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5.
CRIOS
The presence of a regular scheme always has a meaning.
(W. W. Sawyer, Prelude to Mathematics)
Surgical
modelling of the facial profile,
just like cutting a rough gemstone to produce a gem, consists in
following a geometrical scheme. And the cephalometrics of the profile
is reminiscent of the angular symmetry of a precious stone, more
precisely the brilliant cut
seen in profile, which repeats the three-dimensional order of the
diamond.
F.P.
Ramsey, English mathematician, philosopher and economist of the
early 20th century, showed that we can amuse ourselves by drawing
lines in all situations, and thus discover that a geometrical
figure always results.
Every shape and
situation of creation contains its own geometrical scheme. The soft jellyfish,
the hard diamond, a pile of pebbles or a group of stars, the combinations wagered
in playing poker during a year, handshakes between strangers, can all be translated
into geometrical configurations.
Physicists
and mathematicians say that "living organisms have an extraordinary
capability to give order to the surrounding environment" (1),
and that "chaos possesses
an underlying geometrical shape" (2).
The
search for repeated schemes, for mathematical correspondences, is
inherent in all disciplines of the knowable and in the search for
order, symmetry and a hierarchy in the body-mind
and in space-time: this
is a subject evoked by thinkers of all ages and nations.
Seneca (4 BC -
65 AD), Balzac (1799-1850) and Nietzsche (1844-1900) - dissimilar men from dissimilar
ages -- all recognised geometrical consistencies typical of crystals (solids made
up of atoms in a regular structure) in the unity of body and mind.
Seneca wrote: "In all contingencies of life, you have something
incorruptible inside you, like a diamond axis around which the evil
facts of daily life revolve"; Balzac said that "the physiognomic
rules are precise"; Nietzsche invited us to "slowly harden
ourselves like a precious stone, so that in the end we remain quietly
immobile for eternity" (3).
Symmetry,
as an application of measurement (symmetry derives from the Greek
syn, together, and métron, measure) enables us to achieve
defensive measures and tools for interpretation. With it we do not
want to eliminate the asymmetrical or soft things from the world
-- as those who don't like oysters will hope -- nor to reduce human
beings to monoliths, but rather to reconcile the concave with the
convex (as Canova did), the hard with the soft (oysters have shells),
black with the white (a chessboard).
The man in the street always, instinctively, bends before
the absolute, whether it is absolutely beautiful or
absolutely ugly (4).
Note 1.
E. Schrondinger, What is life?, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1946.
Note 2. Theory of deterministic chaos.
Note 3. The transformation of the body into a diamond
is also the goal sought by the alchemy of Buddhist tantrism, known as Vajrayama,
which means "vehicle of the diamond".
Note 4. Piero Manzoni (1934-1963) in an aesthetic
work that is still talked about, sealed his excrement into a tin box, thus sanctioning
the synthesis between bodily and industrial production, between soft and hard,
septic and aseptic, definitively discouraging spectators from the habit of touching
art works with their hands.
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