The Scribe wrote the Text in three Scripts
The First He read and others read also
The Second only He could read and no other
The Third neither HE could read nor any other
I am that Third Script
Shams Tabrizi
And our lives is a common sense that relies on the common fence that divides and attends but provides scant defense from the great light that shines through the pinhole when the pin-light calls itself self-hood, and the self-hood inverts on a mirror in an amora obscura. And it's mine or at least it's lent. And my life til the time is spent is a pin-light bent.
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A Pin-Light Bent by Joanna Newsom
Gabrielle Schaub is an artist primarily working in painting, who is interested in the profound relationship between creativity and human meaning-making processes. She is particularly interested in embodied forms of knowing and communication that exist beyond the immediately intelligible. Through abstracted landscapes—which sometimes incorporate figures and domestic objects—she seeks to tap into recesses of the mind and memory. Her work prioritizes the utilization of exuberant and nuanced colors, as well as naive and gestural marks that teeter in spaces of tension, irresolve, and uncertainty. Painting, for her, is about the rigorous process of sitting with self and seemingly infinite possibilities of form, as well as an honest listening to one’s will and integrity. It is a struggle that she hopes makes itself known, whether consciously or not, through the marks on the page. Ultimately, she hopes to draw attention to a human space of knowing which insists on fluidity, constant reformation, and heightened visceral perception.