Life Notes, or, A Strange Little Story
I will divide this biographical sketch into three sections,
the first covering my formative years, which focused on math and
science,
the second covering my early to mid-adulthood, which focused on writing,
the humanities, and general metaphysical and mystical studies,
and the third covering the current period in my life,
which revolves around digital art. There is some overlap.
Early years:
My full name is David Allen Camp. I was born in 1950 in Madison,
Wisconsin,
a liberal university city 150 miles north/northwest of Chicago.
It is the capital of Wisconsin. The state government and a 40,000-student
university are the two main employers in this city set amid four
scenic lakes.
Except for a few months spent in Colorado and Los Angeles, I have
lived my whole
life in and around Madison, mostly attending classes and working
at the university.
My father, the son of a small town police chief, was a banker.
He started out as an errand boy and ended up as a vice president.
He was hard working, frugal, and concerned with appearance.
My mother, a farmer’s daughter, attended a two-year teacher’s
college and had talent as an artist, although she didn’t pursue it.
Her sister made a name for herself as a watercolor painter in Iowa.
My mother was religious. I was raised a Methodist and sang in church
choirs.
I was a quiet child gifted in math, science and art, though few knew
it.
I had friends, but spent much of my time by myself inventing games.
I took sermons seriously and was my church's first altar boy.
At one point, thoughts of becoming a missionary filled
my head.
That was the only thing that could have pulled me away
from math and science.
I was torn between a desire to serve God or be a mathematician.
There were objective reasons for believing I could be a mathematician:
1. In 2nd grade I helped my older sister, an 8th
grader, with her math.
2. In 6th grade I scored extremely high in a math aptitude
test.
3. At the age of 12 I also learned of Pascal’s triangle and expanded
on it
in complex ways to construct a powerful probability formula for my
games.
This was graduate level college work. I didn’t learn the combinatorial
notation
needed to write it down until I was 17, but I understood it at 12.
4. As a high school senior I scored among the top three in the state
in several math
competitions and was elected a member of The Mathematical Association
of America.
5. As a freshman at the university, I was one of six undergraduates
on campus to
score well in a six-hour Putnam competition. I was the only freshman
to do so.
I was not good at reasoning out problems in the usual, logical way.
I was good
at problem solving, but my real strength was recognizing patterns.
My secret
method was to work out the first three or four cases of a problem,
observe the
embedded pattern, often revolving around derivatives of Pascal's triangle,
recognize the numerical formula, and then work backwards to construct
a proof.
What effect did all of this have on my life? I did intensely enjoy
working with
numbers and solving difficult problems, but I was arrogant in a way
I now regret.
I believed math was the supreme discipline and that I was exceptionally
good at it.
I was also drawn to theoretical physics and wasn't sure which field
I'd end up in.
My hunger to understand the underlying nature of things spilled over
into other fields
as well, including metaphysics, psychology, parapsychology, and comparative
religion.
I was particularly interested in the relationship between consciousness
and energy.
I stayed home to attend the University of Wisconsin because it was
a good school, and
because that was economical, although I would have preferred MIT,
Cal Tech, or Berkeley.
My grades were good, but I was extremely restless. That leads to
phase two.
Writing Years:
There were several reasons for my fiery restlessness.
One was that I was strongly attracted to girls, but too shy to date.
Second, I was terribly bored with math proofs and theorems.
I still loved solving problems, but hated class assignments.
I wanted to do something more creative than that. I was erupting inside.
Third, I felt a spiritual emptiness. Christianity was no longer broad
enough.
Eastern religions with their emphasis on consciousness made more sense.
Combine all of this with some drug use and involvement in the anti-war
movement on a campus that experienced riots, and it was a time of
upheaval.
Math was too sterile. When the physics building I worked in was bombed
because it housed an Army Math Research Center, I was pushed further
from math.
I reached a point where I actually felt guilty about my interest in
it.
I considered art, music, and writing, and turned next to writing.
I wanted to write like Dostoevsky and Hermann Hesse, especially Hesse
who wrote about the same yearnings and upheaval I was experiencing.
I thought I could write like him because I felt so much like his
characters.
I began work on a serious novel about a young, Van Gogh-like artist.
By my mid-20s I was married and settled into a routine of taking
one
course a semester and working 30 hours a week at various campus jobs.
Unfortunately, I wasn’t as talented with words as with numbers and
images.
I was good. I got into every advanced class and workshop I applied
for,
but I simply wasn't very fast. It took hours to revise every page.
I kept writing for two reasons. First, I did have something to say.
