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EVENTS

RIGHT ACTION (Yucca Plant)

For an experiment in Concretism this is a documentracing of a living Yucca plant, in Ojai, CA. 

Those of you here last year saw my work as a designer/poet in the gallery outside this room. 

A few words to introduce the project you are about to experience. If you listen carefully, the process I experienced to create this project is much like the unfolding process of life and its path we travel on. 

Last year my wife, Susan, and I attended all the classes at the Ojai School of Theosophy. 

It is the custom at the OST attendees to create some project that reflects on the subjects taught (by Joy Mills, on the Mahatma Letters) and to share that with the students and invited public at the end in an evening program.
Like my colleagues, I had no idea what I would do. 

Since I contracted a pneumonia just before I came to Ojai, I often sat near a large yucca plant next to the house I stayed in, and then soak up some of the California sun during our breaks.
While doing this I started to become more and more aware of this enormous plant, being much bigger and taller than me.
And as I sat there admiring it, we developed an interesting communion that became the impulse for an idea to relate the plant to the Mahatma letters – somehow. 

Over the weeks this idea unfolded itself. First, I decided to take pictures of the plant, on slide film,
and to project these slides along with texts from the Mahatma letters. I decided to take a portrait of each leaf on the Yucca plant, making a single image of each leaf from a certain point of view. Also, I decided to approach this according to a simple spiral system, by photographing first the leaf at the lowest, ground-level, then moving to the next one by moving around the plant in a spiral, and from the lowest level to its highest.  

Then I also decided to similarly photograph portraits of the leaves or pages from the book on the Mahatma letters, which were to juxtapose with the images from the yucca plant. To show these slides I decided to use a dissolve unit to make their transitions smooth and metamorphic, and got my daughter to send a dissolve unit from our school.  

This needed music and I had in mind something or other by the composer Arvo Part – sort of classic yet contemporary. I bought two CDs at the local store, where I listened briefly to one piece that seemed just perfect. Its title was Litany, which is Christian, – not so appropriate for the Mahatma topic, but I thought it was sung in a foreign language and that no-one could understand the words anyway. Back at the house I played the whole thing, but my excitement turned into disappointment when I discovered that the words were in English and made a definite Christian reference. 

With the mind stuck on Arvo Part I tried his other works but seemed right.
Eventually I gave up on him and searched for alternatives.
Nothing seemed right, and I was running out of time.
One piece by Schubert seemed good, but as soon as I heard it, I recognized it as the music from the tape I received that documented my favorite aunt’s funeral in Holland who passed away just a year before, . . . so I dismissed it. 

I went to bed frustrated. Ironically, Susan and I had just given our lecture to the TS lodge entitled
“Dissonance is the Harmony of the Universe” in which we precisely addressed such encounters with uncertainty, … so I reminded myself that this was the opportunity for the right thing to come forward, something creative and not one from my conditioned response – but only if kept an open mind! 

That night I woke up with the notion to count how many leaves from the Yucca plant I had documented portraits of, since this plus the same number of slides from the book would determine the structure, and therefore the length of music. I got up and counted…to discover the amazing fact that there were 49 leaves on the plan!
Theosophists especially recognize this number as the auspicious number mentioned in various references in the Mahatma letters and other theosophic writings, being 7 x 7, and referring among other things to the seven fields and levels of consciousness and their seven sub-fields respectively. The next day I simply put the images in the order of how I shot the plant, and the less structured slides I shot from the pages of letters and played it with the dissolve unit set on automatic with its timer for 6 seconds per slide. The whole performance was 13 minutes and about 19 seconds. 

Back to the music. I again consulted the various CDs I had borrowed,
and this happened to bring me back to the Schubert piece mentioned earlier,
the Adagio from his String Quintet in C. Not only did none of the possible options come close to the timing, . . . the Schubert piece was exactly. . . 13 minutes and 19 seconds! So, I played the music with the slides, albeit somewhat reluctantly. This time, however, instead of the piece reminding me of my aunt’s funeral I recognized the music I had so often heard her play when she practiced her violin, which was a special and happy memory indeed. Clearly, this piece was the right music, in every way, as you will also experience! 

Curiously this project also contains three symbolic qualities in the material used: Firsts, the 49 images from the Yucca plant that refer to our human nature in the physical, emotional and spiritual fields of consciousness. Secondly, the 49 slides of texts, words that reflect the mental world and the mind. And thirdly, the music, which forms a synthesis of 49 parts in time, and as “sound” it can represent the invisible field of the Spirit. We also know that the mind links the worlds of form and spirit.  

Sit quietly and let the piece speak for itself as you experience its content on your own terms.