If I stipple with ink a flower, it is a constant process of adding dots to complete an image. When using spiro , that adding thought is eliminated. Even if originally done subconsciously, I do not have to count or add as I work when using spiro because the teeth are counted, the design defined.
I had said in my video on spiro that by using a math-oriented tool, I can focus less on creative, more on mathematical. True, but not because of my thinking. I am thinking less math , and allowing myself to be influenced by math. Someone else has done the math for me, and my spiro designs will be better or worse (shakiness, skipping, etc.) depending on how I am letting the math of the tool influence me, not by my own thinking.
An anlaogy is to driving a car. I can rebuild a carburetor on my old MGB and have it run the way I know it can, but now, with Spirograph, I am driving someone's else's Corvette. The MGB (stippling) feels good, the stick shift is"mine", but the Vette seat is back a bit too far, it's a red car so it is louder, unfamiliar, it is using someone else's expertise.
In such a simple tool as a Spirograph, there is the same thinking of building a Corvette: math, engineering, that I do not have to think about.
The value of the art piece is no longer my thinking, but my ability to "be one" with math, science, and engineering. The universe is based in math. So, instead of limiting me with a simple tool, it is allowing me to think about the universe and not about counting the dots. Balance, neutrality, both hope and despair, in the simple math of a Spirograph.
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