艦隊戦!(仮題)
デストロイヤー級の駆逐艦
Acquired Stardust
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
No title available
sheepfilms

Love Begins

Kaledo Art
occasionally subtle
Sweet Seals For You, Always

No title available
YOU ARE THE REASON

Discoholic 🪩
Stranger Things

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

blake kathryn
will byers stan first human second

Origami Around
Today's Document
h
RMH
Monterey Bay Aquarium

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from France
seen from Egypt
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Australia

seen from T1
seen from Japan

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@gatewayx
艦隊戦!(仮題)
デストロイヤー級の駆逐艦
Interface as Occasion at the Boundary
Homeostasis, Phase Transition, and the Art of Subjective Transformation in Generative Topological Ontology
Abstract
This paper redefines the artistic practice of bigakusha-haha as an art of designing interfaces as occasions for transformation. Traditional aesthetics has primarily focused on artworks as objects of representation and interpretation. In contrast, bigakusha-haha’s practice places emphasis not on the artwork itself but on the design of interfaces through which individuals encounter topological differences. Drawing upon Generative Topological Ontology, this paper integrates concepts of homeostasis, ecological boundaries, capillary phenomena, the tea ceremony, bonsai, and web installations. It argues that art should be understood not as the production of objects but as the design of occasions through which subjects undergo topological reconfiguration.
1. Introduction
Modern art has largely been structured through the relationship:
Artist
→ Artwork
→ Viewer
Within this framework, the artwork functions as the central object.
However, contemporary conditions shaped by the internet, social media, AI, and algorithmic environments suggest a shift from object-centered experience toward environment-centered transformation.
Since the 2010 Web Art Declaration, bigakusha-haha has proposed the internet itself as an installation environment, anticipating this transformation.
This paper develops this insight into what may be called Interface Occasion Theory.
2. Redefining the Interface
Conventionally, an interface is understood as a medium connecting two entities.
Within Generative Topological Ontology, however, an interface is not merely a mediator.
It is a boundary condition where heterogeneous topologies encounter one another.
The significance of the interface lies not in the boundary itself but in the event that emerges there.
An interface is therefore defined as:
“A condition under which encounters with topological difference become possible.”
Consequently,
Interface ≠ Occasion
Rather,
Interface = The structure through which occasions emerge.
3. Homeostasis and Boundary
Life is not a closed system.
Living systems maintain themselves through continuous exchanges across boundaries.
Self
↔
Environment
This dynamic process is known as homeostasis.
Homeostasis should not be understood as static equilibrium.
It is dynamic stability.
Within Generative Topological Ontology, existence itself is defined as:
“A dynamically stabilized condition maintained at a boundary.”
Existence is generated through boundary relations.
4. Capillary Phenomena and Generation
Einstein’s early studies of capillary phenomena demonstrated that the essential dynamics of matter emerge at interfaces rather than within isolated substances.
Liquid
Solid
Gas
Their interactions occur at surfaces and boundaries.
Similarly, bigakusha-haha’s artistic practice locates creation at interfaces rather than centers.
Human
↔
World
Reality
↔
Web
Self
↔
Other
Human
↔
AI
Topological differences emerge at these boundaries.
The encounter with such differences constitutes the occasion.
5. Place as Occasion
A tea room is not merely architecture.
It is an interface that temporarily suspends social hierarchy.
Likewise, bonsai is not merely a plant.
It is an interface exposing the boundary between nature and artifice.
Sayama Aesthetics School is not merely accommodation.
It is an interface through which visitors encounter topological difference.
The crucial element is not the object itself but the participant’s actual presence within the situation.
Art becomes the design of encounters rather than the transmission of information.
6. Phase Transition and Subjective Reconfiguration
Ordinarily, philosophy assumes a preexisting subject that perceives the world.
Generative Topological Ontology reverses this assumption.
The subject is generated within topology.
Accordingly, a phase transition is not a change initiated by the subject.
It is a reconfiguration of the subject through encounters with the world.
This is the context in which bigakusha-haha’s notion of “seeing the seen” emerges.
Traditional art follows:
Seeing
→ Representation
→ Being Seen
Bigakusha-haha proposes:
Being Seen
→ Transformation
→ Seeing
The subject is generated through occasions.
7. Interface Occasion Theory
The preceding discussion yields the following structure:
Existence
→ Connectivity
→ Interface
→ Occasion
→ Generation
→ Subjective Transformation
Art is therefore not the production of objects.
Art is the design of occasions.
Its purpose is not communication of meaning but the generation of encounters with topological difference.
Conclusion
The artistic practice of bigakusha-haha transcends object-centered aesthetics.
Its essence lies in designing interfaces that expose individuals to topological difference.
