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Brick for Stone

i'm experimenting with new approaches to the problem of linking objects to networks of meaning and context. here, the clue to the puzzle is hidden in the shadow of the object. it's a reference to the Biblical Tower of Babel story, an important founding text or point of departure for much of my work. in the passage referenced, the builders of Babel are described as using "brick for stone". here we have a brick so worn by its time in the sea that it's taken on the shape of a stone. the Babel story has undergone a similar process; something that was once clearly man-made has become something (mis)taken for a natural, inevitable form. this story, so worn by time and in the telling, is one of thousands that make up the foundations of our culture.

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