Sunday, April 12, 2026

Morphotism: A Treatise on Form, Drift, and the Aesthetics of Compositional Transformation




Morphotism: A Treatise on Form, Drift, and the Aesthetics of Transformation

Morphotism is not a style, but a sustained inquiry into the behavior of form. It is a practice grounded in the instability of visual identity and the plasticity of image matter, wherein a single origin-image becomes the site of exhaustive transformation, not to discover a truth within it, but to exhaust its outer limits through procedural reworking.


Morphotism is the aesthetics of drift, a commitment to perpetual reformation, where each iteration reflects not a deviation, but an articulation.  It is a contour of thought expressed through the malleability of visual matter.
Ontology of the Image

At its core, Morphotism presupposes that no image is fixed. An image is not a representation; it is a territory, a terrain through which light, memory, and perception are routed. Under Morphotism, an image is treated not as a singular object but as a morphological condition.
This condition is subject to:
  • Chromatic reconstitution (alterations in tone and color profile)
  • Spatial displacements (rotations, croppings, or refocalizations)
  • Juxtapositional transgressions (overlay, mirroring, reversal)
  • Textural remediations (filters, grain, clarity, distortion)
Thus, the image becomes a body in continuous self-reconfiguration... a visual organism.

Methodology
Morphotism manifests as a serial discipline, producing sets or suites of images. Each is derived from one visual source, yet rendered distinct by methodical variation. These variations are not ornamental but ontological recalibrations.  Each version asserts a slightly different worldview, a marginally shifted claim about the original’s identity.
This may take form in:
  • A 64-page sequence where each page is a chromatic evolution of the same photograph
  • A diptych wherein the original and the reoriented inhabit tension
  • A grid series in which slight morphological deviations amplify across the composition
  • A photobook where sequencing is the aesthetic engine, rather than singular capture
Morphotism is not repetition. It is iterative excess.  It's a maximalist logic applied to minimalist sources.
Philosophical Grounding
Morphotism is aligned with post-structuralist thought, particularly where meaning is deferred, unstable, or constructed through difference. It owes debt to:
  • Jacques Derrida’s diffĂ©rance (the endless deferral of fixed meaning)
  • Michel Foucault’s archaeology of knowledge (visual artifacts as contingent, historical)
  • Gilles Deleuze’s difference and repetition (multiplicity as generative force)
Where modernism sought the essential image, Morphotism seeks the relational image where its meaning always shaped by its neighbors, its position in sequence, its treatment history.
Anti-Finality
A key tenet of Morphotism is resistance to closure. The series is never truly complete. Even the most exhaustive treatment retains within it the ghost of further transformation. 
This aligns Morphotism with a generative ethos, one that encourages reproduction, reinterpretation, and even computational continuation. It is a visual strategy built not for iconicity, but for intellectual promiscuity and  a willingness to be shaped anew.
Applications and Future Inquiry
While rooted in the photographic, Morphotism can be expanded into:
  • Generative AI image sequences
  • Printmaking re-inkings of a single plate
  • Video frames treated as morphic intervals
  • Archival reinterpretation (where existing images are subjected to morphotic recovery)
In this sense, Morphotism is medium-agnostic.  It is not bound by material, only by method and intent.
To practice Morphotism is to engage in material introspection.  It is not of the self, but of the image itself. It is to treat form not as an endpoint, but as a relay of becoming. Each variation is not a derivative, but an instantiation. Each shift, a question.
Morphotism does not ask, “What is the image?”
It asks, “How far can an image be re-formed before it loses its name?”
And in that question, it finds its power.

