By Jon Goldman
I come from Woods Hole, Massachusetts, a small village on Cape Cod known for its marine science, and technology and its oceanographic discovery. Art and Science have a great deal of interdisciplinary interplay and I am involved as a research fellow in a new institute TEMPI which combines neuroscientist, musicians and a wide range of artists exploring the nexus between those two disciplines. As an environmental artist coming from MIT’s Center for Advanced Visual Studies, my interest is in developing major art projects that mine everything from the nano-scaled to civic scale.. There is great crossover in both inspiration of the artist and in the PROCESS of exploration. My current project, TRUTH PROJECT explores the word “truth” at the scale of 2 microns ( a human hair is 100 microns wide) where I have carved the word onto a pin ‘s surface as well as on a large scale at 8-feet by 48-feet making the letters out of perforated and illuminated aluminum and plans to place them into major east coast waterways like the Hudson River, Boston Harbor and the Potomac. It is my strong belief that every choice is a political one and with democracy at stake, the Arts can lead and emphasize the critical importance of the concept of Truth to all aspects of life. I come from a family of productive artists and scientists. And although the end goal may be different it is in THE PROCESS that we share the pursuit.
I am an artist with a 45-year practice. These two images are from my current TRUTH PROJECT, and display two of the many works focusing on the word ‘Truth”, a concept under particular assault in today’s world. It began with the sculpture “FUZZY TRUTH” a bright orange fur-covered version of the word, all in response to the idea of “alternative Facts” posited by a misinformed former spokesman for the 45th presidency. I am deeply interested in community. Years ago, I produced an event where I gave away 60 inflatable Santa Claus suits to strangers, (OCCUPY SANTA) and documented the experience of creating an instant community. From that I took on another multi-layered project to paint portraits of 300 of my neighbors. The effort became the VILLAGE PORTRAIT PROJECT. I was interested in the individual portraits, but more in depicting what a community looked like. I found inspiration from Paul Strand and Cesar Zavatini, who published “un Paese” as a portrait of an Italian village for that specific project. I come from the theatre where the notion of the gesamstewerke (The WHOLE work) is abundant in the crossovers of all the disciplines working in tandem to create something from nothing. I would credit a lot of my inspiration to the spirit of that collaborative effort.