(Formerly Trans-D Digital Art, a blog investigating - & creating - artistic anomalies since 2011.)
Thursday, March 23, 2023
Saturday, February 4, 2023
Conjuring up David (#2) (New: 2/27/23)
Wednesday, January 18, 2023
Hygeia & the Pentalpha
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| Medicine (as the goddess Hygeia), 1901, Gustav Klimt. |
In any case, Klimt embedded a very bold spiral in the sinuous windings of Hygeia's golden reptile. While (most likely) not a perfect golden spiral, it is similar enough to satisfy the pentagonal muse and (what some might imagine to describe) the Pythagorean philosophy.
Wednesday, January 11, 2023
Vale, Jeff Beck!
Sunday, December 25, 2022
The Song of the Golden Dragon
Monday, December 19, 2022
Google Celebrates Judith Leyster
Today's Google Doodle celebrates Judith Leyster... a lovely surprise to find on a Monday morning. It's kind of like, Judith Leyster Saves the Day... again!
Monday, December 12, 2022
Chasing Ancient Pentagrams Part III: The Quintessence - The Fellowship of Pentalpha
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| A floor mosaic - featuring a stellated dodecahedron - in St Mark's Basilica, Venice by Paolo Uccello circa 1430. |
Maurits Cornelis (M.C.) Escher (1898-1972), was a Dutch graphic artist especially known for the mathematical figures and motifs in his work, while Italian painter, Paolo Uccello, was not. Uccello accomplished amazing feats of perspective in his paintings, but his online oeuvre contains only one other example of a geometric solid. And, yet, it's his polyhedron which is unquestionably the "star" of the mosaic at St. Mark's basilica... surrounded by what looks like a string of... well, sliced zucchini (but don't quote me). In any case, regardless of the vegetables, his dodecahedron is a powerful icon.
But, there is one continuum between Uccello's mosaic and Escher's drawing. Both images glorify the stellated dodecahedron while, at the same time, revealing its fundamental source: the pentagram.
Wednesday, November 23, 2022
The Mad Minstrel in the Gallery
Tuesday, November 15, 2022
Chasing Ancient Pentagrams Part II: The Quintessence - The Egyptian Duat
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| An Egyptian limestone panel, 400-200 BC / Metropolitan Museum, New York |
"The Star which guided them is that same Blazing Star, the image whereof we find in all initiations. To the Alchemists it is the sign of the Quintessence; to the Magists, the Grand Arcanum; to the Kabalists, the Sacred Pentagram."
- A reposting of a quote (see Halloween post) via Albert Pike, a 19th century American Freemason.
In the large image (carved in relief) above, two baboons are worshiping the Duat, which hovers above the scarab - a sun symbol often used as a talisman for protection and placed inside a mummy's shroud - which, in turn, is set above the sun, placed here beneath the Duat.
(Note: Compare this design with the Kabbalistic tree-of-life inset right. Although not an actual match, there is a certain likeness in the way the elements are placed.)
This relief has a number of Underworld motifs... the most prominent being the pair of baboons facing each other. Baboons were said to be sacred animals in the Egyptian pantheon, and when depicted singly represented the great ibis-headed god, Thoth, a lunar god, who, in a sense, was Ra's (or Re's) counterpart.Sunday, November 6, 2022
If the future was yesterday, then, when is tomorrow?
Well, "the times, they are a changing" and quite literally. It's DST here in the states and we've just gained an hour... just in time for an interlude post hosted by that enigmatic woman in the video above, Laurie Anderson, a time-traveler (to be sure), whose amazing performance took place almost 40 years ago... and the world has, yet, to catch up with her.

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