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In the mid-1950's, American artist I. Rice Pereira wrote a short book entitled
The Nature of Space. In it she explained the apprehension of space
as an attribute of consciousness, and specified an irrational, or unknowable,
spatial quantity which she called 'the zero.'
This project is about collecting known spaces and, through re-arrangement,
generating unknown or 'zero' spaces impossible to describe logically.
In December of 2001 I sent an email to friends requesting that they send
me descriptions of places, either from books or from their own memories.
I collected about 150 sentences, divided them into fragments and entered
them into a database with identification numbers for each fragment. A randomly
selected group of these numbers has been inserted into each photograph.
Clicking on numbers in different areas of the image (after closing this
text window) causes a sort of poem to emerge. Each image has many possible
combinations, all of which in some way describe a location.
The image containing the numbers is itself a kind of 'zero' place, being
both known and unknown known in the sense that it is an old photograph
I found at a flea market or antique shop, but unknown in the sense that
I don't know the photographer or the location of the picture.
I like to think that throughout history memories and stories of places have
been accumulating in space like a dust cloud of numerical data or an invisible
hieroglyphics. The stories are always there to be decoded and re-generated,
but they still remain as elusive as the zero.
The wind swept across
In the central depths of a black hole
The past and future light cones
I remember
the years of dust and cobwebs
On the left wall
resembling the American flag.
He found the corpse covered with a blanket
surrounded by more of the same
implying that point H
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