Morphotism and the Musical Score
If Morphotism treats the image as a mutable territory, then the musical score becomes its acoustic analogue: a field of structured potential, awaiting both interpretation and transformation.
In this frame, the musical score is not a static artifact. It is a visual syntax of sound, subject to the same morphotic processes as a photographic image...chromatically, spatially, and temporally mutable. Under Morphotism, a score is no longer the authoritative origin of a sonic event, but a generative artifact, open to deviation, drift, and serial manipulation.
The Morphotized Score: Visual and Sonic Layers
Each iteration of the score represents a treatment, not a revision. These treatments may include:
  • Graphic reorientation: rotation, inversion, mirroring of staves, noteheads, or articulations
  • Color treatment: assigning chromatic shifts to different rhythmic cells, registers, or dynamics (implying emotional timbre)
  • Notational erosion: removing elements to introduce silence, openness, or interpretive ambiguity
  • Spatial distortion: stretching, compressing, or reorganizing notation to reimagine rhythmic or harmonic structures
  • Image-score hybridization: incorporating photographs, diagrams, or marks that abstract or overlay traditional notation
Thus, the score becomes a morphotic field, where each page is not a repetition, but a divergent instance. It is a sonic potential with altered genetic instructions.
Morphotism as a Notational Philosophy
Unlike traditional variation form in music (theme & variations), Morphotism does not begin with a theme but with a form-substrate. That is: the score as a visual system of instruction, subject to visual and procedural subversion.
The question is not: How do I vary this melody?
But: What happens to this score when I re-encode its grammar?
It is a philosophy of notation as mutable language, inviting performers, readers, and listeners into a field of interpretive instability.
Precedents and Philosophical Kinships
Morphotism finds resonance in:
  • Brian Ferneyhough’s notational density, where legibility approaches visual abstraction
  • Cornelius Cardew’s Treatise, which uses graphic notation to open sonic possibility
  • Jani Christou’s Epicycle and Anestis Logothetis’ symbolic systems
  • John Cage’s Fontana Mix and *Atlas Eclipticalis, where form is mapped to celestial or chance-based systems
  • The tradition of eye music, where visual elements of scores (e.g., Baude Cordier’s heart-shaped notation) imply interpretive framing
But Morphotism departs from these by committing to seriality where a sequence of shifting forms from a single origin, as in photography.
The Performance of Morphotism
A morphotic score is not meant to be mastered, but encountered. Each page becomes a new ecology of sound, interpreted not in isolation but in relation to its sequence.
The performer becomes a translator of transformations, enacting drift across the series:
  • One page may sound formal and metered
  • The next: amorphous and gestural
  • Another: sparse, barely legible. A map of silence
The score unfolds as a temporal polyptych, where the audience witnesses not a theme, but a process, not a piece, but a becoming.
Toward a Morphotic Compositional Practice
To compose morphotically is to:
  • Begin with a fixed visual-musical object
  • Subject it to rule-based transformations
  • Sequence the results into a processual scorebook
  • Accept that no singular version is the “work”, but that the trajectory of change is the work
This opens the score to curation, performance variation, and perpetual reinvention echoing the logic of the image-series in visual Morphotism.
The Score as Morphotic Archive
In Morphotism, the musical score becomes an archive of its own reformation. Each page is an index of a choice, a deviation, a reframing. Like the image set, the score sequence reveals not a singular vision, but a landscape of near-versions.
Just as the eye follows the photographic drift, the ear begins to sense a sonic morphology.  It becomes a vibration not of melody alone, but of notation’s becoming.
The result is not a “piece” but a score-object that maps the space between intention and mutation.

On Neologisms as Notation


 

One of the recurring elements in my scores is the use of neologisms, invented words that do not arrive with a pre-approved performance recipe already attached to them.

A term like allegro or presto is useful because it is efficient. It carries centuries of shared instruction. But that efficiency can also become automatic. The performer sees the word and reaches immediately for a known behavior. I am often interested in interrupting that reflex.

A neologism does something different. It borrows from the atmosphere of language without collapsing into fixed meaning. It feels adjacent to something legible, but not fully owned by convention. In that gap, interpretation becomes active again. The performer has to ask: is this a speed, a pressure, a color, a texture, a behavioral state, a spatial condition, a dosage, a distortion?

