kuchler-2017-differential-geometry-the-informational-surface-and-oceanic-art-the-role-of-pattern-in-knowledge-economies
kuchler-2017-differential-geometry-the-informational-surface-and-oceanic-art-the-role-of-pattern-in-knowledge-economies
kuchler-2017-differential-geometry-the-informational-surface-and-oceanic-art-the-role-of-pattern-in-knowledge-economies
Abstract
Graphic pattern (e.g. geometric design) and number-based code (e.g. digital sequen-
cing) can store and transmit complex information more efficiently than referential
modes of representation. The analysis of the two genres and their relation to one
another has not advanced significantly beyond a general classification based on
motion-centred geometries of symmetry. This article examines an intriguing example
of patchwork coverlets from the maritime societies of Oceania, where information
referencing a complex genealogical system is lodged in geometric designs. By drawing
attention to the interplay of graphic pattern and number-based code and its role in
the knowledge economies of maritime societies, the article offers new insight into
possible ways of designing a digital informational surface that captures the behaviour
of an operational system, allowing both for differentiation and integration.
Keywords
algebraic systems, differential geometry, informational surfaces, maritime navigation,
pattern analysis
crests of waves whose shape is sensed as they hit the canoe one by one in
a sequence modelled in distinctly patterned yet otherwise non-represen-
tational artefacts.
Three different types of so-called stick charts exist: an abstract chart
that serves as a prototype of the behaviour of the system, used for
instruction; and two charts mapping actual locations, actual islands
and specific landing sites (Ascher, 2002: 89–125). Rather than voyaging
being a process aided by mapping the movement of the canoe between
islands in relation to independent and pre-existing variables, the
Micronesian voyager thus maps the canoe’s journey by assigning spatial
and metric values to this temporal process, thus rendering the canoe itself
stationary, with iterative and repetitive patterns of surface swells moving
past until a certain sequence and articulation of waves finally enable the
recognition of the anticipated island (Hutchins, 1995: 118).
The stick charts are in effect mapping the journey as an assemblage of
differentiated, three-dimensional neighbouring spaces, whose sequence
and magnitude is captured both as prototype and as record of the experi-
ence of relations underpinning the complex systemic interplay of
currents, winds and elevations. As prototypes, stick charts are at once
metric and geometric, modelling relations and their systemic behaviour
across visible and invisible domains. They are in fact exemplifying the
enigma of seemingly representational surfaces that reference relations
whose immanent relational constitution makes them virtually impossible
to unravel and which nevertheless inform understanding of complex sys-
temic relations across analogous domains.2
We might disregard the epistemic work such prototypes do as cultur-
ally specific and limited to maritime navigation, and yet by doing so we
would miss out on understanding how stick charts can be engaged with
knowingly and what difference the way they are engaged with makes in
culture and society. For as instruments of instruction and recollection,
Micronesian stick charts draw out ideas that transcend the specific con-
text of their use and cultivate an aesthetic that canonizes informational
content in a way that is, as we shall see, of peculiar relevance to the
operation of knowledge economies within wider Oceania. The ubiquity,
translatability and continuity of the ideas that inform the capture of
seascape as a system of sequences and relations which make strategic
navigation possible is evidenced by artefacts produced across island
Polynesia whose central role in rituals sustaining social polities of great
complexity spanning many generations is well known (Brunt et al., 2011).
There is the late-18th-century figure-shaped casket from the island of
Rurutu that is famous for its surface budding with iterated and replicated
miniature extensions of itself; and the so-called ‘God staff’, the only
remaining artefact from the pre-Christian era in the Cook Islands, cov-
ered along the length of its 7 metre shaft with iterated and self-similar
figures. Both artefacts were central to the practice of secondary burial
Küchler 77
Figure 1. Tivaivai Taorei, Cook Islands, Rarotonga, 2003. Photo: Author’s own.