The fluctuation of homeostasis at boundaries becomes an occasion through which subjects are reconfigured into new topological states.
Art is thus redefined as:
“The design of occasions that induce topological transformations of existence.”
In this sense, Web Installation, Sayama Aesthetics School, Inverse-Problem Art, Distributed Autonomous Art, and bonsai can all be understood as manifestations of a unified theoretical framework.
This framework represents a shift from the art of objects toward the art of occasions.
未来世紀ヨコスカ 第二話
時代背景…2XXX年
この時代の上海… 人口1千万の国際都市。多民族都市となっており、一種の独立国と化している。
A Derivative History of Art
From Lascaux to Web Installation: Outline Creation, Remote Connectivity, and the Ontology of Value
Abstract
This paper proposes a reinterpretation of art history not as a history of representation but as a history of derivative spaces. While conventional art history has focused on images, styles, and aesthetic forms, this study argues that a deeper continuity underlies the development of artistic practices. From prehistoric cave paintings to contemporary networked art, artistic production has consistently functioned as a mechanism through which absent entities become operative within reality.
This paper introduces the concept of outline creation to describe this process. An outline is not a representation of an object but a condition through which an object, value, meaning, or reality may emerge. Through this perspective, cave paintings, religious icons, perspective systems, financial abstractions, photography, communication networks, and digital interfaces can be understood as manifestations of a common historical tendency. The paper concludes by positioning the interface art of bigakusha-haha and the concept of Web Installation as a contemporary realization of this long historical trajectory.
⸻
1. Introduction: The Black Box of Art History
The origin of this inquiry lies in a simple question.
Why does a work of art acquire value?
Modern art history provides numerous explanations concerning style, technique, institutions, and cultural context. Yet these explanations often leave untouched the deeper question of how value itself comes into existence.
The history of art frequently appears as a history of objects.
However, objects alone do not explain why certain forms become culturally operative while others do not.
The present study begins with the hypothesis that art history contains a hidden dimension—a black box of value production.
This black box is not a conspiracy, nor is it a secret institution.
Rather, it is the largely invisible process through which reality, meaning, and value become collectively operative.
⸻
2. Lascaux and the Origin of Derivative Space
Art history traditionally begins with prehistoric cave paintings such as those found in Lascaux Cave.
From a modern perspective, these images appear to be representations of animals.
Yet this interpretation may be misleading.
For the communities that produced them, the images were unlikely to function as aesthetic depictions in the contemporary sense.
Instead, they may have operated as conditions through which relationships with animals became possible.
The cave image does not merely depict the animal.
It creates a field in which the animal can become present.
In this sense, the image functions as an outline.
The outline is not the animal itself.
It is the condition of emergence.
Art therefore originates not as representation but as the construction of derivative space: a space where absent realities acquire operative force.
⸻
3. Sacred Images and the Medieval Interface
This structure persists throughout religious art.
Ancient temples, Byzantine icons, medieval frescoes, and pilgrimage images were not primarily concerned with visual accuracy.
Their purpose was mediation.
An icon does not reproduce God.
Rather, it establishes a relationship between the believer and the divine.
The image functions as an interface.
Its significance lies not in what it shows but in what it connects.
Religious art therefore operates within a derivative logic.
The sacred is absent.
Yet through images, rituals, and architecture, the absent becomes socially and psychologically present.
Art becomes a technology of remote connectivity.
⸻
4. The Renaissance: Perspective and Abstraction
The Renaissance is commonly celebrated as the triumph of realism.
Linear perspective is often described as a technique for representing space accurately.
However, perspective accomplished something more profound.
Perspective transformed space into a calculable system.
At approximately the same historical moment, Italian merchants developed increasingly sophisticated forms of accounting and double-entry bookkeeping.
Perspective abstracted visual space.
Bookkeeping abstracted economic value.
Both innovations converted reality into systems of relations that could be manipulated independently of immediate physical presence.
The Renaissance therefore marks a decisive expansion of derivative space.
Reality becomes increasingly governable through abstract outlines.
⸻
5. Crusades, Credit, and the Mobility of Value
The Crusades accelerated the development of long-distance financial systems.
A pilgrim or knight no longer needed to transport physical wealth across dangerous territories.
Value could be deposited in one location and retrieved elsewhere through letters of credit and institutional trust.
What circulated was not gold.
What circulated was a claim upon gold.