That uncertainty is not there to be obscure. It is there to produce thought.

In works like the attached image, a word such as PLIMPELOMIE does not function as decorative nonsense. It acts as a notational device. It pulls from our broader lexicon of association, sound, rhythm, branding, medicine, and invented speech, then asks the performer to construct meaning from inside the work rather than retrieve it from a standard glossary.

For me, this is one way notation can remain alive. Not by rejecting language, but by forcing language to become unstable enough to think again. A neologism reopens the score. It makes the performer do more than decode. It makes them interpret.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Replexism




Replexism is a compositional philosophy that deliberately and systematically harnesses the generative tension between rigorous repetition and burgeoning complexity. Far from a mere stylistic preference, Replexism posits a profound ontological inquiry into the nature of musical structure, perception, and the unfolding of artistic meaning through iterative layering.

At its core, Replexism is built upon the dual pillars suggested by its portmanteau name: repetition and complexity. Unlike minimalist practices, where repetition often serves to distill musical material to its barest essence, or maximalist tendencies, which embrace unbridled density, Replexism occupies a liminal space. It begins with a deceptively simple, often modular, repeated unit.  It can be a rhythmic cell, a melodic fragment, a harmonic progression, or even a timbral gesture. However, this initial iteration is not intended for hypnotic stasis or gradual, subtle transformation. Instead, it serves as a fractal seed, from which layers of intricate, often non-linear, complexity are allowed to proliferate.

The generative mechanisms employed in Replexism are varied and sophisticated. Composers working within this paradigm might apply:

  • Asynchronous Layering: Multiple repetitions of the core module are initiated at slightly offset phases or different tempi, creating shifting rhythmic interference patterns and transient harmonic clusters that are constantly reconfiguring.

  • Permutational Saturation: The internal elements of the repeated module are subjected to rapid, combinatorial permutations, such that while the overall structural outline remains discernible, the micro-details are in constant flux, preventing predictable reiteration.

  • Algorithmic Inflection: Computational processes might govern the subtle alterations to dynamics, articulation, orchestration, or even pitch inflections within each repetition, leading to emergent textures that evolve organically over extended temporal spans.

  • Referential Metamorphosis: The repeated module, through its journey across various complex permutations and orchestrational guises, might gradually accumulate new semantic weight, transforming its initial simple identity into something rich with contextual significance.

The aim of Replexism is not simply density for its own sake, but rather the cultivation of a perceptual paradox. The listener is simultaneously grounded by the discernible presence of repetition, yet constantly challenged by the impossibility of fully apprehending the internal complexity of each iteration. This creates a unique listening experience where patterns emerge and recede, coherence is fleeting, and the overall form is apprehended as a grand, evolving mosaic rather than a linear narrative.

Philosophically, Replexism offers a compelling commentary on the nature of information, data, and interconnected systems in the contemporary world. Just as vast datasets reveal macroscopic patterns through the aggregation of countless individual, often minute, iterations, Replexism's musical structures mirror this emergence from iterative saturation. It acknowledges the inherent complexity within seemingly simple systems and invites a re-evaluation of what constitutes a 'unit' in both sonic and informational landscapes. It can be seen as a musical analogue to complex adaptive systems theory, where local interactions (repetitions) lead to global, often unpredictable, behaviors (complexity).

Furthermore, Replexism implicitly critiques a purely teleological view of musical progression. While a piece might possess an overall trajectory, the moment-to-moment experience emphasizes a non-linear, multi-faceted present. The journey through a Replexist composition is less about arriving at a predetermined destination and more about navigating an intricately textured sonic terrain, where the familiar is constantly re-contextualized by the unfamiliar, and where the listener’s attention is drawn to the ceaseless interplay of the macro and the micro.

