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"Everything Flows"

Nate Hodge uses art as a means to explore his observations through their temporality. As his brush moves along the canvas, it becomes a reflection on the lack of equilibrium; his representation of the disturbance is a natural component of systems and relationships confined to a surface. Often the process begins with a colonizing mark that spreads exponentially across the surface like an invading, alien organism. In natural systems there is a tendency to move towards entropy, but found within this entropy are moments where beautiful and delicate forms develop before dissolving.

Reception for "Everything Flows"

Nate Hodge uses art as a means to explore his observations through their temporality. As his brush moves along the canvas, it becomes a reflection on the lack of equilibrium; his representation of the disturbance is a natural component of systems and relationships confined to a surface. Often the process begins with a colonizing mark that spreads exponentially across the surface like an invading, alien organism. In natural systems there is a tendency to move towards entropy, but found within this entropy are moments where beautiful and delicate forms develop before dissolving.

Artist's Lecture: "Everything Flows"

Nate Hodge uses art as a means to explore his observations through their temporality. As his brush moves along the canvas, it becomes a reflection on the lack of equilibrium; his representation of the disturbance is a natural component of systems and relationships confined to a surface. Often the process begins with a colonizing mark that spreads exponentially across the surface like an invading, alien organism. In natural systems there is a tendency to move towards entropy, but found within this entropy are moments where beautiful and delicate forms develop before dissolving.

Reception for "Everything Flows"

Nate Hodge uses art as a means to explore his observations through their temporality. As his brush moves along the canvas, it becomes a reflection on the lack of equilibrium; his representation of the disturbance is a natural component of systems and relationships confined to a surface. Often the process begins with a colonizing mark that spreads exponentially across the surface like an invading, alien organism. In natural systems there is a tendency to move towards entropy, but found within this entropy are moments where beautiful and delicate forms develop before dissolving.