John Paul Caponigro - From the Change category:
What we see changes what we know. What we know changes what we see. Perception, belief, action, and change are codependent. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Colour category:
Color is a powerful physical, biological, and psychological force. When less color and less intense color is present, trace amounts and subtle differences become highly significant and are strongly felt. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Creativity category:
The act of creation, making anything, is an alteration. We cannot eliminate the medium or ourselves from the process, and both are limited. We create decisive moments by devoting our time and attention to specific things. This is the greatest gift we can give anyone or anything - pieces of our life. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Interpretation category:
Less information often leads to more interpretation. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Miracles category:
Amid countless everyday miracles, I come in contact with something greater than myself and realize I am a part of it... I move in wonder through inspiration, reverence, gratitude, interconnectedness, transcendence, and grace. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Mirrors category:
Surprisingly, Gestalt psychologists have found that when subjected to Ganz fields (emptiness) for long periods of time, we hallucinate. Can empty fields serve as mirrors, not for our exteriors, but for our interiors? (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Mysteries category:
Mysterious spaces cause us to turn inward. Amid a rich upwelling of association, we encounter many aspects of ourselves. As we grow still, we come in contact with a unified, empty, yet full ground of our being. As our consciousness grows more spacious, we find connections between us and the wider world, a shared greater reality. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Photography category:
Photography is much more about elimination than inclusion. The images we make with a lens typically eliminate ninety percent of our field of view and everything that is out of our field of view. The shutter slices time, eliminating all moments before and after it opens and closes. Three dimensions are reduced to two. And in some cases color is removed. How can we call these kinds of artifacts unaltered? (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Photography category:
We are the strongest filter we can place before the lens. We point the lens both outward and inward. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Power category:
The primary mode of experiencing images is non-verbal... but once it's brought out into the light of the day, what's understood by the subconscious intuitive mind can be better grasped by the conscious rational mind. Aligning the two produces powerful results. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Questions category:
While many conclusions are drawn... the process of asking questions is more important than the answers... an ongoing process of discovery. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Revelation category:
The computer is a tool akin to a telescope or a microscope; a tool that opens vast frontiers of possibilities and brings them to light; a tool that captures the elemental and animates or holds it still at will; a tool that captures the organic flow of the earth's crust or the wash of a wave, and creates an impossible symmetry, an elemental Rorshach pattern ripe for continued exploration, divulging a thousand revelations. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Simplicity category:
Visual artists choreograph dances for the eyes, guiding visual journeys in specific ways. But when presented with little or nothing, the journeys of the eyes become erratic and finally still their restless searching. The eye and mind and heart grow quiet, come to rest, and begin to understand their own functioning more deeply. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Technology category:
With the arrival of the new comes the need to overcome fascination with novelty in order to approach substance and sophistication - a sophistication born of subtlety and depth of perception, not complexity and perceived virtuosity. (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Texture category:
Surfaces reveal so much. The marks painters make reveal so much about their work and themselves; their sense of proportion, line, and rhythm is more telling than their signature. Looking at the surfaces of nature may offer equivalent revelations. What do these shapes and patterns reveal about the world and their creator? Surfaces hide so much... (John Paul Caponigro)
John Paul Caponigro - From the Understanding category:
It takes asking many questions from many perspectives and drawing conclusions from many experiences to truly understand something. (John Paul Caponigro)
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