Description
A jaw dropping monochromatic version of ‘Psuedo Symmetry’.
Without color, the light tells the story of this cathedral’s geometry, constructed 800 years ago.
With sacred geometry at the forefront of his mind, architect Richard Poore, was meticulous in the detailing of the arches, pillars, roofs, windows, and turned every opening into a divine passage balancing form with function.
While the arches down the grand hall may look symmetrical, if you look at the center points in which the arches meet you’ll see they don’t line up.
Follow the path down the photograph and you’ll see each arch has its own meeting point; individual to those that built it. Just like the human face and body, two sides were created from the same tools and the same template, but it’s not identically created.
This ‘appeared’ symmetry is fully characteristic of what it means to be human. As a society, we tend to take things of face value, to not look any deeper than how things first appear. This photograph shows that what we first see, isn’t there; that there’s a deeper detailing to everything. Just like us, the Salisbury Cathedral is an imperfect, perfect organism.
Resonance comes in as one of our most rare, with only 12 print’s being produced.
Reach out to our artistic coordinator to find out more about how you can order an exclusive rendition of Resonance.
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