I had settled on a mystical/metaphysical school of thought revolving
around
planes and reincarnation, and I was using structure to represent
this in my book.
At one point I considered writing four books constructed in such
a way that there
would be twenty possible paths from the beginning of the first to
the conclusion.
This revolved around my belief that states of consciousness are like
rooms.
Second, I felt a strong connection with Dostoevsky, partly because
his underground
man was so much like me, and partly because I encountered his name
in dreams.
This is an example of one of those highly charged dreams:
I floated to his home in Russia. I knew it was his home, but saw
no one.
Instead, I found two large bags of mail that were addressed to me.
I had more than a dozen dreams like this during my 20s, 30s and 40s.
I describe them as highly charged because each one left a strong impression.
Only once did I dream of any other historical figure, and I got the
name wrong.
Upon waking I realized I'd associated the wrong name with a particular
painting.
Because I dreamed of Dostoevsky so much and felt a strong affinity
with him,
I had to consider the possibility that I had been him. I neither
believed nor disbelieved this, but I had to consider it as a possibility.
That was what kept me writing, the idea that I was continuing earlier
work.
I wrote this into my novel, which revolved around dreams and reincarnation.
Truth is, that first novel wasn’t very good, and it was too personal,
even though it was fiction, so I set it aside after many revisions.
Then, around age 40, I felt an urge to pick up my pen again.
My novel re-emerged as a fantasy about a young shaman on another planet.
The characters and structure were better, and the story was more compelling.
The title I settled on was "The Inferno," because I was representing
the
material worlds, including the physical, as a place of intense learning.
On the day I chose this name and typed it onto an actual title page,
I subsequently arrived at my job in a university library and found
two copies
of Dante's’ Inferno on my desk, a new copy intended to replace a
worn out copy.
This was the first ime in seven years at that job that I'd encountered
any
copies of that Inferno, so I took it as a sign that I’d chosen the
right title.
It was still Dostoevsky I looked to as a beacon in the forest, not
Dante.
I was still revising my Inferno in 1996 when I began to do computer
art.
I will get to the art shortly. My art led to many online contacts.
One such contact was a woman with a broad spiritual web site that
includes
psychic advising. Upon encountering my work she told another webmaster
that I am one of the most significant spiritual artists of our time.
She also sponsored some of my art on his site, so when my Dostoevsky
dreams continued, I finally turned to her for help in interpreting
them.
I wanted to understand why I was having them. This was her response:
"Hello David, I don't know much about this man except that Dostoevsky
was a writer and I have never read his work. However, my ignorance
on the
matter actually makes my messages less biased and sometimes more accurate.
You were not Dostoevsky. However, he has chosen a small group of students
to guide, which you are among. Though he may not have painted, he
was an artist
and he influences your art in all media. Though I am not speaking
with him
directly, I am being told that on this Earth plane, he was a tortured
soul.
In many respects, you are similar. He has chosen to serve as your
guide for this reason.
His purpose is to inspire and collaborate. A non-psychic observation:
Dreaming of houses is usually an indication of visiting your own personality.
It does not mean that his house was your house, but perhaps he converses
best
with you in a sleep state. This is truly a blessing for you to have
this spiritual
being as your guide. However you must know the he is not quite
the same being as you
have read about. I feel a certain violence about him that he left
behind.
I hope this makes sense. I am also given the name Diante w/an accent
symbol over
the "e" which I'm unable to show in this email. I am unaware of what
this name is or who it belongs to. Perhaps this was your true past
identity.
Blessings,
Rev. Francine"
Now, I don’t put undue weight on anything that any one person says,
but what this response did was to free me from the nagging suspicion
that
I might have once been Dostoevsky. The thought of him as a guide felt
better.
I no longer had to match his work. Shortly afterwards, I finally saw
him
as an external figure in one of my dreams. That put the issue to rest.
As for the "Diante" reference, I did think immediately of Dante.
I once tried to read his Inferno, and I didn't get very far.
I'd long since ceased to be Christian and did not like that undertone.
I simply can’t accept a religion where nice people are damned because
they
don't utter a certain phrase while mean people are saved because they
do.
I can not and will not accept that. Karma is much more elegant and
fair.
So, I felt no desire to have been Dante and dismissed that part of
the letter.
By June of 1998 I had finished my Inferno and posted on my art web
site.
At that point I did still want to get it published. Response on the
part of
readers was good. One person read it three times, another said it
had changed
her life, and a third said he expected his grandchildren to read
it. At a
writers’ conference I learned that my Inferno was too short to be
considered for
publication in the fantasy market and that I shouldn’t have posted
it on the web.
