
14/11/09
15/09/09
21/04/09
01/04/09
05/03/09
entrevista

mis amigas de pan con chocolate se tomaron la libertad de hacerme una entrevista. ahora que la leo, pienso en todas las cosas chipiantes que dije, pero la pase super bien con cynthia y maria.
03/03/09
28/02/09
18/01/09
abuelo

este dibujo tiene una historia muy particular y creo que todo el que lo ha visto la ha deducido o sentido de alguna manera. en el 2007 despues de la muerte de abuela (diciembre 2006), mi abuelo, a raiz de la soledad, se le agravaron todos sus males...
en un tropiezo (no recuerdo como) se fracturo la cabeza del femur.
mientras estaba interno en el hospital me toco cuidarlo algunas veces, asi que aproveche y realice este sketch en una de sus siestas. a los 2 meses murio, siendo esta la ultima imagen de el en vida.
cada vez que veo el dibujo me acuerdo de todos los detalles de la habitacion, el aire acondicionado, como mi abuelo se engurruñaba por el frio...
07/01/09
11/11/08
28/10/08
matthew ritchie
Entrevista en
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/ritchie/index.html#
ART:21: In a way, aren’t you inventing the universe in your work?
RITCHIE: I look at it more like, there’s the real universe. We know through our scientific practices, or we have estimated that we can
perceive about 5% of the real universe. So that’s 95%, gone. Dark matter, dark energy—it’s a very strange and complicated place. On
any given day, you or I might be able to find out about 5% in our entire lifetime of all human knowledge. Now can we use that
knowledge all the time? No, it would be amazing, but we can’t. We can probably use oh, 5% of that in our lives. And then when it
comes down to it, you probably make a decision based on about 5% of the 5% of the 5% of the 5% of the universe. And you’re pretty
confident that that decision is a really good decision. You say, “That’s what I’m going to do today with my life or in this relationship
or with this financial decision.” And you’re basing that on .00625% of the universe. And you’re totally confident that you’re somehow
connected, because you are. You are connected to that 100%.
I’m interested in reconstructing that chain of evidence that leads you from the one thing to the other, because there’s the real universe,
then there’s what we see which is really just a metaphor. It’s already a metaphor for the real universe. We can’t see 100%, we see 5%.
Then we represent that as another little diminished 5% to ourselves and then we put ourselves in that 5%. So we’re already playing
the game that I’m playing every day. This is in a way of sort of building back out and saying, okay, I’ve got this much, but I just kind of want to see just a little bit more, maybe 5% more. And that’ll push me out to the next level of possibilities and kind of open it up.
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/ritchie/index.html#
ART:21: In a way, aren’t you inventing the universe in your work?
RITCHIE: I look at it more like, there’s the real universe. We know through our scientific practices, or we have estimated that we can
perceive about 5% of the real universe. So that’s 95%, gone. Dark matter, dark energy—it’s a very strange and complicated place. On
any given day, you or I might be able to find out about 5% in our entire lifetime of all human knowledge. Now can we use that
knowledge all the time? No, it would be amazing, but we can’t. We can probably use oh, 5% of that in our lives. And then when it
comes down to it, you probably make a decision based on about 5% of the 5% of the 5% of the 5% of the universe. And you’re pretty
confident that that decision is a really good decision. You say, “That’s what I’m going to do today with my life or in this relationship
or with this financial decision.” And you’re basing that on .00625% of the universe. And you’re totally confident that you’re somehow
connected, because you are. You are connected to that 100%.
I’m interested in reconstructing that chain of evidence that leads you from the one thing to the other, because there’s the real universe,
then there’s what we see which is really just a metaphor. It’s already a metaphor for the real universe. We can’t see 100%, we see 5%.
Then we represent that as another little diminished 5% to ourselves and then we put ourselves in that 5%. So we’re already playing
the game that I’m playing every day. This is in a way of sort of building back out and saying, okay, I’ve got this much, but I just kind of want to see just a little bit more, maybe 5% more. And that’ll push me out to the next level of possibilities and kind of open it up.
25/10/08
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