Donnerstag, 5. November 2009

All my images are now available as fine art reproductions

dear friends and lovers of my art

recently i discovered a very professional service
that allows the spreading of my paintings
in the form of high quality reproductions,
on paper or canvas, framed or unframed
any size you wish

please check this out
i have uploaded a selection of "classics"


but if you prefer a print of any of my other images (which you can find of my homepage)
it will also be available through this service.
if you send me a mail specifying your wish
i will then upload the image to FINEARTAMERICA and you can purchase it there.

if you are looking for a special gift of art
or if you want to turn someone else on to the art of de es
now it is easy!

with loving greetings
de es

please forward this to your art-interested friends




Donnerstag, 5. März 2009

THAT ART

this was a piece i wrote some time ago for jon beinarts mega-site



THAT ART

Jon invited me to make a comment in the forum about visionary art.
I said this term is really overdefined and becomes self evident by scanning through the long list of links. But he overcame my reluctance by saying it should be less intellectual, more personal. So i take this gratefully as an opportunity to align my relevant experiences.

My story starts in the mythical age of the glorious emergence of THAT ART, Vienna 1964 in the gallery of Ernst Fuchs with my first one man show, shortly after being initiated into the Old Masters Technique by him. The famous five of the Viennese School of Phantastic Realism ( Fuchs, Brauer, Lehmden, Hausner , Hutter ) had gathered a large following of younger artists , called THE SECOND WAVE OF THE VIENNESE SCHOOL OF PHANTASTIC REALISM. (needless to say that there came many more waves) There were about lets say thirty artists who showed mainly in this gallery within the following years, encouraged with the fatherly love of Ernst Fuchs to aspire to reach up to the stars in art heaven.
Ernst introduced me through books and catalogs which one could find only in his studio to other artists who worked also in this manner in other countries.( eg Klarwein, Escher, Johfra) I realised soon that there was a simultaneus appearance of other phantastic painters as a world wide phenomenont that stood in sharp contrast to the attitudes of modern art.
Fuchs was teaching the old masters technique privately and Hausner later became professor on the Viennese Akademie. Paetz, Helnwein , Hechelmann and Jochen Wahl became my closest friends . We all had had very differnt ideas but the fine illusionistic technique was the common denominator of our works. The book Manierismus by Gustav Rene Hocke was our bible.

When i moved to Switzerland in 1968 i met Giger and had a show together with him , he did not yet work with airbrush then. Here i also learned about the existence of Psychedelic Art. I did not work anymore in the Old Masters Technique and was basically interested in content and strong concept- not so much in the beautiful-and-fine. The roots of my stone-period are in Switzerland.

Back in Austria in 1972 I was assistent of Professor Ernst Fuchs at his seminar in the magical castle of Reichenau. His genius attracted artists and visitors from all over the world , many are wellknown today and have also become teachers of the oldmasters approach to inner vision. (Hanna Kay, Olga Spiegel , Phil Jacobsen Rubinov, Wolfgang Widmoser,Bob Venosa...)



I moved to New York in 1974 and lived there in the legendary artist district Soho till 1986. I teamed up with my new friends from Reichenau , discoverd more kindred spirits, got acquainted with the Visionaries and Psychedelic Artists from east and west, taught the old masters technique together with Phil in the large basement of my studio in Green Street and realised soon that the New York art scene had absolutely no taste for THAT ART
I felt strongly that it was my mission to fuse the European branch of inner vison with the American, that this type of art was the first truly international art movement and so I organised a group exhibition in the Studio Planet Earth Gallery ( Isaac Abrams, Olga Spiegel, Hanna Kay ), an effort that led later to the formation of the New York Visionaries.
I was happy to discover the art of Alex Grey in a gallery not far from the studio, as a sign that the art scene was maybe more open than I thought and I met Antonio Peticov, who added the special South American touch to THAT ART . Unforgettable are also my meetings with Ingo Swann under the umbrella
of parapsychological art. (PSI ART)

Nevertheless the movement stayed underground. But there were a few individuals like Mikl Bell and Christian de Boek who had the strong intention to gather the spirits . Boeks website later became like a Who is Who in the World of Strange Visions.


