On Numinosity
"Though
men associate with it most closely yet they are
separated from it, and those things which they
encounter daily seem to them strange."
Heraclitus
From 1929 to 1962, the French phenomenologist, Gaston Bachelard wrote several books in which he analysed and elucidated the "poetics" of matter, revealing the subtle yet profound ways the properties and associations of various substances affect the imagination. He demonstrated scientifically that water, for instance, could be experienced as "dissolved girl." He psychoanalysed fire and spoke knowledgeably of the "hidden spirit" imprisoned in the solids, liquids and gasses we usually take for granted. "Dreaming of the secret power of substances, we dream of our secret being. The greatest secrets of our being are hidden from ourselves."
For
some time, we at Amateur have been exploring a small
branch of the tree he planted. A numinous object is
one in which matter, form and situation combine to 'haunt'
or otherwise fascinate the imagination. The objects
we attempt to understand and hope to create are sometimes
physically tangible, actual things. But literary objects
are also an important part of our research.
[see TEST
CASE - THE NUMINOSITY OF LITERARY OBJECTS]
"I
have always been haunted by objects that possess
their own light: things and situations that cast
peripheral illumination on known ideas, causing
them to be viewed in a different configuration."
Brian Catling, sculptor
An early experiment:
Fifteen objects were created by choosing from a menu
of thousands of possible forms and materials. The aim
was to create things which would generate a numinous
charge in any situation (though, obviously, the charge
would be different on, say, a ship at sea or in, say,
a mushroom-cellar). The instrument of our imagination
was the sensitive geiger counter/lie detector from which
we took our precisely calibrated readings. For "a yolk
of leather in a tobacco egg", for instance, a reading
of 63.7 nmns was recorded. While an "arrow of ice wrapped
in surgical gauze" generated no more than 37 nmns. "I
am large, I contain multitudes" wrote Walt Whitman.
The multitudes we contain provided the data for our
measurements. The figure in nmns is the average of many
hundreds of individual readings made over several years,
in some cases over several decades.
15 Objects and Their Titles
That
some of these objects bore more than a passing resemblance
to the art of the day was noted. As an experiment, wondering
if we weren't artists ourselves, we assigned titles at
random to our models. This completely altered the readings
we got. The cylinder of dust which had generated a modest
22.6 nmns when untitled, was now identified as "Silo"
and registered an impressive 81.8 on the numenometer. Calling the yolk of leather in a tobacco egg, "October Seventh", on the other hand, diminished its charge from 27.4 nmns to a mere 7 nmns. Identification and analysis of the factors involved in such shifts will continue to absorb us for some time to come, (i.e. progress in this field is slow).
More rapid has been our progress in techniques of Object
Generation. Once a tedious process involving pages of
documentation and cumbersome equipment, matter & form
can now be combined automatically on a computer screen
thanks to the development of object generating engines
[see FROM THE CONFIGURABLE
CATALOGUE OF OBJECTS].
PB