So, I let go of my dream of getting it published, left it on my web
site,
and began to focus more on the art, which was more of a pleasure to
do.
Up until that point I had thought of myself as a writer. Now I was
an artist.
Art:
My early focus was math, but art was the other thing I was good at
as a child.
When I was in 5th grade I did a carved block print that
ended up
in the school music teacher’s living room as well as a city art show.
A primitive sculpture I did in 6th grade was also in a
city-wide show.
vI had a talent for drawing, but I stopped doing art after grade school.
My focus was on math and science. I wanted to be a math or physics
professor.
In a college physics class my hunger for art was ignited when the
lights
were turned out and white light was splintered into colors by a prism.
I tried making colored cellophane and balsa wood sculptures to capture
some of that beauty in the form of colored cubes, but it wasn’t the
same.
So, I settled on writing at that point in time because it seemed
broader.
My hunger for art had to smolder a while longer. In my late 20s I
did take several
drawing and design classes at the university and did register as
an art major,
but writing was my focus. I remember being apprehensive in my first
drawing class,
but I more than held my own among students who’d been drawing all
their lives.
Scheduling problems and lack of space at home kept me from moving
on
When I was 36, my second wife and I built a house in Verona, a small,
near-by city.
I began teaching myself to paint in the basement there, focusing
on smooth, well-blended
geometric forms, but when my second marriage broke up, I lost my
studio space.
I had resumed writing, working on my Inferno, and that was my focus
again.
I got my first computer in 1995, at age 45. It was 75 MHz, with
8 MB of RAM.
I initially used it for writing and games. Then, in 1996, I saw
an advertisement
for CorelDraw 6, which included a crude 3D program that caught my
attention.
I bought that set of programs liked working with images on my computer
so much that
I bought more programs and began to immerse myself in art on that
computer.
My initial work was embarrassingly stiff, but I enjoyed it. Then,
in the fall of 1996,
Bryce 2 came out in PC form, and that set me free as an artist. I
loved the way
it could simulate glass, metal, and water, as well as sculptural
forms in general.
Pieces took many hours to render on my first computer, but I didn’t
care.
By the spring of 1997 I had enough pieces to start a web site. It
was immediately
covered in a local newspaper article. By the summer of 1997 some
of my pieces
were good enough to catch the eye of the two webmasters I mentioned
earlier.
At the end of 1997 I upgraded to a 300 MHz PC, and the art became
easier.
I worked intuitively, experimenting with surfaces and atmospheres,
keeping
objects to a minimum and looking for balance. A certain strangeness
variably slips
into anything I do because of my interest in other-worldly things,
but I often
worked out of a shear love of color and form. Images on a computer
monitor have a
stained glass-like quality of light that I love. I like geometric
sculptural forms.
Because I was still writing, I was only spending a few hours a week
on art.
When I let go of the writing in mid-1998, I was able to concentrate
on art.
I had no grand designs or goals for my imagery, I simply loved working
with light.
In January of 1999 I upgraded computers again, this time to a 450
MHz PC,
and I began doing a 16-image online gallery every month. In April
of 1999
I began my "Etherworld" galleries, with the idea of making my art
more ethereal.
Then, in April of 2000 I began my "Greenworld" galleries. I was feeling
an urge
to portray different planes on my web site through a complex series
of galleries.
I was deflected in late September of 2000, after doing my sixth Greenworld
gallery.
It began when a science fiction writer, Denise Vitola, emailed me
because of my art.
We wrote back and forth, and one day I mentioned that I liked the
work of
Dostoevsky and Hesse because of their spirituality, depth, and dualistic
characters,
a theme central to my own Inferno. Then I went to work and, as on
the day I chose
"The Inferno" as the title for my book, there were two Dante books
waiting for me.
I do see Dante books from time to time, but no more than a few a year.
It is rare.
On this particular day the titles caught my attention. One had to
do with Duality
as a theme in Dante's work as well as his love of light, and the other
spoke of a
"new life of Dante." I had just written of my own interest in the
theme of duality,
and my life by now revolved around light in the form of art on a computer
monitor.
This was the first time I realized that I had anything in common with
Dante aside
from the title of my book. I began to look into the books and into
his Inferno.
These two books were just the beginning of an intense flurry of coincidences.
Some were bizarre. I read of Dante's encounter with Virgil, and
then I turned on
my TV and found myself watching a fantasy program where Virgil make
an appearance.
This is completely meaningless by itself, but it was part of a larger
pattern.
I am good at recognizing patterns. On supper break one day, a hornet
stung me.
