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Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona | Hexagram #35 – Chin/Progress
Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona | Hexagram #35 – Chin/Progress
Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona | Hexagram #35 – Chin/Progress

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona | Hexagram #35 – Chin/Progress

Artist (American, born 1947)
Date1999 (printed 2003)
MediumGelatin silver print, with printed text panel
DimensionsMat: 17 7/8 × 21 13/16 in. (45.4 × 55.4 cm)
Support: 10 7/8 × 13 7/8 in. (27.6 × 35.2 cm)
Image: 8 13/16 × 11 1/4 in. (22.4 × 28.6 cm)
ClassificationsPhotograph
Credit LineGift of Robert and Kathleen Siebel, 2018
Object number2018.23.15ab
Descriptiona.) Horizontal landscape composition in canyon country with pattern of rock formations and shadow in top half and darker rock formation with peak at center in lower half. b.) Hexagram #35 – Chin/Progress
eMuseum Notes

The I Ching or the Book of Changes is the study of nature, its natural processes, and the study of human nature. Its teachings are based on observation of the natural world, of observing the flow of natural processes and time and taking those observations to human behavior, to learn beneficial ways of responding to situations.

It is universal, speaking to all of humanity, yet at the same time, it is highly individualized as it is directed towards the one person who is consulting it. It is a personal questioning with a universal answer. Although its knowledge is directed towards the one individual consulting it, it is not for the individual alone. It is holistic. It’s basis is the interconnectedness of nature and man. Everything is connected to the earth and mankind as each one influences the other.

The I Ching consists of 64 Hexagrams (consisting of 6 broken or unbroken lines), made by combining 2 trigrams (three broken or unbroken lines). Each Hexagram denotes an idea, for instance, the first hexagram Ch’ien – the Creative – Heaven, is a double trigram of Heaven – 3 unbroken lines repeated. The 2nd Hexagram, K’un – The Recpetive – Earth, is also a double trigram of Earth, 3 broken lines. There are 8 double hexagrams in the I Ching, while the other 56 hexagrams are a combination of Heaven, Earth, Thunder, Water, Mountain, Wind/Wood, Fire, and Lake. Thus it is a book that speaks in metaphors, using these very visual images to create ideas from the natural world that then interpret our day to day existence. These very visual concepts appealed to Janet Russek and David Scheinbaum, as they explored and learned the workings of the I Ching.

Both Scheinbaum & Russek, photographers, began to make images that were personal interpretations of the 64 hexagrams or commentaries in the I Ching. The images are not literal interpretations – not a photograph of a lake, or a mountain, etc., but rather, they are interpretations based on the understanding of the images and the emotional response to the Hexagram using the natural world as interpreter.

35

CHIN | PROGRESS


Iching-hexagram-35.svg

LI | The Clinging, Fire

K’UN | The Receptive, Earth

 

In the natural progression of a day,

The sun rises high over the earth

All is clear

Expansion

Lucidity

Sanctity.

 

The higher the sun rises, the more it emerges

from the dark mists, spreading the pristine purity

of its rays over an ever widening area.

(see the Richard Wilhelm translation of The I Ching or Book of Changes, p. 137)

On View
Not on view
Terms
  • landscapes (representations)
  • ecology
  • wilderness areas
  • west
  • rock
  • canyons
  • ancient