Original artwork description:

64x84 cm | Filler, oak frame, stones.

For this work, I placed seven stones in the wet filler and let it dry. The same stones should be placed on top of the panel in corresponding positions.

Pareidolia is the tendency to see shapes and figurations where they don't exist. Such as in clouds or in the grey fields of the moon. It also includes the ability to hear hidden messages in music or random noise. Both tests for interpreting subconscious signals - such as Rorschach images, or various techniques of foretelling or reading signs, use pareidolia. The phenomenon is probably a result of the perception's constant process of interpreting and understanding visual stimuli. The linguistic concepts we perceive are not part of the material reality itself. They exist only in our minds. In a way, everything we see is a form of pareidolia.

One of the shapes easiest to perceive for the brain is the face. Being able to read the emotional register of the surroundings in the smallest detail is an essential ability. Faces are important. Simple renderings of them, like smileys, or emojis, can even be written with characters and have become a complement to the written language. They can substantiate or undermine text in the same way that body language does with speech. Small, almost imperceptible shifts in facial expressions or the use of subtle emojis can change a message from friendly to threatening. In the same way, animation of dead matter or objects can be perceived as both life-giving and frightening. Perhaps this duality reminds us that the perceptive conscious self also consists only of flesh - raw matter.

The face on the picture may appear slightly vicious. When we project supernatural evil on nature and the physical environment, it is perhaps to hide the even more frightening fact that nature is utterly indifferent to us. This void can be described by Jacques Lacan's concept of the Real. A register outside language where the subject dissolves. A kernel, closed and hard as stone, where nothing can be understood or even experienced. Where meaning no longer has relevance. Nevertheless, it is the only thing that really exists in a physical sense.

Materials used:

Filler (coarse and fine) in oak frame

Tags:
#abstract #painting #minimalism #oak frame #filler 

#345 Pareidolia (2021)

Painting 
by Johan Söderström

Star fullStar fullStar fullStar fullStar full 1 Artist Reviews

£1,005.34 Alert

Original artwork description
Minus

64x84 cm | Filler, oak frame, stones.

For this work, I placed seven stones in the wet filler and let it dry. The same stones should be placed on top of the panel in corresponding positions.

Pareidolia is the tendency to see shapes and figurations where they don't exist. Such as in clouds or in the grey fields of the moon. It also includes the ability to hear hidden messages in music or random noise. Both tests for interpreting subconscious signals - such as Rorschach images, or various techniques of foretelling or reading signs, use pareidolia. The phenomenon is probably a result of the perception's constant process of interpreting and understanding visual stimuli. The linguistic concepts we perceive are not part of the material reality itself. They exist only in our minds. In a way, everything we see is a form of pareidolia.

One of the shapes easiest to perceive for the brain is the face. Being able to read the emotional register of the surroundings in the smallest detail is an essential ability. Faces are important. Simple renderings of them, like smileys, or emojis, can even be written with characters and have become a complement to the written language. They can substantiate or undermine text in the same way that body language does with speech. Small, almost imperceptible shifts in facial expressions or the use of subtle emojis can change a message from friendly to threatening. In the same way, animation of dead matter or objects can be perceived as both life-giving and frightening. Perhaps this duality reminds us that the perceptive conscious self also consists only of flesh - raw matter.

The face on the picture may appear slightly vicious. When we project supernatural evil on nature and the physical environment, it is perhaps to hide the even more frightening fact that nature is utterly indifferent to us. This void can be described by Jacques Lacan's concept of the Real. A register outside language where the subject dissolves. A kernel, closed and hard as stone, where nothing can be understood or even experienced. Where meaning no longer has relevance. Nevertheless, it is the only thing that really exists in a physical sense.

Materials used:

Filler (coarse and fine) in oak frame

Tags:
#abstract #painting #minimalism #oak frame #filler 
14 day money back guaranteeFree returns

14 day money back guaranteeLearn more

5.0

Overall Rating

Based on 1 reviews
5 stars
1
4 stars
0
3 stars
0
2 stars
0
1 stars
0

Visit Johan Söderström shop

Johan Söderström

Star fullStar fullStar fullStar fullStar full (1)

Location Norway

About
Artist statement. Ever since I started working with art, I have searched for a mode of painting that felt right and consistent to me. I wanted the materials and methods... Read more

View all