Page 15 - Art First: Karel Nel: Observe
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the space. The demands of the circular space meant that the trap doors
                                                       allowing entrance fold upwards and sideways, like an elaborate but ef-
                                                       ficient wooden origami. These unexpected, irregular pieces start up into
                                                       the space of the room like abstract sculptures, propped up, when needed
                                                       by wooden struts (9). The large trapdoors follow a curved and angular
                                                       geometry that is not strictly Euclidean, and which look forward to the
                             9                         conundrums faced by astronomers who in recent years have needed to
                                                       create receivers that could fold up into a rocket capsule and then unfurl
                                                       when deployed in space. Nel speaks about their strange projection into
                                                       the circular space, as though presences at the portal as one enters the
                                                       inner and uppermost room (10).
                                                           Nel’s own studio, a long barrel-vaulted space flooded with air and
                                                       light (12), has its own unusual presences: the large, wooden Dan recep-
                            10                         tacle, from Liberia, suggests a purpose that is not evident to the outside
                                                       eye. The immaculately chiselled ridges that form the base of the bowl
                                                       suggest its use as a technology whose purpose is now elusive. Mounted
                                                       upright, the wooden Dan dish (11) seems both archaic and contempo-
                                                       rary, a receptor for knowledge now unnamed.
                                                          In Studio as observatory, a shaft of light penetrates the dim space.
                                                       Its precision seems emblematic of consciousness, and the human drive to
                            11                         make sense of the world: the light divided from the darkness; the night
                                                       from the day; the firmament from the waters; the waters from the land. The
                                                       studio is a place of quiet inner observation and contemplative actions that
                                                       form a quest, an ascent required to understand levels of consciousness.
                                                       The study of light and darkness is central to art and astronomy in both the
          LEFT: Enfolded space  detail                 physical and metaphysical senses.

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