As a nascent practice, Replexism offers fertile ground for exploration. Its methods demand meticulous control over musical parameters while simultaneously embracing the generative power of iterative processes. It challenges both composers to devise robust yet flexible modular material and listeners to engage with music on a multi-layered perceptual plane. In an era saturated with information, Replexism stands as a compelling artistic response, constructing a sonic reality where the ceaseless interplay of the known and the newly emergent defines the very act of composition.

Loops, Lists, and Lines: Hanne Darboven and the Sonic Logic of Circle Lexica


Hanne Darboven


Introduction: Temporal Architectures and Notational Innovations

The intersection of visual art and musical composition has long been a fertile ground for innovation. Hanne Darboven's systematic, date-based numerical sequences and my pharmacologically-infused colored circles represent two distinct yet conceptually aligned approaches to notation and temporal representation. This article explores the parallels between Darboven's serial methodologies and my Serio-Constructivist aesthetic, particularly focusing on my Pharmacological Circle Lexicon, to understand how I reconceptualize musical notation as a visual and temporal construct.

Hanne Darboven

Hanne Darboven: Seriality and Temporal Documentation

Hanne Darboven's work is characterized by the transformation of time into visual form. Her extensive series of handwritten numerical tables, often based on calendar dates, serve as both documentation and abstraction of temporal progression. These works, while visually minimalist, are dense with conceptual layering, converting the passage of time into a tangible, visual experience.

Darboven's approach aligns with serialist musical techniques, where numerical sequences dictate compositional structure. Her works often assign values to specific days, months, or years, systematically encoding time into numerical sequences. These sequences are translated into pitches and rhythmic values, creating a self-generating, non-expressive sonic structure.

Bil Smith's Pharmacological Circle Lexicon


My Pharmacological Circle Lexicon: Visual Notation and Serio-Constructivism

Part of my compositional practice, termed Serio-Constructivism, involves the creation of visual scores that challenge traditional musical notation. The Pharmacological Circle Lexicon comprises intricate, multicolored circles, each accompanied by detailed pharmacological data, including indications, dosages, and administration routes. These circles function as autonomous notational units, encapsulating complex musical instructions within a singular visual form.

Hanne Darboven

This approach transforms the musical score into a multidimensional artifact, integrating elements of visual art, medical documentation, and musical instruction. The use of pharmacological terminology introduces a layer of semantic complexity, inviting performers to interpret the score beyond conventional musical parameters.  Bil Smith

Parallels: Temporal Structures and Visual Notation

Bil Smith's Pharmacological Circle Lexicon


Darboven and I employ visual systems to represent temporal structures, albeit through different methodologies.
Darboven's linear numerical sequences and my circular lexicon both serve to document and interpret time, transforming abstract temporal concepts into concrete visual forms.

Bil Smith's Pharmacological Circle Lexicon
 
  • Repetition and Seriality: Darboven's repetitive numerical patterns and my recurring circular motifs both utilize repetition as a structural and conceptual device, emphasizing the cyclical nature of time and musical rhythm.

  • Visual Complexity: While Darboven's works are visually minimalist yet conceptually dense, my scores are visually intricate, incorporating color, form, and text to convey multifaceted musical instructions.

  • Integration of External Systems: Darboven integrates calendar systems into her art, whereas I incorporate pharmacological data, both extending the boundaries of musical notation to include external informational systems.

Hanne Darboven


Expanding the Language of Musical Notation

By integrating external systems—be it calendars or pharmacological data—into their compositional practices, we both challenge traditional notions of musical instruction and performance. These approaches invite a reevaluation of how time, structure, and meaning are represented and interpreted within the musical domain.

In exploring the sonic logic of circle lexica and serial numerical sequences, we uncover new possibilities for the visualization and conceptualization of music, expanding the language and experience of musical composition and performance.