Figure 2. Cook Islands tivaivai at exhibition, Rarotonga 2003 – taorei, ta taura and manu
Source: Photo by author.
most complex coverlets, produced only in the Cook Islands, which are
famous for their complex genealogical system (Siikala, 1996). The taorei
piecework is composed of identical, iteratively replicated and transitively
arranged core patterns (pu), made of precisely measured, identically cut
pieces in work that is divided between four to eight women, each stitch-
ing a triangular part of the core pattern known and recalled as a sequence
of numbers and colours. In ways that are to be unravelled in the course
of this article, it is the number sequence that serves as key to allowing the
assemblage of pieces at the surface of the patchwork to instruct and
remind people of the precise positioning of persons and their polities in
the complex system of genealogy and its resulting polities.
It is to this latter piecework coverlet in the main that I will direct
attention in this article. In doing so, I will expose the algebraic logic
and the geometric imagination it gives rise to at work in the construction
of what may seem a flat, merely decorative surface, and show how it is
that the workings of the genealogical system can be deduced from a
seemingly abstract surface pattern (Küchler and Were, 2005).
Patchwork is a vehicle for navigating biographical relations and to plot
life projects with as much surety as the navigation of the ocean, and it is
its formalized aesthetic surfacing as pattern that serves to instruct,
remind and inform, turning a mere artefact into an epistemic tool.
Before returning to unravelling how patchwork is able to do its epistemic
82 Theory, Culture & Society 34(7–8)
concerned with the question of how such systems are engaged with know-
ledgeably. In relation to the material discussed in this article, the question
of how abstract pattern is intentionally applied so as to achieve closure
and yet retain a systemic capacity that binds the one into the many
reasserts itself with a force to which only the recent work of Patrice
Maniglier (2006) attempts to do justice. There is no space here to elab-
orate on the recovery of the work of Claude Lévi-Strauss for a philo-
sophical anthropology, and it will have to suffice to point to Maniglier’s
work as justification for the return to Lévi-Strauss’s (1963a, 1963b, 1969)
much ignored insight into what he so aptly called the ‘canonical formula’,
whose manifestations resonate across sensorial registers and are as
mobile as they are intuitively recognized and engaged with imaginatively
as people are cognizant of their intersubjective validity.
For Lévi-Strauss had understood the role of mathematics in deducing
the understanding of relation, which is delivered in its potency only by
pattern, and used this insight to create the rigorous method directed to
studying the seemingly random data on which anthropology still relies
today. Seemingly unremarkable surfaces, visible as graphic designs
drawn into the sand, twisted into string, plaited into palm fronds or
woven into vines, were first understood by the early anthropologist
Abel Deacon (1934), who came to be stationed, at the start of the First
World War, as a missionary on the island of Ambrym in the archipelago
of Vanuatu, south-west of mainland New Guinea in island Oceania.
Trained in natural sciences in Cambridge, and thus acquainted with
mathematics and physics, Deacon was able to translate the geometric
diagrams that were drawn, plaited and lashed by the islanders into an
algebraic system called in mathematics a noncommutative group, which
emphasizes relations between objects and rules of combination that allow
for a coherent formal interpretation and prediction of transformations.
The realization that patterns can be ‘read’ as a system of elements (such
as real numbers) together with a system of abstract rules for their com-
bination so that two sides of a formula can be transformed in relation to
one another proved revolutionary in anthropology, its logic used by
Lévi-Strauss to decode further the data left by Deacon, revealing the
existence of the most complex marriage system known to us, consisting
of six classes (Lévi-Strauss, 1969). It was the discovery of what Lévi-
Strauss termed the ‘canonical formula’, consisting of the operational
quality of so-called quaternion groups, that enabled him to create the
basis for the rigorous study of the quality or behaviour of kinship
systems based on observable and quantified relations (Gell, 1998: 56;
Lévi-Strauss, 1963a, 1963b; Morava, 2003, 2005: 60).
It is not that Lévi-Strauss’s insight into the role of the ‘canonical
formula’ in allowing the translation of three-dimensional into two-
dimensional imagination had been totally lost to anthropology, but its
mathematical properties enabling systems of transformation and
Küchler 85
mathematician Maria Ascher (2002), whose insight that the very idea of
relation is an inherently mathematical one allowed her to expose the
mathematics at work in diverse graphic systems, misses the chance to
expose the systemic relation between algebraic and geometric imagin-
ation, and the difference that the understanding of such a relation may
make to how complex systems are imagined to behave and are engaged
with forethought and strategic intent.
