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Culture & Religion

Jonathon Keats Will Gently Explode Your Mind

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Photo Credit: Jennifer Dessinger

Adam Gopnik calls Jonathon Keats “a poet of ideas, whose work always rests on a solid basis of scientific research and resolves in a startling, semi-serious image.” While much of contemporary art is meaningless outside of a closed circle of creators and admirers, or heavily dependent upon elaborate theoretical explanation, Keats’ work captures the imagination instantly, twisting the familiar into novel and wonderful forms. 

Here are just a few of the things this man has done: 

  • Created various entertainments for plants, including: 
    • pornography (videos of bees pollinating flowers)
      • a kind of “travel channel” featuring video of the sky over Italy, on the premise that plants, being stuck in the ground, would find travel fascinating, but might not relate to, say, the Louvre. 
        • A photosynthetic restaurant featuring a variety of gourmet sunlight dishes
          • Attempted to genetically engineer God in a petri dish
            • Sold real estate in the extra dimensions of time-space proposed by string theory (he sold 172 lots in the Bay Area in a single day, according to Gopnik’s article). 
              • Written a story that is currently invisible, but will reveal itself over the next 1000 years
                • Fomented a Copernican revolution in Art.
                • Gopnik quotes Keats on his own work: “What I’m always doing is trying to pose thought experiments in the old-fashioned philosophical way,” he said, “imagining from a radically different perspective circumstances that are very familiar to us, in order to make them unfamiliar and force us to start to pull them apart. So if your children are supposedly vegetating in front of the television when they watch it for hours, what happens when you show television to vegetables? I don’t have the answers, or I wouldn’t make the work.”

                   Jonathon amidst the grateful botanical patrons of the Photosynthetic Restaurant at the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, California. 

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