Portfolio : Giordano Bruno Series Artist's Statement  
 

Homage to Giordano Bruno II
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Homage to Giordano Bruno IV
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Homage to Giordano Bruno VI
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Homage to Giordano Bruno IX
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Giordano Bruno Series Artist's Statement
Click Here to view all prints in this series

Since the early twentieth century artists have investigated themes or forms associated with the cosmos, and I am no exception. In particular, I am attracted to the formal possibilities inherent in the geometry and the universal mathematical order that have been associated with the cosmos since the time of Pythagoras. The geometric elements in this series were inspired by the sketches and writings of Giordano Bruno included in his publication, Articulus adversus mathematicos, where he wrote of philosophy and mathematics.

Giordano Bruno was born in Nola near Naples in 1548. His exceptional intellectual abilities were soon noticed and he entered into the Dominican Monastery in Naples where he studied, among other things, Aristotelian philosophy. When he began to postulate his own ideas of the Universe he came to the attention of the Inquisition in Naples and then in Rome . To avoid persecution he left Italy in 1576 to live in France , England , and Germany where he studied, taught, and published many books.

During these years abroad Giordano Bruno studied the writings of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and others. He not only adhered to the Copernican view of a central sun but he believed that the stars were also suns lying at a tremendous distance from earth. He wrote, lectured, and passionately argued his ideas of the universe being infinite and vast and the possibility of an infinite number of worlds inhabited by intelligent beings. He spoke of God as being immeasurable and being present in all things. He was outspoken about his ideas of free thought and speech.

After returning to Italy in1591 he was soon arrested by the Inquisition and sent to Rome for trial. For eight years he was kept imprisoned, periodically interrogated and tortured. After receiving his final sentence of death he said “Perhaps you my judges pronounce this sentence against me with greater fear than I receive it”. Refusing to recant a single word his tongue was pulled out by his executioners and he was burned at the stake in Compo dei Fiori in the middle of Rome in 1600.

This series of etchings gives homage to the courageous spirit and ideas of Giordano Bruno, his quest for broader views and his relentless fight against corruption and for truth.


 
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