(A selection based on various writings since 1984. First appeared in the catalogue of the exhibition at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 2003. Later in catalogue to show at Tel-Aviv Musseum of Art, 2004. Appear here with the addition of "Names").
"Figure" and "Ground"
In nature, order exists in the large scales. It is present too in our lives, but there it is statistical, that is, it functions in life without a precise execution in each and every instance and within a rather large margin of error. It is actually within that margin of error that life transpires. The upshot is that in real time, our lives are committed to a state of perpetual chance, a state that thwarts any forecast that is more than a generalization so broad that it is in fact useless. A gift for swift unrelenting improvisation and a proclivity for sheer luck are therefore prime qualities for survival.
This fundamental human condition is the background in front of which I try to place a clear image of order and stability. My paintings spring from a need for equilibrium and I assign to them the task of functioning as a kind of gyroscope, using symbolic order as a counterweight to the turmoil and confusion of reality on our, human, scale; objects that are metaphors of greater, more complex orders. The paintings are "non-objective", i.e. they contain no images deriving from corporeal reality visible to the unaided eye, precisely because they are meant to be the antithesis to that reality. The synthesis, of course, is the complementary co-existence of the "ground" and the "figure" as a dynamically linked entity.
Metaphysical Geometry
Nature prefers certain proportions in its structures and processes. These same proportions are at work in our psyches and are the source of our need for harmony and of our ability to recognize it. Early in the history of the first great cultures, people realized that the source of those proportions and the potential creative energies that rested in them were encoded in the relatively simple act of drawing a perfect circle. They found that by systematically dividing up the circle into equal portions with a compass and ruler (probably pegs and ropes on the ground) those proportions could be played upon in such a way that the primal unity of the circle would generate from within itself all the archetypal forms and in so doing reveal the secrets of growth and transformation. For thousands of years that act was indeed conceived as a symbolic participation in the original Creation.
It would seem only natural then that this unique generative system be applied to the design of temples, each conceived as a model of the cosmos, that were the major projects of entire cultures in their supreme effort to connect material to spirit. Today, we no longer build temples and geometry is taught merely as a technical tool. But art and its ability to convey concepts continues.
I use several of the methods integral to the "antique" approach, such as the legendary Golden Section (also known as the "Divine Proportion") and Golden ("Fibonacci") Scale and root rectangles. I have combined these with Western (Itten, Albers) and Japanese harmonic colour systems. My feeling is that the use of these methods and systems, as simple as they are, is as close as I can get to actually
touch and simulate, albeit in a primitive fashion, the true reality and the "style" of nature.
The Appolonian Ethos: An Alternative Art
From its earliest beginnings to the present day, the history of art has subdivided into two super-cultures, each possessing a distinctive ethos and artistic mentality. An artist is drawn to one or the other mainly by his disposition, though one cannot disregard the influence of time and place.
In the Dionysian art culture (also known as Romantic or expressionistic) the
artist himself is the protagonist of his creation which reflects his inner world or presents a personal interpretation of the surrounding reality. Its most characteristic sign is its gestural " handwriting" or brushwork that at times can be, or seem to be, barely controlled. Parallel signs appear in sculpture in the choice and handling of materials. A central value of the Dionysian Ethos is the concept of the creative act as a chain of actions and responses, of improvisations, a tense and exciting adventure whose final result is not known in advance. A parallel expression in music: jazz.
The Appolonian Ethos (known also as Classical or "constructive") is founded on two essentials. One is that a creation should be constructed around transcendent concepts that lay beyond everyday experience. The second is that a work of art should be founded on a chosen set of game rules which, once defined, become obligatory. The paradigm of the Appolonian Ethos is architecture, particularly temple architecture. This is a paradigm of systematic order, the product of careful planning and precise geometry, of integrated systems of harmonic proportions such as the Golden Ratio and Progression (that continues to surface again and again in diverse areas of research, including Fractal Theory), and elegant finish. A parallel expression in music: the fugue. As in architecture, an Appolonian creation does not bear palpable signs of the artist's hand. His personality, his preferences and vision are expressed in the entirety of his style. It is a delayed, sublimated expression that manifests itself in the finished works.
