oil and gesso on stainless steel with wooden frame
Th
e first binary • Nigh
t and day • Dark and ligh
t • Evil and good • A
hrim
an and Ah
ura Mazda
Science, from the Latin scienzia, means knowledge; through it, we are perpetually discovering, developing and rewriting our own cosmogony. With an elegant method that tests its hypotheses, Science remains under pressure to prove itself empirically. This creates a secular and dynamic environment of exchange and growth that unites man across borders to all things and deepens and enriches our understanding of ourselves, our environment and our origins. Gnosis also means knowledge in unanglified Greek and differs principally from its sister, Science, in that it is spiritual knowledge or insight. It is the intimate and personal experience of gleaning something unknow-able, mysterious and other behind the fabric of reality. Gnosis, when directly perceived, is often unspeakable, and when and where it is spoken, it is always tied to the tradition of storytelling and the magic of our earliest creation myths. These two seemingly conflicting knowledges have set the stage of battle within the body between the mind and spirit. Science is coolly rational, logical, objective and centered in the head and Gnosis is heatedly irratio-nal, faith-based, subjective and centered in the heart. However, what we perceive as an opposition between the great exterior discipline and the great interior discipline is, in fact, inseparable correlatives. They are two sides of the same coin, leading us to greater insights and awe. There is no doubt that Science has trumped Gnosis through its exponential growth in understanding, end-less revisionism and technological inventiveness. It has developed our most plausible creation myth by parting the very fabric of matter and space to peer deep into our past to find our origin in an explosive singularity. It has shown our cosmic smallness while simultane-ously connecting us to totality. Through it, we have overthrown our geo- and anthropocentrism and have learned of our spectacular and felicitous place in the far corner of our universe. The pursuit of knowledge, of Science, frees us from the trap of tradition and allows us to enter into the fluid realm of rebirth and change. Liberated from our past, we can concentrate on our future and continue to expand our fundamental understanding of ourselves. But while the mind is nurtured, so too must the spirit be. The loss of the heart ultimately means the loss of the head.
It is here where we must inevitably talk in meta-phor, in poetry and abstractions because we have reached the borders of that indefinable otherness, that mysterious substance which defies our logic and play-fully skirts our undertanding. This is the wellspring of inspiration and dreams, the fount of wisdom, the inexhaustible and intuitive well of our collective expe-rience. It is here where the mystery of beauty and art can be found. The knowledge of beauty and art move the spirit to dance with its music. To be moved thus, is to be moved within, transported, lifted up through the soul of language, color, form and sound. It is our human voice telling our human story, connecting us back to the urvoice of our collected unconciousness when we were apes, reptiles, trees, rocks and stars. It is the myth and magic of an intelligent biped struggling to understand itself and its origins in the dawn of self-awareness. It was the goal of many of the early Abstract Ex-pressionists to recreate this mythology with paint. They wanted to bring us back to the unspoken realms through color and form. Standing before many of their canvases one can feel that they are approaching the very threshold of that hidden world. It is in their spirit that I approached these paintings.
