BUCHAREST.- Everything in our nature is related to fluids and liquids.
The study of the geometry of liquids and stationary waves is in the centre of the artist and researcher Gabriel Kelemens work.
To explain his lengthy and thorough researches on the dynamics of standing waves and the Universal Sphere-Vortex Principium, Gabriel Kelemen uses art. The practice of these experiments has taken over 15 years and the results are emphasizing the complex mechanisms beyond it.
After a unique recipe, Kelemen induces and maintains standing waves on carefully selected liquid corpus, invisibly shaping them. The metamorphoses of the liquid matter traversed by vibrant energy reveal dynamic patterns symmetries.
The Sphere and the Vortex principium derives from the experiments on standing waves, as the sound-vibration applied to fluids makes the latter become dependent on form and geometry. When vibration is applied on liquids, there takes place a differentiated displacement of branched circular currents that rotate. This is similar to marine hydrous currents, atmospheric currents convections and, down to biological scale, similar to blood-lymphatic circuits.
The exhibition Cymatics: when Sound meets Substance, prepared by
Nasui collection & gallery in Bucharest, unfolds in four stages which are corresponding to different angles of Gabriel Kelemens study: drawings, sculptures, digigraphies and video.
Kelemen uses the means of photography and filming to record, in macro-mode, his laboratory experiments in the liquids worlds. The main purpose of these tools is both documenting and engaging the audience into the world of Cymatics, but the results are surprisingly defined as generative art. The exhibition hosts several digigraphies and a video room.
The exhibition displays a series of unique drawings, that act like an illustrated decoding for the Universal Sphere-Vortex Principium. Each plate is revealing one aspect of this theory after the other, thus making a complete circle: enunciation, demonstration and Q.E.D. The plates are meticulously organized as maps, including written explanations and notations. In tones of sepia, to ensure the chromatic coherence of the entire visual discourse, the drawings also hint at and bring to mind the world of academic, philosophical studies.
Kelemens sculptures are actually the result of freezing the liquids movements and energetic vectors in certain volumetrical stages, during long generative progresses. The evolution of these essential mathematical entities reveals marvellous and unexpected processes of the organic life and organic nature.
Sound visualization is one of the ancestral human dreams. Capturing the image of the ephemeral sound still concerns scientific environments. Almost everything in the universe is in a state of vibration. Gabriel Kelemen
The Cymatics: when Sound meets Substance exhibition is accompanied by a book.
Curator: Cosmin Nasui
Gabriel Kelemen is an artist and researcher. He teaches at the West University of Timisoara (Romania). He is one of the recognizable global representatives of Cymatics, including TED. In long-term studies, he has found his very own way into this discipline. In addition to observation, Kelemens artistic understanding and penetration of the world of Cymatics are made through drawings, videos, photos and sculptures.
From significant revelations of the geometrical content of the shapes, Kelemen moves on to the complex representations of the nature. After profound study of macro universe, spheres and spirals and their presence on all levels of reality (magnetic fields, ocean currents etc.), Gabriel Kelemen turns his investigation towards the human body (bones structures, bloodstream etc) and the micro universe (cellular division).