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Artistic Statement:

On an Arctic Iceberg
The content of any piece
of visual art is multifaceted; although some aspects should be expressible in words, it is a sorry piece indeed whose content is entirely
so. The following is therefore not intended to explain the total substance of these pieces, but rather be a starting point for their perception.
The most important feature
of this work is the juxtaposition of elements referring to the natural world, and those referring to the world of man-made things. This reflects
two cherished tenets of this artist regarding our species' all too successful campaign of violence and poison on the entire biosphere, including
ourselves.
The first is that mankind
and nature can share this planet as members of a healthy, stable ecosystem. The shape of this association is bound to reflect the ambiguities
and confusions of mankind's ill defined position between being natural and non-natural.
The second tenet is
that technology has a crucial role to play in the achievement and maintenance of any such benign man/nature interaction. Technology has the
presently realized potential to be disastrously destructive of nature, but it is not inherently so: it obeys natural laws. Even should one
desire to do so, technology cannot be eliminated; it can, however, be turned to advantage.
The survival of the
human race is inexorably linked to its relationship with the natural world. A great deal of serious pondering and action on the subject of
this relationship is in immediate order if such survival is to occur. It is hoped that these pieces will be seen as celebrations of this challenge--
the most significant we have ever faced-- in all its complexity and internal contradiction, and regarding the achievability of a positive
solution, monuments to hope.
GW
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