gnostic science
SER
IES 1: PA
INT
ING
S : CO
NF
LIC
TIN
G C
OSM
OL
OG
IES
In the Beginning
48" x 60"
oil and mixed media on canvas
Beresh
it • In the B
eginning a lightless void • E
verything is B
lackness • Before th
e Big B
ang • 13 Billion years ago
Matter
36" x 36"
oil on canvas
Particles condense • C
luster • Find each
other • A
ttach and grow
• Th
eir density becomes our destiny
Galactic Haze
36" x 48"
oil on canvas with aluminum frame
Nebulas birth
suns and stars • Galaxies form
• Th
e Milky W
ay • Is the C
ow P
ath • To our Solar System
Magnetic Fields
24" x 36"
oil on canvas
Early E
arth im
pact • Drives iron from
the m
antle • To the core • W
here m
agnetic fields become • B
ipolar
Black Earth
36" x 36"
oil on canvas
Volcanic crust • Rain of fire from
the h
eavens • Melts ice • L
eaving water • L
eaving the seeds of life
Atmospheres
24" x 36"
oil on canvas
Earth
calms to a steady tripartte division • F
inds balance in itself • Regulates • A
sh settles • Sm
oke clears
Clouds and Light
48" x 60"
oil on canvas
Th
e storm gath
ers • Weath
er wash
es away at th
e world • Steady precipitation • U
ntil the rain of w
ater ends • In a prism of ligh
t
Night Sea
36" x 48"
oil on canvas
Cam
brian explosion • Life grow
s • Pyram
idal to the surface • In th
e dark depths • B
eneath th
e moon
Amphibious Divide
60" x 48"
oil on canvas with aluminum frame
Surface tension breaks • Eyes open on air • T
he first breath
is taken • Wh
en that w
hich
swim
s • Becom
es that w
hich
walks
Forest
36" x 36"
oil on canvas
Prim
ordial hom
e • Th
e Evolutionary Tree of L
ife • Axis M
undi • From th
e limbs descending • A
new m
an
Self
16" x 20"
oil on canvas
Blood and brain • P
ress into life • Until th
e pedunculation • Ruptures into • A
utonomous identity
Incarnation
24" x 36"
oil on canvas
Man aw
akens and rises • Th
rough th
e binaries to become • T
he h
and • Th
e tool • Th
e technician
Fire
16" x 20"
oil on canvas
Th
e first technology • A
bolishes th
e night inside • A
nd with
the flam
ing sword • T
he door to E
den and innocence • Closes
Tabula Rasa
36" x 48"
oil and mixed media on canvas
A new
beginning • Th
e labor of the field yields • T
he geom
etries of writing • T
he w
ord made flesh
• Made stone
SER
IES 1 : A
FT
ER
WO
RD
: EL
EM
EN
TAL V
IEW
S
Memories of Eden
16" x 16"
oil on canvas
Idle idyll • Dark cypresses and fligh
t of birds • Th
e snake comes • C
reeping darkness • Th
e seal of the covenant is broken
elemental views Conflicting Cosmologies is the narrative I found in my paintings as I completed the series. I knew as I painted that there was an underlying theme and common source for what I was creating. It was only in retrospect that I was able to work through the coded message and discover what it was I was saying to myself. One often starts a journey without knowing where one is headed. We have plans and goals, a vision of the future, desired outcomes, but many things wanted and unwanted intervene. It is often only through experi-ence and the appropriate distance and perspective that one can see a more complete picture of what one was doing and attempting to do. This series grew nonlinearly, in fits and starts, with long stretches of inaction followed by great cathartic bursts of action. Persistence paid off and by sticking to the project and always returning to the canvases to add a fresh layer of paint or a thin wash, the paintings began to organize themselves and inform each other in a silent visual dialogue. After having the paintings photographed and show-ing them to friends, and spending time with them as a collection, a pattern began to emerge that created a higher ordering of the information on the canvases. When I understood what I had, I knew where to focus my energies to complete the project to the scope I wanted to achieve. Art, like any engrossing labor of life, is a process of self-education and direct experience. Through entropy, my knowledge today is deeper than my knowledge yes-terday and the current narrative could have only been achieved as I worked through the problems of its cre-ation. In other words, this series could not be planned, it had to be worked through. As my mind leapt across the canvases and space and time to tell the story of how we found ourselves in the world with the double-edged sword of consciousness, I realized that this has been the story that I have always been telling; the story that drives me to create. It is the story of man standing under the weight of his own self-awareness. With this narrative in mind, I organized the paint-ings in book format allowing for a linear reading of our progression through the formation of the universe, earth and life towards man. I further added short five line poems vertically on the page that can be read or ignored at the viewer’s discretion.
While working out the narrative for these paintings, a larger vision came and I saw the themes and content for my next two series: Elder Elements and Impossible Views which are now fully fleshed out ideas that will test the limits of canvas by mounting and stretching them in ways that have not been done before. In Elder Elements, I’ll expand upon the repertoire of Gnostic Science by exploring the protoscience of alchemy and elementary magic using the primary colors, green, brown, black and white. I will use the Paracelsian and Chinese elemental systems, as well as Tibetan prayer flags and sacred drums to create a vibrant space of ancient magic. This will then be followed by Impossible Views, a meditation on the ultimate extremes of space and time shone through unique manipulations of black canvases creating an atmosphere that physically and pictorially represents the abstract ideas of modern sci-ence which discusses phenomena beyond the range of human perception. Both projects can now be produced because of the groundwork laid with this series. I now know what my message is and how I want to deliver it. I confidently look forward to producing visceral works that will connect with the viewer on multiple levels by combin-ing the complex cosmologies of our past and present through science, spirituality, mythology and magic.