1982 I published a booklet called SHARING LIGHT where I also made some statements about my artistic position and what i thought THAT ART is. This was my view:
Surrealism had developed into Phantastic Realism through natural evolution and Phantastic Realism changed into Transformative Art through the agens of the spirit of theNew Age . Furthermore, on the future level Planetary Art was already starting to emerge.
In all this was an underlying visionary current of inspiration, leading from the darkness of the Middle Ages to the coming bright Planetary Age

Personally I was not fond of being called a surreal painter, Surrealism is a historical place for me, and i didnt think of myself as being a visionary artist either because visions come and go and i wanted to formulate solid states of the human condition.
I remember many very entertaining brainstorming sessions where we tried to come up with the absolut perfect name for a group project of THAT visionary- manieristic- surreal- phantastic-realistic- psychedelic- new-age- psi--transformative-planetary ART.




At my return to Vienna in 1986 the phantastic realists were considered of no interest for the contemporary art scene, but the founding fathers of the movement had established parallel art worlds and were successfull in their own terms .
The remains of the Second Wave of the School of Phantastic Realism had dissolved into two groups: some were still working in the absolutely meticulous manner and the others had changed their stiles in various ways.
I belonged to the second group , worked on large formats quite loosely and confused my former collectors ( who suffered because i didn paint stones anymore). Obviously I had manoevered my self out of the main stream of THAT ART into unknown territory, from where watched its rapid growth.

The two books of Michel Random on Visionary Art introduced me to quite a number of artists especially from France which i had not seen before.
James Cowan , publisher of Morpheus Int. handed another handfull of remarkable artists over to the eyes of the public. It is e.g his merrit that the influence of Beksinski has impressed the younger generation.

Since I know Ernst Fuchs he spoke of his cherished dream to organise a museum for THAT ART and so it was not surprising that he managed to organise the Venice Art Fair for Phantastic Art where one could discover even more of the never seen before. ( Claude Verlinde, Judson Huss,...)
Damian Michaels gets the movement rolling in Australia and publishes a visionary art paper and organises a travel exhibition.
Phil , my dear friend since Reichenau came to Europe almost every year to give painting seminars which always included a visit with his students to my studio. In turn I visited him at his course locations and enjoyed to spend time with him, Michael Fuchs and the students . In this way I met more and more very gifted members of the tribe, who now make their mark in the web.

Phils book Drinking Lightning brought back wonderful memories from
our common times in Studio Planet Earth, New York. His profound insights into the relationship of art and spirituality and his discovery of the invisible tribe as the genetic pool of the artists of THAT ART are certainly plowing the grounds for a meaningful art of the future.









Three years ago i got my self a computer and plugged myself into the collective mind. Lawrence Caruana surprised me with his thorough investigations and evaluations of visionary art and the development of its network.

Morpheus establishes a museum for the Fantastic Arts in the net. His crew is also growing. For years i was thinking it cannot get darker than Giger, but here comes Barlow and prooves me wrong.

I met Peter Gric who also lives in Vienna , his stunning works his, computerskills and his links show me where the tribe might move to in the future. Through the net i make contact with other artists from his generation.

In the local gallery of Hanno Karlhuber old and young members of the tribe come together at openings to celebrate THAT ART

Brigits Marlins Society of the Art of Imagination and its presence in the internet unleaches an hitherto unimaginable flow of image-force.

Visits to the Netherlands with Phil reveal the outstanding genius of Johfra and the existence of a community of tribe members who have not been known here till now, with connections to France and to Eastern European countries . Rardy van Soest is in the process to create a museum für phantastic realism, Gerrit Luidinga is compiling names and images since years.

This summer i met Phil again and he showed me his recent magnum opus Eyes Of The Soul which collects 150 ! artists from all over the planet in one monumental volume. It took me three hours just to look through the color plates,so much was there to discover !

