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Solaris (Notes and Sketches, #18), 2013–16 Drawing

Bjorn Bjarre

Norway

Drawing, Ink on Paper

Size: 4.1 W x 5.7 H x 0.1 D in

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Originally listed for $3,250
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About The Artwork

Solaris is a living planet with a surface covered by an unknown substance which science, for lack of other terms, calls ocean. This oceanlike mass is restlessly transforming – constantly producing and destroying complex shapes. In addition, this substance is creating living organisms inspired by the subconscious of those who observe it. Several people have tried to express something resembling the experience of the planet, but the visualisations and stories only resembles shadows on the wall inside a cave. Still, I imagine this planet being real. If the universe is infinite, I think that everything we can imagine does exist. (…) It is only seemingly that this metaphor – me being on another planet – is a wish to be somewhere else. It is more about a physical presence in time and space and an absence of distractions. Nature’s strange transformation – the unhurried flow of time – creates a state without memory. I am already somewhere else, and the lines that gradually develop on the paper grow out of this slow, memoryless emptiness. They describes shapes: hazy, indeterminable, chaotic mirages in the borderland between organic structures, architectural ruins, alien entities and galactic phenomena. I am still working on these drawings, and I am trying to draw details so small that the smallest ones are only visible to the inner eye. The pen I am using is half a millimetre thick and the lines cannot be erased. If I make a mistake, I have to incorporate it into the picture. It is introspective and contemplative work and to me, these drawings open up an endless imaginary space beyond the worldly. It is to lose oneself in preparation for the immemorial. A series of works inspired by the science fiction novel Solaris by Stanislaw Lem, which chronicles the ultimate futility of attempted communications with the extraterrestrial life on a far-distant planet. Solaris is covered with an ocean that is revealed to be a single, planet-encompassing sentient organism. In probing and examining the oceanic surface from a hovering research station the oblivious human scientists are, in turn, being studied by the planet itself (- excerpt from wikipedia). "For some time, there was a widely held notion (…) to the effect that the thinking ocean of Solaris was a gigantic brain, prodigiously well-developed and several million years in advance of our own civilization, a sort of cosmic yogi, a sage, a symbol of omniscience, which had long ago understood the vanity of all action and for this reason had retreated into an unbreakable silence. The notion was incorrect, for the living ocean was active. Not, it is true, according to human ideas -it did not build cities or bridges, nor did it manufacture flying machines. It did not try to reduce distances, nor was it concerned with the conquest of space (…). But it was engaged in a never-ending process of transformation, an ontological autometamorphosis." (- excerpt from the novel). Being a long-time admirer of Andrei Tarkovskys film adaptation of the novel, I recently re-read the book, and realized that the planet´s incessant sculptural activity on the surface is only obliquely suggested in the film. The entire planet resembles a skin of an unknown material which - inspired by the human presence in the space station - is making gigantic abstract and representational formations on the surface. At the end of the novel the main character finds himself for a brief moment seemingly communicating with the strange formless ocean, although the knowledge obtained is as fleeting as the ocean itself. These works are investigations into the relations between a literary text, mental images, different pop-cultural visualizations of the unknown and invisible phenomena in astronomy and quantum physics. They are not only visualizing aspects of a probable distant planet, but also - like Solaris - probing the human mind for what lies within.

Details & Dimensions

Drawing:Ink on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:4.1 W x 5.7 H x 0.1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Bjrn Bjarre (1966) born in Oslo, Norway
www.bjarre.org www.tegneklubben.org

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