The Art Of The Passing Moment
By Kolleen Roberts, Inside IT: Information Technology
On-line Magazine
September 2001
A deep appreciation for what is small is one of the characteristics
of Japanese art. This sensibility is found in the compactness of
thimble-sized jade carvings called netsuke, in
the cultivation of miniature bonsai trees, in the
brief lines of haiku poetry. The expression of
the artist offers to the viewer an opportunity to seek a reflection
of the greater world in a microcosm, to find what the Western poet
William Blake described as "the universe in a grain of sand .
and eternity in an hour."
Jean-Pierre H�bert has made a claim on this
tradition in his piece "Ulysses," which is currently on view in
the Computing Commons Gallery. "Ulysses" is the focal point of H�bert's exhibit "Traces on Sand and Paper," which will be
on display through October 12. The artist visited ASU to lecture on his work on
August 30.
In the strictest terms, "Ulysses" is an artistic tool, a machine
for creating drawings. It is a beautiful tool, constructed of a
square, terraced, three-step mahogany base polished to a high shine,
and a central well filled with finely ground white silica. When
not in use, it resembles an elegant, grown-up version of a child's
sandbox.
Out of sight within the base are a computer system, two servomotors,
and a magnet. The magnet travels around the box along a series of
cables, driven by algorithmic formulas in a software program H�bert has written. The artist places a steel ball upon the
sand and, with what seems to be a cheerful determination of its
own, the little ball rolls resolutely through the powder following
the hidden magnet, until it has drawn the pattern the artist had
in mind.
The designs created by "Ulysses" tend to be elaborate geometric
ornaments - interlocking spirals; or a metagon, an open polygonal
figure proposed by Max Bill; or a twirling pattern of hexagons inscribed
inside other hexagons.
But "Ulysses" can also be programmed to draw around obstacles such
as stones, and thus to create H�bert's conception
of a dry garden, or karensansui. This is a Japanese
landscaping technique that is many centuries old, and one that is
associated with Buddhist philosophy.
A karensansui makes use of large, well-weathered
rocks placed in a field of gravel. Many such gardens are found in
Japanese monasteries, where it is the task of the monks to sweep
the gravel into swirling patterns around the rocks, using a rake.
Dry gardens are said to suggest islands rising from the waves of
the sea, or mountains in the midst of flowing rivers. They are meant
to imply the impermanence of a visible world that is ever changing,
and to be a starting point for achieving serenity and awareness
through contemplation.
The idea for his machine, according to H�bert,
came while reading a book on the ways man has tried to shape the
earth and make marks on it throughout history. The first generation
of the device, "Sisyphus," was developed in 1998 and 1999 during
a collaboration with Bruce Shapiro.
Born in Calais, France, in 1939, H�bert is
an engineer by training. He worked for IBM during the early years
of FORTRAN language
programming, and among his first computer drawings were diagrams
on financial arbitrage. He said he recognized quickly that the computer
could be a powerful means for self-expression. It also gave him
an outlet for the interest in art he'd had as a child.
"Traces on Sand and Paper" includes a selection of H�bert's line art in India ink, acrylic, and watercolor.
The prints, created with a pen plotter, are composed from continuous
lines that H�bert described as being literally
miles long, lines which double back recursively, as if covering
the surface of the page in sewing thread.
H�bert's command of his technique is such
that with slight variations in the position and density of the lines,
he can suggest that the viewer is really seeing folds of cloth,
or a dappled texture like rainwater on stone, or a cotton-like cloud
of fog out of which the outline of a nautilus shell slowly appears.
H�bert has extended his programming process
to carving wood with routers, and to etching patterns on glass.
The evolution of his work into different media has been partly prompted
by the fact that plotters are becoming an extinct species -
they are no longer manufactured.
H�bert said he believes in applying programming
to something physical, that computer art should be grounded in the
real world. "We can't just look at our monitors all the time," he
said.
And yet there is, one senses, a pursuit of something intangible
as well. "Ulysses" is named for a character in Greek poetry, a hero
of the Trojan War who wandered the earth after becoming lost while
sailing home. "Sisyphus" is another character from mythology, one
who was said to spend eternity rolling a rock uphill and then watching
it roll back down. H�bert makes clear in his essays that the achievements of
his machines are no less fleeting.
At the opening of the exhibit, the artist reserved for himself
the task of smoothing out the sand after each demonstration of "Ulysses,"
using a small flat brush and wooden rake. He noted in all seriousness
that one of his favorite parts of the artwork is erasing it once
it is completed.
"There is much that is similar in what I do, and what the monks
do, in how we approach this," he said.
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