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Art exists in time as well as space. Time implies change and movement; movement implies the passage of time. Movement and time, whether actual or an illusion, are crucial elements in art although we may not be aware of it. An artwork may incorporate actual motion; that is, the artwork itself moves in some way. Or it may incorporate the illusion of, or implied movement. Time has had a significant influence in the world of visual arts. Artists have depicted various symbols for time to express its impact as a philosophical question that is reflected in the human existence, or important events in…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Art exists in time as well as space. Time implies change and movement; movement implies the passage of time. Movement and time, whether actual or an illusion, are crucial elements in art although we may not be aware of it. An artwork may incorporate actual motion; that is, the artwork itself moves in some way. Or it may incorporate the illusion of, or implied movement. Time has had a significant influence in the world of visual arts. Artists have depicted various symbols for time to express its impact as a philosophical question that is reflected in the human existence, or important events in history to represent the passing of time.This essay is not another guide to show the evolution of art through time, but about the evolution of our perception of time through art.
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Autorenporträt
Shaharee Vyaas is a cryptomathician whös researching the synergies between science, art, and religion. He came to the realization that there are more points where these three fields are converging than there are points where they are bifurcating.Shaharee lives somewhere between Europe, Central America, and Asia as a digital nomad. For more than ten years he used to get around on a boat but had to give it up because it was too time-consuming. Right now, he gets most of his utilities by magic, just like everyone else who lives on land. If he is not writing, painting, composing, or moving around, he likes to read, entertain his wife, and to visit artist colonies who established themselves in old factories or in the middle of nowhere.He is also comfortably asocial-a hermit. Sometimes he tends to be a pessimist and an oil-and-water combination of ambition, laziness, insecurity, certainty, and drive.More information can be found at www.maharajagar.com or place an order in his online catalog at Saatchi. Shaharee's most inspiring works are rarely for sale, but the artist gladly sells reproductions of his works or puts them up for expositions. That's how he distillates a living from his art.