It was my first hornet sting in 25 years. My finger was still smarting
at home
that evening as I read Dante’s canto where everyone is being stung
by hornets.
That was not the mystical part of the experience. I left work early
because of
my finger, and I ended driving into a rainbow at one point with the
sun shining
in my eyes in the rearview mirror. Then I read of Dante's hornet
stings.
It may sound silly, but seeing the sun and driving into a rainbow
was moving.
I wouldn't have been in that place at that time if not for the hornet
sting.
I didn’t read much in the Dante books, but I did learn that there
are parallels
between his life and my life. He sought to embrace all human knowledge,
a laughable goal now, but not unlike what I wanted from physics,
parapsychology,
and comparative religion. Lost or unrequited love was also a driving
force for
both of us in our early writing. We both moved to a city named Verona
in our mid-30s,
and we both began an allegorical work titled "Inferno" in our early
40s.
He was deeply bothered by the damnation of virtuous pagans. I had
already gone
one step further. My companion for many years was Wiccan, a Pagan.
Dante and I both deal with planes, or levels of creation, and mathematical
structure and symmetry are equally important in our work. Some time
later,
in the spring of 2002, I learned that in his first book, "New Life,"
he speaks of coincidence and special numbers in much the same way
that I do.
Viewing his life and mine as two halves of a whole, both Western
and Eastern
philosophies are represented, resulting in a wholeness and symmetry
that
probably comes closer to the truth than any one religion or worldview
by itself.
Finally, given his intense love of light, I’m sure he would have
liked computer art.
This is only a sampling. There were dreams, too, like one where I
held
a book written by Dante, and it was this life, the one I am living
now.
My own Inferno had already spoken of such a thing. So, looking at
all
of the coincidences in concert, including that first one, on the day
I
chose "The Inferno" as my title, I took another look at what I had
written.
It is about a young shaman who remembers earlier lives. In one of
those lives
he was a writer, the author of a book describing the life he is currently
living.
The writer’s name I intuitively chose was Danu. Given that "te" means
"you"
in Italian, and "you" sounds like "u" in English, Danu can be translated
as Dante.
I also discoverd after the fact that my character's name, Pietr, is
similar to
Pietro, the name of a son of Dante who ended up as a lawyer in Verona.
The list goes on, as if something deep within me had been trying to
communicate.
In late September of 2000, I was on the verge of burnout with respect
to my art,
so my annual vacation to the woods of northern Wisconsin came at a
good time.
It was short, but I had numerous, drawn out spells of déjà
vu in the forest.
I not only recognized places, as if from a long-forgotten dream, I
felt moments
of compressed time, seemingly the whole of creation there within in
my grasp.
I could almost remember shaping the dream. I looked around at other
people, and I
couldn’t help but think that they, too, knew that this is a dream
and we are the dreamer.
I caught a glimpse of something I’d experienced over and over throughout
eternity.
When I returned home, I set to work on a new project consisting of
a set of
Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso, and Creativo galleries with renewed
vigor.
I’d started the Inferno gallery before the trip, in response to the
coincidences,
but I felt better equipped to finish the project after I returned.
Why the fourth gallery? I believe that it is within us to create
our reality
in a very real way. The four galleries also correspond loosely to
the physical,
astral, causal (past life), and mental planes in some Eastern systems.
I dated my Inferno gallery October 2000, Purgatorio November 2000,
and my
Creativo gallery December 2000. I managed to fit in an extra gallery,
so I
dated the Paradiso gallery Easter 1300, the time Dante returned from
his journey.
Dante would have done the same. My theme galleries do not illustrate
his work,
but rather my own views. They are linked to the four-by-four structure
of images
within each gallery and to the structure of my Inferno, which is
derived from
a quote in the Talmud concerning the devil’s number being "four times
four."
I am after all portraying the lowest planes or states of consciousness
in my book.
When I speak of "Eastern" mystical thought, I am drawing from various
sources,
but talking mostly about ECKANKAR, a discipline revolving around
connection
with Spirit in the form of light and sound. It was curious that in
the midst of
all these coincidences, I was reading some passages titled "Soul’s
Identity."
ECKANKAR speaks of this kind of coincidence as waking dreams intended
to convey
a message or lesson. Part of my lesson probably involves aspects
of my personality
that still need work, including excessive pride, lust, and passing
judgement on others.
There is also anger in there from a deep hurt. I do understand that
things balance,
and that each of us is something far greater than any one life of
any one person.
There were three more Dante coincidences that should be noted. Denise
Vitola
had a birthday in October, and a friend sent her a story as a birthday
present.