Work In Progress for Ensemble 2.0










 

Line, Rupture, Icon: The Nonlinear Narratives of a Score



Line, Rupture, Icon: The Nonlinear Narratives of a Score

The image of Bil Smith’s score for organ does not merely notate sound, but it proposes a topology of collision, where notation, image, and gesture collapse into a singular visual field. This is not a page of music. It is a syntactic event: an architecturalized plane where gesture, time, and symbolic form conspire to render an unstable and multidimensional performance object.

From the outset, the image challenges legibility. The traditional stave dissolves into pliable, muscular lines, warped and thickened like stretched tendons, carrying with them the stress and weight of encoded sonic vectors. The musical staff is not a passive grid.  It is an actor, an energetic conduit that writhes under the burden of notation, image, and embedded semiotics.

The Actor-Network of the Score

Within the environment of the score, a cast of visual forms performs a strange and charged theatre. The oversized treble clef anchors one side, like a fossilized symbol from a previous tonal regime. Around it, Pop forms intervene: a word like “SPILL” ruptures the image mid-frame in a comic explosion; a golden orb marked by a rearing horse haunts the center like an anachronistic myth-image; a segmented gear blade hovers above, rotating invisibly, threatening to cleave through the stave.

None of these are ornamental. They are operational signs.  The present themselves as entities that perform, that direct attention, that shape time and motion. The performer is not merely reading but navigating a field of symbolic topographies.

Gesture as Constructed Terrain

The gestural content of the score is not reduced to notes and slurs. Instead, gesture is written into the architecture of the page. Consider the heavily layered blocks of parallel lines, all compressed, oblique, and offset as zones of weight, like sediment deposits in a geologic record. These are moments of sonic pressure, notated density, or interpretive resistance.

Microtonal fragments, glissando cascades, and floating accentual ornaments act like sonic eddies, rippling across the score. But more striking is the materiality of these gestures: each is not a symbol but a form, situated in a landscape of other forms. Together, they comprise a spatialized performance ecology.

The score treats music not as a sequence but as an environmental choreography.  It is a pressure map of sound-bearing forms, distributed through a field of cross-referential signs.

Semantic Saturation and Image Interruption

One of the most compelling aspects of Smith’s approach is his use of image as semiotic force. The presence of the “SPILL” graphic is not decorative. It is an index of disruption. It occupies the staff like a sudden explosion of excess.  It is something that cannot be assimilated into the linear logics of notation. It interrupts in the way noise interrupts signal; its rupture is the message.

Elsewhere, modular icons, stripped heads, three-dimensional forms, and grid distortions act as insertion points. These are not annotations. They are active elements, coded with implicit meanings, each awaiting interpretation through the body of the performer.

The organ amplifies this theatricality. Its architecture is already spatial, architectural, performative. Smith exploits this by writing a score that behaves like space extending beyond the frame, folding in on itself, warping notation into sculptural pressure zones.

Performance as Constructive Encounter

In a traditional score, the performer obeys the signs. Here, the performer is compelled to interpret, to act, to respond. There is no single temporal logic to follow. Instead, the performer must build one by assembling a route through vectors, intensities, and blockages.

The reading of the score becomes a form of constructive encounter.  It is not just learning, but decoding, mapping, assembling. It is a hybrid role: part reader, part choreographer, part visual interpreter.

One does not perform this score in time. One extracts time from it.

Toward a New Notational Terrain

This score does not ask to be decoded. It asks to be believed. It believes in its own topology, its own symbolic grammar, its own sense of musical action. It does not depict music. It is music, in the form of potential.

Bil Smith’s “SPILL” score for organ is a site, a material and speculative environment. It articulates a new space of practice where the boundaries between drawing, score, architecture, and instruction blur. Gesture becomes inscription. Notation becomes landscape. Performance becomes excavation.

It is less a document than a world: volatile, gestural, unstable, and full of unresolved, interpretive promise.

