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Reality, as handled by an artist, is apparently less a straight line than a tangled headphone cable

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9 dimensions is the most concrete number in today’s pack, and it’s hiding inside a painterly argument that reality is not flat.

Reality, as handled by an artist, is apparently less a straight line than a tangled headphone cable

Kamal Sabran’s note reads like a studio session with the walls moved around: higher dimensions, parallel realities, and the suspicion that a coffee cup may exist in more than one place at once. The piece treats confusion as a feature of multidimensional living, not a bug. It also frames creative work as motion through dimensions without coordinates: painting, composing, and sculpting with sound become ways of entering vibration, while art itself looks like a 4D projection trying to squeeze into 3D form. Barbara Hand Clow’s nine dimensions are cast as frequencies of awareness, and Paul Halpern’s hunt for a “theory of everything” gets translated into the artist’s toolkit of color, silence, and absurdity.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: If reality isn’t flat, this is the kind of mess that makes art feel like navigation instead of decoration. Source: Perplexity Search (community: Reddit/HN)


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