Thursday 15 November 2012

From the Tide Pool to the Stars: Series 3. Number Games


From the Tide Pool to the Stars

         Man is .... related to all reality, known and unknowable ... plankton, a
shimmering phosphorescence on the sea and the spinning planets and an expanding universe, all bound together by the elastic string of time.  It is advisable to look form the tide pool to the stars and then back the tide
pool again.                                      
John Steinbeck,  The Log from the Sea of Cortez
                                                                       
Many articles have appeared in The New Scientist over the past few years about a 'Goldilocks Universe'; the idea that our universe has just the right conditions for life to evolve.
One of the articles discusses this idea in a book called Just Six Numbers: The Deep Forces that Shape the Universe. The author, Martin Rees, a cosmologist and the astronomer royal, addresses the cosmic coincidence that six numbers in physics have just the right value for the emergence of a universe with galaxies, stars, planets, chemistry and life and poses questions as to why this might be so.  I bought this brilliantly informative book and have read it many times.
The moment I saw the John Steinbeck quote Rees used to head the first chapter (above) I knew that this was the direction my work needed to take, I, too, needed to ‘look from the tide pool to the stars ...’ (see earlier series relating to Tides and Rock Pools)

The Six Numbers

The first number discussed is N, it relates to the size of the universe. Its huge value, 10 with 36 zeroes, gives us the balance between the nuclear forces that hold atoms together and the vastly feebler but ultimately inexorable power of gravity.  If N were any smaller our universe would be too small and too short-lived for anything larger than an insect to evolve.
The next number is ε – epsilon which has a value of 0.007 and defines how firmly atomic nuclei bind together and how all the atoms and therefore the chemistry of the earth was made.  If it had a value of 0.006 there would be no other elements only hydrogen, so no periodic table - no life.  Had it been a bit higher, at 0.008, protons would have fused in the big bang so not even any hydrogen!  
The next two numbers control the expansion of the universe.  First is W - Omega – about 0.3 – which refers to the ratio of the actual density of atoms in the universe per cubic metre, about 0.2, to the critical density, about 5 atoms per cubic metre, which would have provided so much gravitational pull the universe would have collapsed long before any life could have evolved.  Secondly is λ – lambda which with a value of only 0.007 is the weakest and most mysterious of forces.  It controls the expansion of the universe and so seems to dictate its whole future.  If it were much stronger the universe would have expanded too quickly and cosmic evolution would never have got started in the first place.
The fifth number Rees discusses is Q which gives rise to all stars, galaxies and galactic clusters and was imprinted in the Big Bang. One part in 100,000, it is the ratio between the rest mass energy of matter and the force of gravity. Were this ratio even smaller, gas would never condense into galaxies but if it were much larger the universe would be an empty place dominated by black holes.
Finally and so obvious is Ddimensions which must equal three as two or four would have made our evolution impossible.  The stability of the solar system relies on the fact that spacetime has, on the macroscale, only three physical dimensions.
These six values permit something significant to happen, and fortunately for us, to go on happening.
Series 3. Number Games (Encaustic works) 
Working through a series of encaustic works helped me to get nearer to an understanding of these ‘six numbers’ that constitute a ‘recipe’ for our universe, while the use of the ancient encaustic medium itself seemed appropriate for the purpose.
Encaustic paint made with bees wax melted with dammar crystals and coloured with pigment is applied molten in layer upon layer with each layer fused to the one before using heat. The surface can be incised and pigment worked into the cuts to create linear effects as in the works in this series. When finished it is polished to a soft luster that actually repels dirt!
Encaustic is believed to be at least 2,500 years old and was used by the ancient Egyptians to paint portraits of the dead. It is a very versatile, durable art form. 

Below are some of the Encaustic and Mixed Media works from the show.

From the Beginning of time
300x300mm, encaustic on linen 2012  SOLD

We Straddle the Cosmos  2012
300 x 300mm, encaustic on linen  SOLD

One Very Large Number
2011,  250x200mm, Encaustic on Board.  SOLD

One with 36 Noughts
250x200mm, Encaustic on board, SOLD

Alchemy in the Star  2011
250x200mm, Encaustic on board

A Flat Universe   2011
250x200mm, Encaustic on board.  SOLD

A Tentative Hypothesis   2012
250x200mm Encaustic with iron oxide on board. SOLD

Expanding Universe  2011
250x200mm, Encaustic on board.  SOLD

Luminous Sediment
2012, 250x200mm, encaustic on board. SOLD

The Texture of the Universe
2012, Encaustic and sand on board SOLD

Foam on the Wave Crests
2012, 250x200mm, Encaustic on board. SOLD

Three Dimensions
2011, 250x200mm SOLD

Cosmic Web    2012
250x200mm, Encaustic on board SOLD

Evolutionary Spiral   2012
250x200mm, encaustic, iron oxide on board. SOLD

A Tentative Hypothesis  2011
250x200mm, encaustic on board.  SOLD

Time: One Way Arrow 2012
250x200mm, encaustic and iron oxide on board. SOLD


A Interesting Universe   2012
250x200mm, Encaustic, iron oxide, verdigris.  SOLD
Star Dust: Neptune's Necklace  2011
200x180mm, Encaustic on board. SOLD

Ouraborus: Nereis amblyodonta  2012
200x1800, Encaustic on board.  SOLD

An Interesting Universe   2012
250x250mm.  Rust, verdigris, encaustic on canvas SOLD

Complex Chemistry   2012
Rust, verdigris, wax on board


The series of oil paintings that followed are a response to various cosmic concepts, for example that ‘we straddle the cosmos and the micro world’ – that we are intermediate in size between atoms and the sun and that our planet and everything in it, including us, are galactic fossils made from the debris from stars that exploded in the early universe.  The ‘Six Numbers’ make their appearance in most of these works as well.