Sound Morphology Learning Lab - Inside the Score: Agostino Bonalumi and the Mito-Notational Field




 

Sound Morphology Learning Lab

Inside the Score: Surface, Pressure, and the Mito-Notational Field

In this score, I am not using the page as a neutral support. I am using it as a pressure field. I want the work to begin acting before it is performed, before the eye organizes the symbols into anything legible, before the performer decides what counts as event and what counts as atmosphere. The score has to function first as a condition.



That is where Agostino Bonalumi matters to me. What I take from him is not simply a visual reference. It is a structural lesson. His relief works turned the surface into an active spatial body. The plane was no longer passive. It was stretched, stressed, pushed outward, made to hold tension. That logic is central to what I am doing here. I want the score to behave the same way. I want it to feel as though it has been forced into visibility from behind.



The matte-black receding relief in the background establishes that immediately. It is not there as backdrop or mood. It is the first layer of behavior. The protrusions make the page feel swollen, pressured, bodily. They interrupt the fantasy of flat readability. Even before notation appears, the score is already telling the performer that this field has depth, resistance, and stored force.

I think of the black relief as compressed energy. It recedes, but it also insists. That contradiction is useful. It makes the eye work. It slows down the act of reading and turns perception into part of the composition.

The Scuduri font in the upper right reinforces that shift. For me, it is not a decorative flourish or a title marker. It acts as a local code block, a signal that the score operates under its own internal law. It announces a notational jurisdiction. Once that font appears, the page makes clear that it may borrow from conventional systems, but it is not governed by them entirely.



That is the role of what I call the mito-notational system. It borrows from Western notation, but it does not remain obedient to it. Staff fragments, noteheads, beams, rhythmic densities, and gestural clusters all appear, but they no longer behave as parts of a continuous linear syntax. I break them apart, suspend them, compress them, and redistribute them so that they begin acting less like instructions and more like charged objects.

This is the essential move. I am not rejecting notation. I am turning notation into material.

Across the score, the fragments do not form a single sentence. They form a dispersed topography. Some are dense and blackened, almost architectural. Some are thin and unstable, more like tremor bands or residues. Some hover as isolated capsules. The performer does not simply read through them. The performer has to move among them. The score becomes archipelagic. Meaning is produced not only by the symbols themselves, but by the tension between them, the distance between them, and the pressure of the relief field underneath.



That is how the score functions. Each element bends the space around it. A compressed cluster thickens the silence beside it. A stretched line changes the temporal character of an empty zone. A suspended fragment may carry less literal instruction than atmospheric or tactile pressure. In this system, notation is not just symbolic. It is topological.

The purple variant makes that even more explicit. The field becomes more synthetic and less recessive. The metallic circular forms read like resonators, valves, apertures, or pressure discs. The staff lines extending outward from the clef create a sense of projection or transmission, as if notation is being routed into a device. At that point the score stops behaving only like a page and starts behaving like an interface.

That shift matters to me because it shows how the work moves between identities without settling. It can be relief painting, score, symbolic artifact, and apparatus at once. I do not see that instability as a problem. It is the engine of the piece.



For the performer, this changes everything. The score does not ask for passive decoding. It asks for navigation. It asks the performer to decide what is foreground and what is field, what is sounded directly and what remains atmospheric, what behaves as rhythm and what behaves as texture. The page distributes pressure, but it does not close off interpretation. That balance is important. I want the work to remain unmistakably itself while still requiring thought, judgment, and risk from the performer.

So when I say this score functions and acts, I mean that quite literally. It functions as a relief system, a hybrid notational script, and a symbolic object. It acts by delaying legibility, by turning surface into force, by making notation tactile, and by forcing performance to begin as interpretation rather than execution.

That is the larger aim for me. I do not want a score that simply tells a performer what to do. I want a score that changes the conditions under which doing becomes possible. I want a page that thinks spatially, a notation that behaves like matter, and a surface that carries its own internal tension into the room.

That is where this work begins. Not as document, but as pressure.