Okay, and here comes Jon Beinart and switches on the link cluster in the visionary art forum , where i find almost all assembled who passed through ---- this pages- plus more to discover-----isn´t THAT ART?


Vienna, november 11 th, 2005 D E
E S





i

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MESSAGE TWO from march 1982, new york

transformation in art : transformative art

transformation is the key koncept for the understanding of the current world-condition

transformation is the process of fundamental change from the "old world"
to the " new world “

transformation is a process of continual creation, the flow of evolution

transformation moves consciousness, through liberation, growth, expansion, self-realisation and transmission of the energy of transformation

transformative art is a mirror of and an instrument for transformation. it is the expression and transmission of the energy of transformation

transformative art transports awareness beyond the limitations of old belief systems-it transforms.


transformative art 1. reveals the limitations of the "old world"
2. leads back to the source and real values of life
3. tunes into the harmonic order and full potential
of the whole
4. expresses new possibilities, new ideals, new reality
models and the self-image of the new man

TRANSFORMATIVE ART CREATES IMPACT THROUGH THE BALANCED PRESENCE OF IDEA AND BEAUTY, MYSTERY AND MEANING. IT TOUCHES, INSPIRES AND ENERGIZES THE WHOLE BEING

note:
transformative art developed indepently at the same time as many modern and postmodern "isms".it stands in sharp contrast to pure formalism as well as pure photorealism.in its methods it basically continues the traditions of the old masters yet applies it to the subjects of our time. it integrates and brings into focus artistic phenomena that have been labeled mystic, spiritual, transcendental, metaphysical , symbolistic, manneristic, visionary, surreal, fantastic, fantastic-realistic, magic realistic, psychedelic, psychic, consciousness, cosmic, science fiction, space, new age, and so on... art.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

in addition i want to greet all members of the tribe which i met personally
on my journey , mentioned or not , and those i have not met,
with love and affection





Mittwoch, 15. Oktober 2008

IM SINNREICH "soul-update"









almost one year passed since my last exhibition and before it gets too cold in my ample studio i open my doors to the public.

i show a selection of ten of the100 LIGHT OF LIFE paintings in the hall ( as i still have not found an opportunity to show the complete cycle i intend to make a series of ten shows, each time showing a sequence of ten.)

in the gallery upstairs some new ARCHITEXTURES are for sale.
the large diptych LIFELINES: (WAVELINE -SNAKELINE) brings the current themes to the point.
.

Donnerstag, 3. Januar 2008

essay by philip rubinov jacobson




This essay is published in ARCHITEXTUREN

The Promethean Integral Artist
Philip Rubinov Jacobson


The Calling

»Let the beauty we love be what we do.«
Rumi
I first became aware of De Es Schwertberger in 1971. It was a year after I had seen reproductions of the art work of his Austrian mentor, Ernst Fuchs. Not long afterwards, at the tender age of 19, I found myself at Castle Wartholz, in Reichenau, Austria, working under the tutelage of Ernst Fuchs and his assistants, De Es Schwertberger and Wolfgang Männer. In the 35 years that have passed since meeting De Es, our relationship has continued to grow, evolve, change and expand; not unlike the remarkable evolution of his multifaceted artistic life. I have observed the evolution of De Es' work and have become intimately acquainted with his creative process, artistic intentions, psychological, philosophical and spiritual transformations. Qualities that I personally value and highly admire in the artistic domain include versatility, artistic growth, creative courage and spiritual transformation. These are all qualities that De Es possesses in great abundance. Versatility and artistic growth have both become extremely rare and nearly vacant in the arid wilderness of contemporary art. There is a lack of change and genuine growth in self-awareness in most artists. And hardly any recognition and acknowledgement of evolutionary qualities in the administration and handling of finances in the contemporary art scene.
This lack of growth and creative courage can be found in all media of the fine arts, the fads and fashions that fly by overnight like the exhaust from so many passing automobiles on a road with a short destination to a stagnant pond. In addition, too many artists continue to produce the same imagery, decade after decade. The spiritual impetus and inspiration behind the initial intentions of artists are all too often abandoned, cashed-in, for the formulas and fads that serve as a carte blanche at the Bankomat, or ATM, of the Art Market Machine.
In contrast, De Es has remained true to his »calling« as an artist, as surely as the priest has been »called« to his faith. Perhaps, the most remarkable thing about the evolution of his work, despite the seemingly dramatic and radical changes in his art, is the continuity behind his artistic metamorphosis and that this is something that the public has been, in general, unaware of, which can finally be remedied through this premiere exhibition and catalogue on his latest works. His works of the past fifteen years, in particular, offer us a fresh vision, a beacon of light. His paintings assist in the melting away of the repetitive fall of acid snow of art that is all too often vulgar, violent, and vacant. The chilling scams of anti-art-»art« and the »art for art's sake« philosophy crumble alongside the work of De Es. When genuine truth and beauty is seen, the superficial is exposed and its inevitable decay and death gives way to the Tree of Life. As an artist, De Es, with his new paintings, bring us a nourishment of artistic light and life.