The long hegemony of the Dionysian in Israel's plastic arts has created a situation in which I, who associate myself with the Appolonian ethos and thereby belong to a miniscule and "esoteric" minority, am obliged to write texts such as this one as a kind of apologia.
Territory
My work has been involved with geometric order since the middle 1960s. For 20 years I had rigorously confined it to the strict purist discipline of Concrete Art. That meant systematic, self-contained relationships of forms and colours that alluded to nothing outside of themselves. In the middle 1980s my unease with what was happening in the country escalated into a crisis of belief in the Zionist Project. The gap between the emerging character of the country and the vision and ideals that drew me to Israel had grown to such critical proportions that I felt that if I didn't succeed in rebuilding my bond to this place I would have no alternative other than to sever my connection to it. The concept that eventually de-fused the personal crisis and led me to place my work in a new context - both are inextricably interwined - was that of a reconstructed self-image according to which I was not only an Israeli but also a permanent resident in the geographical-historical region that surrounds my home. I took the map of the ancient world and redefined it as a personal territory that extends from the Tigris in the east to the Pillars of Hercules in the west and from Abu Simbel in the south to the province of Veneto, Italy, in the north. This enabled me to extricate myself from the intense pressure of daily life in this narrow country and to move about freely in a broader expanse of space and time. The change in scale has been decidedly therapeutic.
In this way I returned metaphysical geometry to its place of origin, Egypt, and to the architectural legacy of the temple in Egypt, Greece, Jerusalem and the Islamic world. I concentrated mainly on temple plans, construction in Canaan and the Israelite kingdoms, architectural elements and details, aspects of the tel (four-dimensional layered patterns) and various objects. I applied the traditional proportions and other characteristics in order to create new versions combined with elements from different times and places together with new ones.
Colour acquired new attributes. It was no longer a matter of pure autonomous harmonic configurations but became a transmitter of symbolic and cultural information. I reached the conclusion that the quintissential hues of the greater part of "my" territory derive from the complementary pair blue and orange. Together with our typical extreme contrasts of light (white) and shadow (black), a palette of colours can be constructed from that axis and its moderate oscillations and admixtures that one actually encounters in the landscapes and the architecture. The typical proportions are large areas of orange derivatives (browns, tans. desert, sandstone, bricks) contrasted with small amounts of blue derivatives (turquoise, greens, tiles, oasis, seashores).
The Holon
The holon is the basic unit of every kind of evolution.
A holon is an entity that is in itself whole and simultaneously is part of some other whole. Each new emerging Holon includes and transcends its predecessor(s). The process produces not only increasing complexity but also additional, unpredictable, attributes in each new stage or generation of growth.
The Holonic model makes clear that each new stage of development carries with it all the stages that preceeded it. The "old" remains part of the new, it is not erased. That is a situation with deep significance in respect to cultural developments.
Looking back, the holonic model accurately describes the changes that took place in my work and in the self-image that I created, stage after stage of "including and transcending".
Holonic evolution is also the generic method of Islamic pattern-making.
The Islamic Pattern
The adjective "decorative", which is usually appended automatically to Islamic patterns by many Western observers, and the term "arabesque", are misleading. They suggest that patterns are bereft of meaning and function merely as visual entertainment and are not a serious art form. It is likely that this is due to the fact that in the temples erected by all the known cultures with the exceptions of Judaism and Islam , the structure itself was the support for an additional layer of art concerned with storytelling and the portrayal of mythical and historical figures. Like the floor in the Sistine Chapel, geometric designs were subsidiary, indeed often decorative, parts of the architectural setting and were outside the focus of attention. In Judaism and Islam, images that might be construed as idolatry are forbidden and permit only the use of geometric symbols and quotations from the holy texts. In Islam, however, the sophisticated geometric design method of mosque architecture produced a new art-science of pattern-making. The building, based on the relatively simple geometric unity of the plan, acts as the support for intricate patterns .The more interesting of these patterns are dense with sub-patterns and suggest several readings. The end result is a coherency of meaning throughout the entire edifice, its exterior and interior, representing growth, evolution, invention and diversity as timeless cosmic universals.
