Daniel Joglar: Dabbah Torrejon.In 1912, Alfred Wegener Alfred Lothar Wegener (Berlin, November 1, 1880 – Greenland, November 2 or 3, 1930) was a German interdisciplinary scientist and meteorologist, who became famous for his theory of continental drift ("Kontinentalverschiebung" or "die Verschiebung der Kontinente" in his words). , the father of the theory of continental drift continental drift, geological theory that the relative positions of the continents on the earth's surface have changed considerably through geologic time. Though first proposed by American geologist Frank Bursley Taylor in a lecture in 1908, the first detailed theory , presented extensive evidence showing that some two hundred million years ago the world's continents were all joined into a single supercontinent su·per·con·ti·nent n. A large hypothetical continent, especially Pangaea, that is thought to have split into smaller ones in the geologic past. Also called protocontinent. , which he called Pangaea. As the seafloor spread, Pangaea broke up and the continents began to drift apart Verb 1. drift apart - lose personal contact over time; "The two women, who had been roommates in college, drifted apart after they got married" drift away , eventually assuming their present positions. Four years ago, Daniel Joglar used the name Pangaea as the title of a work consisting of dozens of colored cardboard layers hung on the walls slightly askew a·skew adv. & adj. To one side; awry: rugs lying askew. [Probably a-2 + skew. , evoking tectonic plates This is a list of tectonic plates on Earth. Tectonic plates are pieces of the Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, together referred to as the lithosphere. The plates are around 100 km (60 miles) thick and consist of two principal types of material: oceanic crust (also called in constant movement but also expressing the basis of his work in general: subtle displacement. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Joglar works with ordinary office supplies--paper clips, rulers, protractors, pencils, erasers, colored paper, note cards, envelopes--that seem in his hands to magically turn into something else, something radically different. This effect has little to do with aggressively modifying the materials or even with recontextualizing them. What actually happens is almost imperceptible: Arranged on different tables, as motionless as stones on the sand of a Japanese garden Japanese gardens (Kanji 日本庭園, nihon teien), that is, gardens in traditional Japanese style, can be found at private homes, in neighborhood or city parks, at Buddhist temples or Shinto shrines, and at historical landmarks such as old castles. , these everyday objects, things we've seen a million times, suddenly acquire the majesty of old mountains. Displayed in isolation, positioned with great precision, they become landscapes one would not dare rearrange, perfectly untouched by daily life. The trick is beguiling; it has to do with order but also with chance. "I do not intend to control what happens on the tables; there is an element of fortuitousness that is essential," Joglar explains. Joglar's work is extremely quiet. The objects lie on the tables in repose, as if the artist had put a full stop to the flux of everyday life. His latest show, "Sonidos Distantes" (Distant Sounds), seemed to incorporate sound, or at least the idea of silence as a sound. Somehow the objects in the ensemble recall music, but except for a beautiful guitar on the wall, they evoke it vaguely, without ever strictly referring to it. "Faraway sounds have always intrigued me, much more than the ones nearby," the artist explains. For it is the distancing, the slight displacement in time or space, that gives Joglar's artwork that intensification that in a musical tone is known as resonance. Joglar seems to look at commonplace things as if he were looking at a remote landscape, his eyes half-closed but in constant awe of the textures, colors, and forms that surround him. But in this new exhibition his gaze has zoomed in on precise geographical accidents on that landscape: a couple of brushes, their tips lightly dipped in blue paint; some swirling drawings in ink found in a book; a wineglass turned upside down over two black cardboard circles. It's a bit like the famous story "A Row of Trees," by the Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata
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