The Laboratory
The over-emphasis on becoming a »specialist« in the ever-expanding fields of human activity has also spilled over into the domain of art, encouraging an »icon-nomics« of style that generates artistic profits, instead of creative prophets. Underlying both the personal impulses to growth and creative enterprise are the fundamental impulses that seek a unity of consciousness. This integral impulse has been the very »terra firma« upon which De Es stands. The simple »secret« behind the diversity and creative courage that De Es expresses in his art is that there has always been this philosophical and spiritual quest that remains a constant matrix to his artistic motivation. It cannot be overstated that upon close examination of De Es' whole body of work, it becomes increasingly apparent how each of his so-called »periods« are truly integrated. The past, as it proceeds into the present and even announces the future of his artistic life, becomes obvious. For De Es, this creative process takes the form of a scientific-like laboratory of aesthetic experiments. I asked him about this lab-like approach that he engaged in his creative process, and he replied: »I always did this. As soon as I had found a new idea I did little sketches where I tried to find every possible placement of things and figures in relationship to each other; to find out the best way to express the essence of the idea.« In his pursuit of »essence«, there is a paradox: That which is »born of intuition« seems to almost contradict that which is a result of scientific method, or of »the rational«. In contrast to his earlier works, his recent work reveals a more fresh and free expression, and yet his inner creative process and production of aesthetic ideas remains relatively unchanged. The difference, in my view, is that his creative process has undergone a refinement, allowing more of the »moment« to take on a significant role in his creative productions. At such times, at its apex, even preconceived ideas may be abandoned altogether, or modified so much, that the original idea becomes swept away by a wind much greater than his personal breath of vision. For De Es, this artistic dance between will and surrender draws ever closer to a rhythm and musical flow, a visual language that is both personal and universal, indeed, an integral art of »essence«.
For example, in one of our informal discussions on art, I brought up his »Stone Period«, and conveyed to him that there was a wonderful methodology in his creative process. From my view, it seemed to come into play even when he was dealing with ideas and imagery that came from another realm, non-ordinary states of consciousness; or from invisible forces behind the visible planes of matter. This exquisitely grounded practice of painting, that also reveals an evolution in consciousness within De Es, and for that matter, any responder to art, was of particular interest to me at the time. In talking with De Es he responded very directly: »Once I have something I squeeze it very methodically and thoroughly.« He then mischievously, but innocently, laughed a little and so did I.
He had taken on a bird's eye view, an artistic perspective through scientific spectacles, and added: »… to find the optimal positioning of the light; the angle that would express my idea in the best way, I did hundreds of little sketches without any aesthetic purpose behind it. I just did experimental scribbling until I was absolutely certain that I was ready to begin the painting. Though this approach, I figured out the exact size and proportions of the painting ground. For me it was very important to have a clear-cut idea before starting a painting. I wasn't really interested in how it looks, just as I was not interested in flowers or still lives, or anything one would expect from a painter. I was not interested in the approach, to make something just for the sake of beauty. In the same way, I was not interested in painting something ›fantastic‹ just for the sake of creating beautiful or astounding fantasies. I actually wanted to get away from fantasy to bring it all back to the real ground of existence.«
Following this inner guidance and self-direction, his »fantastic« depictions of the underworld and the Jungian-like archetypal forces at work behind them, did not last long. This culminated in his triptych: The Lifepoles (which came at the end of his »Stone Period« he had started in Switzerland), and De Es added: »... I began to paint floating stones hovering above grassy fields. But soon the grass disappeared and my subjects became strange forces that acted within these barren landscapes. Mountain tops lifted off the ground and floating rocks were split into halves, and the earth underneath them too. The cut went through everything. This was an exciting idea because it could show something very basic about life, about the principle of duality that rules everything. This cut doesn't stop anywhere. Isn't human consciousness beginning when ›the One‹ separates itself into ›the Two‹? Also the phenomenon of the symmetry of the human body came into play at this point as well. At this time science was very preoccupied with researching the connections between the two hemispheres of the brain. When I moved to Switzerland I felt that my period of painting ›robots‹ …« (which came at the tail-end of his immersion in Fantastic Art) »… was also finished.
Looking at life's mechanical aspects couldn't yield more images about the human condition. I was reading a great deal from authors like Erich von Däniken, Timothy Leary, Louis Pauwels and similar stuff. Conceptual art appeared in the galleries and made a mark in my head. During this time of research I did about 150 works on paper. ›The cut that goes through everything‹ was a major discovery in my laboratory. There was ›the horizontal cut‹ and ›the vertical cut‹ and when the lines are crossing we come to ›the point zero‹. The subsequent paintings are metaphors about this ground-map of existence: We are always operating within these major fields of construction, these dualities within this grid of existence.«
For De Es, a mind-set advocating a hierarchical view is barely present in regard to the arts, instead, his paintings and writings express a holarchy that is inclusive of everything, where the realm of fantastic/visionary art is no longer »exclusive« in his search for the »essence« of life and creation. De Es remarks on this as well: »In my search for essence, the fantastic seemed limited for my pursuit, because fantasy usually is just about creating a new spectacle, adding more illusions to what we already have. In my own way, actually, I was opposing purely fantastic art. It was a search for an image that would show some truth; speak out from the ground of existence, reveal the way it is. It was in this manner, that I was finding my real personal content, my very own subject, my very own self. This was my primary motivation.«
To enter the »Realm of Essence« he had to learn to live without preconceived notions; of how art should look like, even how he should perceive life and how he should respond to it. Cast adrift from the »fantastic« dead weight of his past and without any anxiety over the future, he then could enter the Here and Now, the present moment of what was, for him, his »real personal content«, his »very own subject matter«. De Es' latest works of energetic and varied explorations are hard to categorize. They are a hybrid of abstract, expressionistic and multi-dimensional images of a dynamic architectural »Integral Art«. Whatever art-critics may have to say about these recent works, one thing is clear: We can begin to understand why De Es has not stayed in one single room of an infinitely large Creative Mansion. A place that many of us artists drift away from, even becoming »homeless«, and then spend a life-time searching for the essence of our true nature and home, our very own Creative Mansion.

