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RelationShaping
Field Studies
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Sallybeth
Bologna, the 1920s. Giorgio Morandi spends his working life in a small room at 36 Via Fondazza, painting the same bottles and boxes from a low shelf. The objects barely change. The arrangements barely change. What changes across forty years is what Morandi sees in the space between the bottles. London, the 1830s. Michael Faraday spends his working life arranging iron filings on paper around magnets, watching how the patterns shift when the magnets shift. The filings are mundane. The magnets are common. What develops across thirty years is what Faraday sees in the field the iron filings together describe. The two cases occur a century and a continent apart. They share a structure that RelationShaping: Field Studies makes its central subject.
At the heart of the book is a single claim. Relational seeing is a competence, a trainable capacity to attend to the relations among elements as the constitutive features of structure, acquired the way listening is acquired, operating faster than conscious analysis, producing results the practitioner cannot fully describe in declarative terms. The book argues this capacity across ten case studies that range from still-life painting to electromagnetic field theory, from Renaissance counterpoint to mycorrhizal forest networks, from the human microbiome to the classifier predicates of American Sign Language. A single capacity produces a Morandi painting and a Faraday diagram, a counterpoint exercise and a Sign Language utterance, a botanist's listening of a forest floor and an architect's listening of a poché plan. What runs through all of them is the relational structure the book is trying to name.
©2026 David Boles (P)2026 David Boles