The story was about someone who possessed the last copy of Dante’s
Inferno.
The author knew nothing of me at the time. If a part of me was once
Dante,
then my Inferno is, in essence, Dante's last Inferno, replacing the
old one.
In December of 2000, when I returned the two Dante books I had checked
out,
I found a new Dante book waiting for me on my desk. I tried to get
rid of them,
and they came right back in a new form. The library hadn't even ordered
this book.
It found its way to my desk on this particular day anyway.
Throughout all of this I was observing an additional strangeness in
my emails
with Denise Vitola. Specifically, I would write about some subject
in email
before I left for work, and then a book title directly pertaining
to what I
had just spoken of would be waiting for me at work. One day I made
note of this
to her and mentioned that she was like an oracle for me. She replied
that she did
have knowledge or recall of serving as an oracle for a priest in an
ancient time.
I decided to test my observation. I said give me one more sign, something
specific.
Then I went to work, and when I got there, I found a credit for the
Dante book I had
returned months earlier. This is the only time I ever received any
kind of credit
for a Dante book, and it came seemingly in response to my direct
request for a sign.
So, what am I to think? What would you think? Although I fear falling
prey to a delusion,
I think I would have to be an idiot to ignore the signs, dreams, and
coincidences.
And so what if it is true that some part of was me Dante, or still
is given that
a part of us exists outside time? There is a core part of my being,
a spark,
that was a core part of his being, but I am a different person now,
with a
different body and brain. What should I do? The same as anyone else,
learn from
my mistakes and continue to work at becoming a better vehicle for
Spirit to bring
light into this world. That is where my art comes in. I am still in
my infancy as
an artist. My work is unique and moving, but I have no wish to compare
myself with
other artists. I’ve seen too much beautiful work by too many gifted
people to do that,
but I do think that I have something to share. That is my goal now.
My art is my way
of seeing inside. I have not yet been able to leave my body in a fully
conscious
state, but people who have done so have written to say that they’ve
seen places
I’ve portrayed in my art, so I am not imagining everything. I work
intuitively,
following inner promptings in a never-ending quest for beauty and
light.
__________________________________________________________
The above was written in early 2001, before I began my project.
In October of 2001 I began a Divine Comedy Parallel Gallery
project which consists of 1,800 images in groupings of nine.
These are not intended to illustrate the poem, rather
they supplement it with the added depth of mirrored nines.
I did not realize until later that the number nine was
a pivital number for Dante in his first book "Vita Nuova."
Regarding strong synchronicity in my life, it has continued.
One explanation, a Taoist view, is that I am simply doing what
I am supposed to be doing, and so in harmony with the whole.
Another explanation, relating to between life accounts by people
regressed via hypnosis, is that these are pre-arranged "flags."
I will conclude with a statement I once posted on my Inferno page:
___________________________________________________
On the day I chose "The Inferno" as the title for my story,
I subsequently arrived at work to find that someone had
placed two copies of Dante's Inferno on my desk,
a new copy intended to replace a worn out copy.
I was not thinking of Dante when I wrote my allegory,
but dozens of new coincidences in the fall of 2000
forced me to take a look at his life. As it turns out,
we have much in common, including moving to a city
named Verona in our late 30's and writing an Inferno.
Both lives exhibit a strong interest in light, in the grand
scheme of things, and in portraying both light and dark.
In retrospect Danu, the name I intuitively chose for a previous
incarnation of the character in my book, translates as Dante
(te=you=u), and the character's current name, Pietr, is
strikingly similar to that of one of Dante's sons, Pietro.
All of these things taken together suggest a connection.
I acknowledge the superior artistry of Dante's work, but
I believe that my Inferno is more profound than the Comedy.
My Inferno is not bound by religious doctrine. It is about Soul,
That which is conscious, and the relationship of Soul to this
world.
The Inferno is my only fiction. My mind is better suited for
math (I was
elected a member of the Mathematical Association of America at
the age
of eighteen) and the computer art I now enjoy. I love working
with light,
but for a time The Inferno was my focus. I had to write it, absolutely
had to.
You can believe what you want. I am not intellectually certain
of anything
except for the fact that I am conscious, but I do have to consider
that
coincidences and my own intuitive writing and art may be ways
Spirit
communicates with my rigid, linear mind. My Inferno can be read
purely
as a story, but if you suspend disbelief and imagine that it springs
from
the same spiritually-oriented spark of awareness that is responsible
for the Divine Comedy, its meaning will be greatly enhanced.
When you're done, you can pick up your beliefs at the door.