The Confesison of Zero

 
 

Zero is an extraordinary number.  It is a number that denotes the existence of absence.  As soon as humans acquired consciousness, they began to count:  one sheep, two sheep, three sheep: one apple two apples, three apples. There's the discovery of natural numbers! ( Apparently primitive numbers only went as far as ten because humans have ten fingers with which to count, hence the decimal system.) Natural numbers were based on our practical sensations of counting.  But at some point, the formulation of the concept of zero by an Indian mathematician fundamentally changed human consciousness. High-speed calculations of the 0s and 1s of the binary numeral system underpin the basic principles of the computers that sustain our modern civilization.

The awareness of the existence of absence is related to the Buddhist idea of emptiness, a nother concept which originated in India.  The goal in Buddhism is to train oneself to achieve enlightenment. Enlightenment can be defined as the ability to see beyond life and death with the consciouness becoming able to sene the source of the life which sustains it.  In this way, zero does not denote a state of sterlie emptiness, but a state of emptiness that simulataneously contains the seed of everything.  It is the state from which everything that exists is born and to which everything that exists eventually returns.  Zero doe not exist in the physical world.  It is a dim, uncertain memory buried in our consciousness, because it is where consciousness itself was born.

As an artist, I wanted to give zero a shape.  To make zero - which has no physical existence - visible, I decided to craft an object that went right to the very blink of zero.  I sought to give physical form to a three-dimensional mathematical function, the equation for which becomes zero at its zenith.  I made a mathematical model in two parts, an upper and a lower, of which the upper is suspended in the air.  Using stainless steel, I was able to craft a shape that tapers to a point just 0.8millimeters wide.  The zero pint is found about one centimeter beyond that. It definitely exists and its position can be shown; it just happens to be invisible.

The realm of zero lies in that narrow interstice where the two points confront one another here in thes eighteenth-century chapel where the mathematical model has taken up its discreet residence.  Examine that invisible point with proper care for there can be found the mystery of existence.

 

- Hiroshi Sugimoto