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foto prof Marjan Ocvirk

Networks – The Fine Arts of Architectural and Space Design

The living space is part of a larger, visible and invisible space, stretching into eternity, in both the inward and outward direction, into universe as well as the composition of the smallest atom particles. Research shows that space exists in systems maintained through networks and existing in both the visible and invisible, direct and indirect form. Networks may be either simple or complex. Often, man can only sense them.

Similarly, human conscience can be viewed as a network of computer links accumulating what we sense. Consequently, the human body is assembled and managed through known and unknown system networks. Man, plants and animals boast of pre-programmed systems which, however, are never entirely defined as they depend on living conditions occurring in various cycles of human existence, while other natural elements, such as crystals, can be described as system networks which are merely reflections of the state established at the beginning of their existence.

The paper asks the question when networks enter the world of fine arts. The answer offered by the paper is that this happens whenever a system incorporates a fine-art story. Similarly, music begins with melody. The fine-art melody existing in space can be sensed via system networks or a system-network link created by the human mind and hand. The common-system-network puzzle sensed in its fine-art form represents the visual world of our cultural habitat. An understanding of system networks in space fosters system search, system maintenance in its functions and fine arts, and system upgrading.

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