The Creative Mansion of De Es
In the confusing maze of modern art and life, we all long to return »home« to the Creative Mansion within from which we suffer the illusion of separation. For the integral artist, the Creative Mansion must be built to rejuvenate the soul and ultimately serve to inspire others. When one is »called« to do this, to navigate and pass through the wilderness of a contemporary art world, that is, generally, indifferent to an art of the soul, such a calling requires that the artist reconnect to the mansion of creative powers. The artist must »move in«.
The petrified pillars supporting this superficial and often soul-less forest of contemporary art are crumbling, as they rarely contain the Plotinusian strength of Beauty, Truth and Goodness. In his book, The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche spoke about what he called »the myth-less man« of the industrial West, who was fired up by the energies of material progress but at the same time troubled by an immense nostalgia:
»And now the myth-less man stands eternally hungry, surrounded by past ages, and digs and grubs for roots, even if he has to dig for them among the remotest antiquities.«
Thrown into this contemporary myth-less-mindscape and irony, De Es has demonstrated a remarkable tenacity from the very beginning, which has nourished the growth of his artistic spirit. This has been (and continues to be) creatively expressed in an artistic spectrum that has gone from a mystical precisionism to a devotional abstraction. His accomplishments have resulted from visiting every nook and cranny of the Creative Mansion on the inside, while never turning his eyes away from the world and the stars above, to which man, mansion and mission is interconnected. De Es' work constantly reminds us of this, even aids us as wayward souls in returning home. In his capacity as a »consciousness-cartographer«, he is navigating the myth-less man back home to the Creative Mansion. Here the view outside the windows widens a connection to the Web of Life, the very fabric of energy and matter that weaves its way on to the canvas of his paintings.

