Dot Matrix

Dots. Raised or flat, they have a multitude of uses. They keep us driving in the correct lane; they end sentences. On old printers, they formed characters. They represent letters and numbers to the blind by way of Braille. In that form, they also inspire artist Christopher French to create...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Dots. Raised or flat, they have a multitude of uses. They keep us driving in the correct lane; they end sentences. On old printers, they formed characters. They represent letters and numbers to the blind by way of Braille. In that form, they also inspire artist Christopher French to create. After discovering a book of Braille paper, French began using the raised symbols of dots to plan out—to “graph”—his colorful, geometric paintings of filled circles, or, um…bigger dots. At first, French was taken with the texture of the paper alone. But he says of his progression, “Indeed, by 1991 the text had become the image, with each series of seemingly abstract paintings stimulated by a historical work of literature.” Holly Johnson Gallery, 1411 Dragon St., features French’s first solo Dallas exhibition, Color Culture: Themes and Variations, through March 24. Check it out and you’ll be seeing dots. Call 214-369-0169 or visit
hollyjohnsongallery.com.

Feb. 9-March 24

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Arts & Culture newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...