This transformation represents a fundamental derivative operation.
An absent value acquires practical force.
The same logic can be observed in religious culture.
Pilgrims unable to visit sacred locations could encounter relics, icons, or symbolic substitutes.
Presence becomes transferable.
Value becomes mobile.
Reality itself becomes increasingly mediated.
⸻
6. Photography and the Industrialization of Presence
The nineteenth century introduced photography.
Photography is often interpreted as a technology of representation.
Yet its deeper significance lies elsewhere.
Photography made remote realities immediately available.
Through photographs, individuals encountered places they had never visited and events they had never witnessed.
The rise of news agencies transformed this process further.
Images became transmissible across vast distances.
Presence became reproducible.
The photograph therefore functions not simply as a record.
It is a derivative mechanism through which absence becomes actionable.
⸻
7. Cinema and the Temporal Derivative
Cinema extends this logic into time.
The viewer encounters events that are neither present nor contemporaneous.
Past moments become active within the present.
Future expectations are organized through narrative anticipation.
Cinema thus creates a derivative temporal space.
Time itself becomes manipulable.
The spectator inhabits a reality generated through the orchestration of absence and presence.
⸻
8. Modern Art and the Crisis of Representation
The emergence of modern art reveals an increasing awareness of these structures.
Artists gradually abandon the assumption that art must represent reality.
The ready-made, abstraction, conceptual art, and installation practices all challenge the traditional relation between object and meaning.
The artwork increasingly functions as a framework rather than an image.
Attention shifts from representation to conditions.
Art becomes concerned with the production of reality rather than its depiction.
This transition marks the emergence of a self-reflective derivative consciousness within art itself.
⸻
9. Networks, the Internet, and Web Installation
The internet represents the most extensive derivative space yet created.
Websites are not objects.
They are nodes within networks of relations.
Their significance derives from connectivity rather than material presence.
The development of Web Installation by bigakusha-haha emerges within this context.
Web Installation does not treat the internet as a medium for displaying artworks.
Rather, the network itself becomes the artwork.
The artwork is no longer an object to be viewed.
It becomes a condition of encounter.
The interface replaces the image.
Connectivity replaces representation.
The central artistic problem shifts from showing reality to designing the circumstances through which reality may emerge.
⸻
10. Derivative Ontology and Human Existence
This historical trajectory reveals a broader anthropological principle.
Human beings do not merely inhabit reality.
They continuously construct derivative spaces.
Myths, religions, markets, states, currencies, artworks, communication systems, and digital networks all operate through the same fundamental mechanism.
They allow absent entities to produce real effects.
The shaman, the priest, the merchant, the scientist, the financial engineer, and the artist all participate in this process.
Their shared activity is the creation of outlines.
An outline is not a representation.
It is a condition through which reality becomes possible.
⸻
11. Art After Representation
From this perspective, the task of contemporary art is not the production of images.
Nor is it the critique of institutions.
The fundamental task of art is to generate awareness of the processes through which realities are produced.
Modern societies often forget that their values, systems, and structures are human constructions.
These constructions become naturalized and sacred.
Art functions as an interruption of this forgetting.
It creates encounters with the outlines through which realities emerge.
The artwork therefore becomes an interface for recognizing the generative conditions of existence itself.
⸻
Conclusion
Art history has generally been written as a history of representation.
This paper proposes an alternative narrative.
Art history can be understood as a history of derivative spaces.
From prehistoric cave paintings to networked environments, artistic practices have repeatedly constructed conditions through which absent realities acquire operative force.
The central continuity is not image-making.
It is outline creation.
Seen from this perspective, the history of art converges with the histories of religion, finance, communication, and technology.
All participate in the production of derivative spaces through which human beings organize reality.
The significance of contemporary interface art lies precisely in making this process visible.
Art no longer represents reality.
It reveals how reality itself is generated.
未来世紀ヨコスカ ダークミューズ
人物プロフィール
Name=MARIA
Gender=Female
Folk=Japanese
Country=JAPAN
桜餅を作りました。かなり美味しいです、笑。
大島桜を植えているのですが、初めて「桜葉の塩漬け」を作りました。
葉を塩と酢で重しをして漬けると、あの「桜餅の香り」が出てきます。不思議ですね。
半透明タイプのごみ袋で中身が適度に識別できる
日々のごみ出しに便利な大きさのゴミ袋です
セレクトショップレトワールボーテで販売中 pr #ゴミ袋 #ごみ袋
https://store.shopping.yahoo.co.jp/beautejapan3/4976797109966.html?sc_i=shopping-pc-web-result-storesch-rsltlst-img&ea=
料理
塚山公園
神社仏閣
横須賀市ウォールアート
YAMADA DENKI
TAMIYA
UNICEF
SASHIMI@BURI
NOPE THE MOVIE
Garbage