In the Lion's Den
Approaching the Absolute of the »Uncreated« involves the courage to move through one's deepest fears. Such an undertaking, as evidenced in the evolution of this artist's work, expresses this journey of consciousness, ever widening one's view from its egocentric point of origin. Through the spiritual imagination, illusion is destined to unveil enlightenment. We have the opportunity, in this exhibition, of seeing it unfold, and that is a very powerful and contagious thing. Knowing that his art reveals this potential experience within all of us is inspirational. Art has always been a guide toward integrating and inspiring higher forms of beauty, truth and goodness. As a responder to the art of De Es, it is my sincere wish that his work become as much a blazing Promethean fire of inspiration for you, as it has been for me. When I spoke to De Es about this he said:
»Basically everybody stands there in life as the artist, groping creatively into the unknown future to find a shape according to his or her own taste. This is the everyday lesson of art: Finding out what there is tomorrow and how it fits our very own taste. Groping into the Void – if this existential urge is blocked, people just buy into other stuff, and if this continues they suffocate creatively and get buried under the stuff made by others. Today there is so much pressure to consume and the creative self must fight very hard to shake it all off, to find out what it really wants and to establish and secure its own creative space. I think it is very hard in our days to become an artist who really says something in the voice of Spirit, in which the creative spark stays alive and the visions in motion«. This is an art of significant transcendence; it marries prior and present experiences with future-vision. It is embodied in a medium of expression that enlarges, raises, inspires and transforms the awareness of both artist and community. An integral art is none other than a fusion of experience; a transformation that expresses the spontaneity and novelty arising from a more integrated individuality meeting collective purpose. The artist's work aspires to awaken the enlightened mind, stir the divine heart and to reconnect with a greater Reality. Such creative workers help us to recognize the fact that we have no future except for what we envision.

