


Abstract Splashdown Backpack
Designed and sold by Buckwig
$40.79
20% off ends in
00H
55M
23S
$40.79
Product features
- Carry your stuff, express yourself, keep your hands free, it's win-win-win
- Bag measures 17.7 x 11.8 x 4.9in / 45 x 30 x 12.5 cm
- Most standard laptops fit in the internal laptop pocket, which measures 13.5" x 10.5" / 34 x 27 cm
- Durable 100% polyester shell
- Vivid all-over design, sublimation printed for you when you order
- External mesh pocket and adjustable padded straps
- For a different style, check out the Drawstring Bag
- For more space, try the Duffle Bag
- Since every item is made just for you by your local third-party fulfiller, there may be slight variances in the product received

Abstract Splashdown
t has been a long and raging argument that the abstract expressionists of the 50's, 60's and 70's were very busy contemplating their own navels and trying to find the "zen" in everything they did. I would argue that they were in fact just one very important example of the hungry sleep-drugged soul seeking a way to be heard. However, many artsists of those times, and indeed today, would flatly deny anything remotely to do with spiritual things - or worse still - religious things. Take, for instance, one of my favourites - Mark Rothko. This tragic artist committed himself to the task of producing massive canvases with many vaguely resembling the outline of a window - especially an after image once the eye has closed. His vast expanses of colour seemed to hunt out a corner or edge in a desperate attempt to complete, or conclude, the picture. Not satisfied with that he went on to give up titling his work saying that he did not want to influence the onlooker in any way. Ironically he failed... and sadly took his own life. For me his works speak of wonderful tantilizing clues visually demonstrating the struggling spirit seeking (and succeeding!) in revealing herself - now that is real influence! Let me explain by an apparently unrelated route: I seek to assist my own spirit in attempting to make manifest even the tiniest, most pathetic, weakest fact that the spirit in us all is not only just trying to communicate with us - but is in fact actively seeking to set the whole human balance right... which is the spirit leading the mind and body back to her source - not the other way round - the mind and body leading the blinded soul to... well, eventually death. Not so long ago I came across the writings of Meister Eckhart, a fourteenth century Christian mystic. His words amazed me. He described in his many sermons what he believed to be the truth as to why we are here. He also revealed many tantilizing "images" of the spirit from the least angelic being right up to God Himself. His descriptions were... how can I put it simply?... abstract! In one of his sermons he described God as... "unknowable"... "not able to be understood"... "undefinable". In another he made a statement (one of many which may have contributed to him being accused of heresy!) "People say God exists... God does not exist... " left out of context that would be a truly blasphemous assertion. But he went on to say that "... God is far greater... God is beyond existence". These and many other controversial sayings have impressed me so much that I have come to "see" God as an abstract entity - not, I hasten to add, an anarchic abstract form - but rather a God far more powerful, far more greater - than I can imagine... in other words totally undefinable. Rather than this putting a distance between me and God, it has done exactly the opposite. And when Eckhart began to describe the life of Christ in an almost completely abstract way - Eckhart said that Christs life was the greatest example of the seeking and finding the uncreated source of the pure soul - my imagination began to run like a film of frenzied obscure visuals. Eckhart has become, to me, the patron saint of abstract artists. The beauty of Eckharts enigmatic words are intensely inspiring. What better way to illustrate his poetic writings than to describe Gods "isness" in the very basic form of a gigantic flat area of one saturated colour untainted by anything else. Strangely enough this could be part of an exact description from one of Rothko's immense, sometimes almost monochromatic, paintings. He was contradictory in his religious expressions sometimes but that is exactly what is part of our double life as abstract art it could be said is the epitome of no rules, just expression wherever it comes from, and in any form or interpretation you as the appreciator wishes to define it.
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