The Indicator: Moby, Part 2

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Courtesy of Moby

I once saw a video of David Hockney discussing a Chinese landscape scroll. A provocative little art-geek film (or so it seemed at the time) entitled, ”A Day on the Grand Canal With the Emperor of China (or Surface Is Illusion but So Is Depth)”.

On the surface, the film’s subject is a 17th-century Chinese scroll painting. The depths, however, are personal and make the film more about the artist himself, a target for his projection. So, if surface is illusion but so is depth, then what we have is an interesting problem.

In this sense, he wasn’t trying to lay down any absolute truth or theory about Chinese landscape painting, or even himself. But merely his understanding at that moment in time—a moving target exploring another moving target. What would Hockney say about the scroll now?

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Cite: Guy Horton. "The Indicator: Moby, Part 2" 13 Apr 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/226265/the-indicator-moby-part-2> ISSN 0719-8884

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