A truly integral artist

Integral artists find inspiration through numerous methods and sources, visible and invisible. While De Es may touch on many aspects of the creative process, it is indeed an appropriate term that he uses in describing his own inventive arena as a kind of »laboratory«. He has that unique quality that few artists possess that combines the mind of an Aristotle with Platonic energies of exploration in the pursuit of truth through beauty.
His recent works reflect the great mystery through abstract architectural forms. His visions are reified through skill, expressing an art of the spirit. Here, »techne« serves as the handmaiden to »psyche«. He builds in pictorial layers of perpetual and conceptual visual-motion, waiting and then acting on an invisible guidance that comes in intervals. Some of his works move toward a more passionate and undeniably human expression where abstract forms and expressive color depend heavily on the artwork mixing together in the eye of the beholder. Then there are those pieces that take on a life of its own, literally guiding him toward completion and in the end, the work itself transforms the artist and – subsequently – the responders to his art, and that is simply a miracle.
I would add that the apex of immersion into the fine arts is, potentially, that the creative worker finally discovers, understands and acts in the service of nothing but Love, Beauty and Truth. Art can »cut in« at any point, or state, on the spectrum of consciousness regardless of the stationed-stage of consciousness of the artist. De Es is living proof of this and his imagery has gone from incredibly meticulous pictures, rising from the deepest recesses of the unconscious, to a playful, expressive, and sometimes purely abstract exploration of the forms, textures, colors, rhythms and layers of matter that is joyously born from Spirit. Indeed, one can see in these paintings a kind of probing into life, from the surface of matter to infinite space. He had been painting this all along, but now his recent works are »blow-ups«, energetic magnifications of the surface textures, qualities, mathematics, motions, music and scores of his orchestrated visual journey through an architectural space, a matrix that expresses the son of the infinite and the daughter of the eternal.
There is a sense of everything being inextricably interconnected. One can also see, almost hear, a musical symphony of the quantum physics behind the painted building blocks of atomically constructed patterns. These rhythm-like patterns begin to build forms, like superimpositions upon and through organic fields, a strata of space and time, ancient-future cities and concertos of color, scoring the composition of his works. Further, art can take on a profound noetic, hermeneutic quality. This ability is acquired not by way of observation, but by way of inspiration and the creative and active fusion between spirit and matter. The imaginer (the subject), does not stand over or opposite the screen of vision (the object); the two merge, subject and object unite. It is witnessed, at first, as something other than one's self, followed immediately with the experience of fusion, with the knower and the known becoming one. The artist has the experience of being that which she/he knows and knowing that which she/he is. Knowing and feeling become one. Like innocents, integral artists are mapping the sphere of consciousness, driven by aesthetic instinct, necessity and play. This mysterious integral power has its own will and ends, something is playfully at work inside the artist, or above him, and something comes which is, at times, even beyond his own understanding, and yet De Es, knowing that he cannot know the »All«, surely knows his »part in the All«.

The Integral Fire

If philosophy begins in wonder and ends in understanding, then art departs from what has been understood and moves towards wonder. In a state of »awe«, something is gained and we become larger, more inclusive and integrated with the great mystery of life. The integral dimension of art has its fount in what is the raw material of religion, science, philosophy, poetry, painting, music, indeed, in everything. There is only one Truth, one Reality, to be discovered by all humanity. There is not a distinct and different God, or Truth for each of the world's religions, any more than there is a different Sun or Moon for astronomers of various nations of the Earth under the stars. The unending religious differences of opinion, each religion believing they have the one and only »copyright on God«, has caused an unfathomable ocean of spilled blood, century after century. However, both De Es and his art reflect an awareness that celebrates what is common among all the wisdom traditions, and does not focus on the differences.
De Es' art genuinely inspires a unifying perennial vision. Whereas science emphasizes reason and experiment, and religion bases itself on faith and dogma, there are now more and more thoughtful people who consider the old dichotomies between art, religion, industry, and science, respectively, as faulty and unconstructive. De Es prefers to look at these approaches to reality as complementary, each in their own separate domains without one ruling over another. Such a new view calls for a methodology of introspection that provides direct experiential access to the inner reality of the creative process and consciousness, creative construction and solutions.
»This is the creative process as I see it. You don't even know what you want at first. There is just preparedness for creation and an openness to find something, but you do not know what you are going to find. You are not satisfied with what is already known, so you open yourself up to the unknown, with the expectation that you are able to bring something out of the dark and into the light of the world. Genuine creativity starts with this yearning in front of some kind of blackness. You want to bring something out of that blackness, get a hold on it, make it visible, give it substance, make it real and show it to others – so they can hold it. If you are successful then your art has the power to convince that indeed there is something in the Void! Art must convince! However, even when artists do find something they are always afraid they didn't find enough. That is the artistic position and emotional arrangement. The artist stands in front of the Void and he is afraid that he is not able to pull something out of it.«
The art of the integral creative worker, although often neglected by the mainstream, has had, and will always have, a life and Promethean light of its own. The genuine artist seeks the »wonder«, the »awe«. Humanity no longer regards itself as primitive but something has been lost along the way. The wonder has fled with the winds. This experience of awe has been succeeded by one of »sophistication«. Today, man worships no longer the moon and the stars but his own accomplishments, and either relegates the immensities of time and space to the background of his consciousness, or disregards them entirely, while integral artists use this as their veritable springboard to a new vision and understanding.
The art of De Es reifies an experience of the veritable web of life; the vision and understanding that the whole universe is alive! As our Earth, this tiny planet, rolls along its orbit in space within a universe composed of innumerable and brilliantly life-giving stars, human beings prefer to see only the busy anthill they scurry upon. They believe only in what is seen on the sod upon which they dwell. They are blind to the sacred, the invisible, and even to the beauty of their own immediate surroundings. De Es' body of work reveals an ancient-future of extraordinary places, particles, predicaments, presence and predictions.
From the first artistic expression by a child acting on the impulse to draw, up to the creations of a Michelangelo, the self is created, literally, through the creation of objects. This is the ground for De Es as an integral artist. Indeed, the artist must be so intimately acquainted with materials of the objective world that he, or she, can combine and transform them into an object of art, unique and expressive of both an individualized and collective life. On one of those long evenings of wine and conversation with my friend and philosopher, Ken Wilber, we were both elated by a profound statement by Goethe. Goethe had said that it was the literary character, Faust, that he created, that led him to the understanding of himself:
»The work in progress becomes the poet's fate and determines his psychic development. It is not Goethe who created Faust, but Faust who created Goethe«.
We envision what we will become and that vision draws us toward itself as our self. We become what we meditate on. We become what we create. The journey of art can thus be formed in the spiritual imagination as an integral part of a contemplative practice. The transpersonal and aesthetic experience synthesizes a constellation of traits and challenges into a unified whole. To do that, we must first integrate ourselves. In essence, an aesthetic practice heals the breach between the rational and the intuitive, between the individual and the universe, serving as a catalyst to expand consciousness from an egocentric identity toward that of an All-inclusive-One.
De Es aspires to awaken the enlightened mind, stir the divine heart, and to re-connect with the »essenc« that is creation itself. Within the gem of being genuine, there is a multifaceted extension of consciousness, a release of latent powers and a widening of vision. The »visionary« can include the naïve, the classical, the expressionistic, the fantastic, the abstract, actually anything with an illuminated consciousness behind the creation – with the skills matching the need.

