Edition 1
OVERVIEW2026 ++
- Don’t Play Cards with Satan (for Daniel Johnston)
- Blueprints Inside
-
Broken Glass and Kindness
- Nobility Game in Pink
- Winstons and violet dawns
- That day at the playground (for Lucia Berlin)
- Black Dahlia for Carolee Schneemann
- Dry Formalism Infused with Otherworldly Interdimensional Portals (for John McCracken)
- American Poem (For John Wieners)
- Lichtenberg
- Monochrome for W
- Artist Statement
- Cv
- Contact
- Studio right now
- You & me / Volume 02
- Pure Abstraction
- Ist
- unterm Lederhimmel
Edition 2
ARCHIVE/INDEX202X ++
Notes —
Info
- Utilizing Expendable Materials to Create Works of Formal Pristine Beauty
-
alchemist noun
al·che·mist | ˈal-kə-mist
Alchemist: Someone Who Transforms Things for the Better
The long route to English for alchemist began with the Greek word chēmeia, which probably came from the word chyma (“fluid”), derived from the verb chein, meaning “to pour.” It then passed to Arabic, which added its definite article al- (“the”) to the Greek root. The word then passed from Latin to French before coming to English. Some other words derived from Arabic also retain the al- in English, such as algebra, algorithm, and alcohol; in fact, the transformative liquid that was constantly being sought through experimentation by alchemists is another word with the Arabic al- prefix elixir.