Segmentation

Points on a line
Clear partition
Slice of space

A continuous flow of experience constitutes consciousness.

“The present is big with the future, the future might be read in the past, the distant is expressed in the near.” – Gottfried Leibniz

Into the Unease

Creepy doll
Seems to possess
Disquieting sentience

The vacant eyes, devoid of true sight, hold a gaze that seems to pierce through time.

“Many things, for aught I know, may exist, whereof neither I nor any other man hath or can have any idea or notion whatsoever.” – George Berkeley

Royal Pearls

Patiently waiting
Round the neck
Lovely luster

Detail defined as garb accoutrements enhance appearances.

“All art is autobiographical. The pearl is the oyster’s autobiography.” – Federico Fellini

Master

Clarinet
Bassoon
Master

Up close and personal with an accordion.

“I knew nothing of the real life of a musician, but I seemed to see myself standing in front of great crowds of people, playing my accordion.” – Lawrence Welk

Ding Dongs

Wooden statue
Bear presiding
Over a shelf

Our experience of the world is the primary reality; independent of a perceiving mind, objects hold no inherent existence.

“For absolute existence of unthinking things without any relation to their being perceived, that is to say, without the mind of any spirit, involves a manifest contradiction.” – George Berkeley

Object Removed

Differential
Concrete stain
Aging

In this encounter, the object transcends its physical characteristics and becomes a lived experience.

“An event is the outcome of the past, so far as the past is relevant to the present. It is also the pregnant mother of the future” – Alfred North Whitehead

Juggle Affairs

Reciprocal influences
Ambivalent tone
Nascent interest

A study in handle ergonomics evoke the bells of rhymney.

“Is there hope for the future? Say the brown bells of Merthyr.” – Idris Davies

Relative Mass

Measure determine
Substance heaviness
Downward force

The power of relationships help to form the operative environment.

“The scale can only give you a numerical reflection of your relationship with gravity.” – Steve Maraboli

Craft Paper Window

Bailey’s
Lunch
Breakfast

The tangible and the familiar are the ground on which experience derives.

“The traces left behind by the things of the past… are like fallen leaves, which the wind of history carries with it.” – Walter Benjamin

Imperfection Harmony

Broken blind
Seemingly mundane
Window treatment

We do not inherently perceive the material world itself, but rather, our minds interpret sensory data to construct a world of experience.

“And in short, there is nothing which I cannot conceive as existing independent of my own mind, in some part of infinite space, without any relation to me.” – George Berkeley

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