Philip Rubinov Jacobson is an artist, author, educator, philosopher and traveler born in Rochester, New York. An international and central figure in both the Fantastic and Visionary genres’ of art, he holds degrees in Painting, Printmaking and Sculpture , with studies in Psychology, Philosophy and Comparative Religion. His paintings have been exhibited internationally in more than 90 exhibitions. He is the author of "DRINKING LIGHTNING - Art, Creativity and Transformation" , and the forthcoming publication in 2008, from Betty Books in Bologna, Italy; "PROMETHEAN FLAMES - Rekindling and Re-visioning the Creative Fire". The artist/author's culminating finale' in this Trilogy of Art and Spirit will be "EYES OF THE SOUL - Exploring Inspiration in Art", with an extensive Foreword by Ken Wilber books about art, inspiration, creativity and transformation. In 1981 he co- founded and directed the School of Extended Studies at Naropa University in 1991 in Boulder, Colorado, where he served as the 'rector', or Dean, from 1991-1997. He has been holding his renowned summer painting seminars: "Old Masters - New Visions" since 1997 in Austria, Bavaria, Italy and the USA.
www.rubinovs-lightning.com

Donnerstag, 13. Dezember 2007

Samstag, 8. Dezember 2007

position


grundsätzlich geht es in der malkunst
um die art und weise wie die farbe aufgetragen wird.
die skala der machart reicht von ganz grob bis ganz fein.
zwischen diesen malweisen liegen welten.
die feinen maler sehen im groben ein zuwenig,
die groben sehen im feinen ein zuviel.
ich benutze die gesamte skala des farbauftrages.
ich webe das feine ins grobe
und unterlege das feine mit kraft.

kunst als dialog der versöhnung
von zeitgeist und ewigem geist.

kunst bewahrt
einheit und vielheit im gleichgewicht

kunst fasst unfassbare fülle - in eine form.
frei fliesse die fülle in dem einen licht !