One Canvas, Two Realities

By Steve Bennett | December 18, 2020

When I created Pangean Dream earlier this year, my goal was to produce a surreal study of extreme contrasts. Like all of my composite artwork, Pangean Dream began with literal photographs. I then used digital tools to bend, break, and blend the images. As the process unfolded, intention gave way to accident as the lines between “what is” and “what if” blurred, leaving the viewer to decide what’s real.*

 

Steve Bennett, “Pangean Dream,” dye sublimation on aluminum, 30″ x 20″ 2020

 

Pangean Dream blends photographs of my two favorite places on the planet. No two scenes could be more different: Iceland’s Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon (right side) and the Mesquite Dunes of Death Valley. Iceland, with an abundance of water, is often brooding and foreboding. Death Valley, with about two inches of rainfall a year, seems strangely serene and inviting. Both eternally reinvent themselves in their own ways (although Jökulsárlón has a limited shelf life—it’s ground zero for climate change). Jökulsárlón’s massive chunks of ice collide and groan in the lagoon, casting an iridescent blue glow. The dunes silently reinvent themselves, too, as the wind-blown sands magically reset the landscape. The French writer/poet and aviator, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, beautifully captured the desert’s essence in The Little Prince: “I have always loved the desert. One sits down on a desert sand dune, sees nothing, hears nothing. Yet through the silence something throbs, and gleams.”

And this has what to do with the time of corona? Everything. Pangean Dream is an apt metaphor for the surreal place we find ourselves in at the close of a dystopian year. As in Pangean Dream: one canvas, two realities. But while Pangean Dream is an impossible scene, my hope for 2021 is that we’re going to move past this mash-up of seemingly irreconcilable ideas and behaviors. Yes, the challenges are daunting and the suffering will be severe. But I am optimistic about the power of the  human spirit.


Pangean Dream is now on display in the online “Generous Kingdom V” exhibit at the Verum Ultimum Art Gallery.

* In his thought-provoking book, The Runaway Species, neuroscientist David Eagleman suggests that bending, breaking, and blending are the core cognitive strategies underlying all creative acts. Good read for anyone interested in creativity—it’s helped me articulate and frame my artistic process.

If the contrast between Iceland and Death Valley interests you, here’s a link to my exhibition, “H20 Extremes,” which juxtaposes scenes of desiccation with scenes of an abundance of water.

 

Copyright © 2020 Steve Bennett

 

Share this blog post:

4 Comments

  1. C. J. Lori on December 19, 2020 at 7:26 pm

    Really fascinating post and stunning image. I admit I had to look up Pangea, but the metaphor is very cool. It is like you are putting the continents back together in the image, and hoping that people will have the opportunity and spirit to put our broken world back together too.

    • Steve Bennett on December 19, 2020 at 8:55 pm

      What a poetic and insightful comment. Thanks so much!

  2. Charles Levin on December 20, 2020 at 12:37 pm

    East meets West; Earth meets Ice; Life meets Death; a truly transcendent and thought=provoking image.
    So much to explore here – well done!

    • Steve Bennett on December 20, 2020 at 4:44 pm

      What a great comment–love your “read” of the image. Thanks!

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply