Showing posts with label Alchemy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alchemy. Show all posts

Saturday, May 24, 2014

TALK TALK




Last night at the Symposium, I felt a bit like The Man Called X.

That is to say that they all knew each other, not me, and badge notwithstanding it was difficult to get a word in edgeways, which was insignificant because no one was listening to anyone anyway, just talking uncontrollably and without any discretion or intention to actually communicate. Speaking of which, and what about that 9/11 Memorial and Museum's gift shop (!) and inevitable Danny Meyer 'comfort food-seasonal farm products-local wine and craft beer restaurant' (!!) 'that's not being done for crass and commercial reasons' (!!!) ???  I ask you.


 


Talk Talk: Talk Talk (Link)

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Alchemy

      
  

Alchemical Vessel

     Since the human mind is prone to vagaries, we ought not, perhaps, to be astonished that in fairly recent times both indirect and direct attempts have been made to affirm the possibility of the transmutation of base metals to gold.  Berthelot himself, a sensible man, thought in 1885 that we might ulitmately pass beyond the periodic table and the certainties it appears to offer: "nul ne peut affirmer que la fabrication des corps reputes simple soit impossible a priori".  Later still Fritz Paneth, in a lecture delivered at Cornell University, said that "the trend of modern chemistry is toward rather than away from the theories which were condemned by the official science of the last century" and urged that the positive and negative particles of hydrogen might be primordial matter of the kind sought by the alchemists. 

     -- Wayne Shumaker, The Occult Sciences in the Renaissance, A Study in Intellectual Patterns  (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1972)




 
Alchemist following in the footsteps of Nature Atalanta 




Fritz Paneth, Heinz On The Beach, 1929, Autochrome




Marcellin Pierre Eugene Berthelot (1827- 1907)




Marcel Duchamp, 50 cc Paris Air, 1919




Carl Andre, Lead Alloy Aluminum Square, 1969




Marcel Duchamp, Why Not Sneeze, 1921





Carl Andre, Copper and Lead, 1995