SER
IES 2 : W
OR
K IN
PR
OG
RE
SS : EL
DE
R E
LE
ME
NT
S
Paracelsian Elements
(4) 16" x 16"
oil on canvas
Alch
emy • T
he protoscience of search
ing for • Th
e Ph
ilosopher’s Stone • In th
e dark waiting • L
eaden gold
SER
IES 3 : W
OR
K IN
PR
OG
RE
SS : IMP
OSSIB
LE
VIE
WS
Dark Matter
60" x 72"
black gesso on canvas
Wh
at cannot be seen • Is seen • Th
e eye goes wh
ere the eye can’t go • Into th
e presence • Of an absence
How often do we find ourselves in things? When we look around at the people, animals and objects in our lives we always see what is not us. We know of the self particularly, in relation to the not-self, which is every-thing other than us. This separation can create in us an incredible sense of isolation when the divide between our self and everything else seems unbridgeable. However, if we are fortunate to learn how to lose ourselves in the other, the bleakness of separation and isolation disappears. As the distance between the world and us diminishes, so does the self diminish. The very sense of I begins to shrink in the context of totality. We often forget this, and, in our mad rush to be something or somebody, we overlook the necessity to disbecome. We often talk about finding ourselves. The maxim runs: Know Thyself. But anyone who knows themselves knows how conflicting and contradictory the self is. After awhile, we don’t know what to do with this self, which seems only to do as it pleases without obeying reason or any other higher order. The self is messy and far from ideal. Since we already have ourselves, the importance then seems to be the ability to lose ourselves. This can only be done by engaging the mind with tasks and labor outside of self-awareness. We must do so through something other than us because it is through losing ourselves that we become more wholly ourselves. To be self-aware requires that we discover an occupa-tion within which we can lose ourselves. It is a place where we can turn off our self-consciousness and play with pure consciousness. The key here is play. When we disengage with ourselves we know that eventually we will re-engage with ourselves and by doing so, we refresh ourselves., This is why it is always fun to find oneself again, and why, in the midst of painting, I laughed robustly the second I saw it there. It was the hearty laugh of recog-nition, of finding my name in print. Of course, there, on the can, inches from my feet, it wasn’t spelled out but hidden amongst those two words. I connected the letters like the stars of a constel-lation, knowing that without my last name this would possess no significance. But my name, embedded there, had power; the way words once had power to bind through sound, spelling and incantation. I set down my brush and lifted the can to inspect and make certain of what I saw.
Having confirmed the spelling, I set down the can and dipped my finger into the blackness. I then blotted out the C, K, G and E and wiped my finger on a rag. I stood there, hands on hips seeing myself in a place where I wasn’t before. My name was there, broken neatly, bookending the black smudges. My laughter was the laughter of self-discovery. It was like I had startled myself in a mirror and was seeing myself again for the first time with fresh, curi-ous eyes. The laughter came because I discovered that, despite my vigilance, I could still be ambushed by the least remarkable thing in the world: myself. The world is full of surprises but I never imagined my name and image to be one of them, but when and wherever I find them, they always appears as a destiny. To rediscover ourselves is pure joy. The shock of recognition always takes us by surprise when we are allowed to see ourselves again for the first time, in the words of Wallace Stevens’ Hoon, more truly and more strange. But what is stranger yet, is when we look deeply into the other until something twinkles in the darkness and rises towards the surface to confront us and we find ourselves looking back upon ourselves.
black gesso
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www.charybdispress.com
about the artistJason Blasso is a painter, poet and publisher living in New York City. He is currently completing his first book of poems entitled Summa Neologica. He is the editor and designer at Charybdis Press which releases books on a variety of subjects including tea, poetry and art. He can be reached at [email protected].