“A diagram is a perfect visual schema for posing impossible things, invisible forces, enigmas like the future—all posed as perfectly plausible vectors,” Sillman writes. “The diagram even outdid the camera as the early twentieth century’s best new thing because it could depict things in the universe that exceed the eye, like particles, waves, and quarks. A diagram’s scale is endless. It can indicate how dwarfed we are by the universe, or how busy the microscopic world is, all mapped out on the back of some envelope.”
Photo: From “Faux Pas: Selected Writings and Drawings” (After 8 Books, 2020) by Amy Sillman.
Meta: Type(s): Alumni,Article | Subject(s): Bard Graduate Programs,Bardians at Work | Institutes(s): MFA |