Aside from the fact that geometric systems have long been recognized as the structural mode of matter, this cosmological concept that crystallized in visual form more than a thousand years ago often coincides with Fractal Theory which, since the early 1980s of the 20th century, has created geometric models that reproduce the underlying order of so-called "chaotic" phenomena in nature. Both the Islamic method of pattern-making and the fractal system are based on the reiteration of simple "seed" polygons or modules. These "coagulate" into groups, which in turn aggregate into ever larger groups. The identifying mark of a fractal image is that the composites are identical in their overall contour with that of the smallest seed-form.
Embracing as it does both metaphysics and contemporary science, the Islamic pattern is an ideal visual metaphor of the universal evolutionary creative force at work.
Names, My Names, "Kadim"
The names we bear are not to be taken lightly. A name projects an image, inwardly, to the person bearing it, as well as to others. They are connotative. The names given to us at birth are not necessarily ones that we like, or feel comfortable with. I suspect that when that happens it may be due to an ill-fitting persona that the name exhudes and which does not coincide with the indivdual's self-image, his anima. Names are comprised of four elements: cultural or national identity, semantic meaning, sound and appearance.
As far back as my mid-teens I remember toying with variations on my given name, Mark Raymond Berman. The source then was my unease with "Berman". It is an uneasiness I feel to this day. When I decided to recharge my Jewish identity and become an Israeli I exchanged Mark Raymond for the Hebrew name Reuven. It was common practice then for immigrants and public servants with European origins to change their usually Germanic-Yiddish names to Hebrew names. Reuven proved to be a good instinctive choice. Much later and after sporadic searching over a period of 40 years (it was difficult to find a name that seemed right in all four respects, in addition to which, I had qualms about changing my name while my parents were still alive), I added the Hebrew "Kadim" after Berman with the intention of eventually dropping Berman altogether. In the 1980s there were those who retrieved their Diaspora names as a declaration that they no longer wished to disengage themselves from their origins and placed them alongside their Hebrew names. Again I was out of step. I used the addition of Kadim for the first time in 1991 on the invitation to an exhibition, having felt that the time was ripe to announce that I had unequivocally naturalized myself in my recently extended cultural territory, personally as well as artistically.
The root "KDM" in Hebrew is common to the words for "east" (archaic) and "antiquity" as well as "to go forward". A perfect fit! Later, I decided that the next time I show new work I will appear as Reuven Kadim, without Berman. I do so with a sense of great relief. My wife does not agree to adopt it at this late stage so it is not a legal name but a "pen name". Thus I have put the final touch to my long identity project in classiic holonic style
Dialogue
The dominant culture of western Asia and of more than half of the Mediterranean basin is that of Islam. The central pillar of Islamic art, its morphological language, is that of precise geometric systems. Because the language of geometry was and continues to be unknown and/or distasteful to most Israeli artists, nearly all the references made to the Arab East in Israeli painting have been attempts to capture a milieu of streets, types, landscapes, interiors and objects. In the early decades of the century new-immigrant painters did this in a romantic idealistic vein. In more recent decades it has taken the form of political protests against the behavior of Israel towards Palestinian Arabs. But no dialogue has ever been initiated with Islamic art, except in one or two instances related to popular or folk art. That may also be due in part to the fact that high Islamic art is today a heritage rather than a living body of
contemporary creativity. The extremely rare exceptions (lone artists, sculptors and architects) only prove the rule. Its magnificent anonymous achievements comprise a kind of copyright-free image bank which craftsmen use to copy and imitate. The attempt to master the use of its language and its morphologies and carry them further, as a novice practitioner, has been the essence of my efforts in recent years. Of course, all the conditions have changed but the fertile Jewish-Moslem cultural interactions in pre-Inquisition Spain are an historical precedent that should not be forgotten.