Support in suggesting that the idea of informational gesture alone may
not suffice comes from a surprising corner, the work of the philosopher
Michel Serres. In his work entitled Atlas (1994), Serres reflects on the
emerging culture of information in which local and global phenomena
are mapped by sequential, reversible and entropic flows that are made
accessible to understanding via surfaces that reference the relational
nature of topologically apprehended actions (cf. Connor, 2004).
Serres’s denunciation of linear thought, preoccupied with tracking the
movement of solid objects such as bodies in space, allows him to chal-
lenge our conventional understanding of surface as a flat and metric
form, instead presenting it as ‘folded’ time, a way of mapping time by
giving it a spatial value by marking the infinitesimal neighbourhood of
each point. Serres uses the idea of fabric to allude to the sequential
relations between such neighbourhoods that compose the seemingly
linear point configuration of a surface. Rather than allowing us to rely
on a simple model of similitude in identifying the informational capacity
of fabric, the topology immanent in fabric forces us to connect an ‘inner’
and imagined (imaged) rotation of a geometrically conceived surface with
the relational nature of action that is drawn attention to in the external
shape of a surface, an interlacing of image, surface and relational action
that was conceived of long ago in Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz’s
Faltentheorie (Bredekamp, 2008). Fabric thus anticipates and recalls
sequence as it unfolds in novel assemblages, always different and yet
connected, perfectly exemplifying Peirce’s theory of the index, itself
based on the reappraisal of the logic of relation based on topology
(Burch, 1991), in its gesturing capacity.
To understand how surface can do the work of both connectivity and
closure, we need to return to the work of Serres (1994), and to the nature
of the patterned surface as topological and therefore geometric entity.
Topology, the study of the spatial properties of things that remain invari-
ant under deformation, is concerned with a complex of space, time,
matter and process made manifest in the material imagination at work
in weaving and shaping foldable, stretchable materials. Rather than
directing attention to exact measurement for its own sake, topology
captures spatial relations, such as continuity, neighbourhood, insideness
and outsideness, disjunction and connection. Within a topological frame
of reference, patterns originate from the application of number systems
such as those forming the quaternion group, whose conceptual
Küchler 87
Tivaivai coverlets are the essential operatives of the idea of the polity
or the social body equipped with offices and forms of power that outlast
the mortal body of persons. And it is because there are many polities
even on one and the same island in the Cooks that the idea of the one
goes hand-in-hand with a seemingly competing notion of multiplicity,
where difference rather than sameness matters (Küchler and Eimke,
2009; Siikala, 1996: 47–53). Cook Islands genealogy and its resulting
system of hierarchy is of astonishing complexity when compared to
that of other Maori-speaking populations in Hawaii and Tahiti, where
the principal distinction is a matter of birth alone, distinguishing younger
from elder brothers. In the Cook Islands a second factor is added to that
of birth, and this is the path taken by the apical ancestor and the location
of the arrival of the canoe on the island. Being able to trace one’s own
path to the path of an ancestor legitimizes power over land, its access and
its distribution. Relative position via autochthonous birth is marked by
an appliqué coverlet (ta taura) that is gifted between households linked
through marriage, and the power that such coverlets affirm is distinctive
in terms of its reach and extension across generations conjoined by living
memory. Knowledge of the path taken by the foreign element, however,
is far more complex and difficult to ascertain, as it requires being able to
translate the navigator’s experience of the epic landing site into a formal
system that encourages or enables recognition, and hence its own valid-
ation as knowledge. It is, as we will see, the assemblage of pieces of pre-
cisely measured and cut cloth (taorei) into a pattern that can be repeated
over and over again that achieves this effect of validation, gifted, poign-
antly, by a grandmother who is herself foreign-born to her own adopted
granddaughter, both repeating the journey taken by the apical ancestor.
It is important to describe the construction of the taorei in some detail,
so as to convey how the pattern indexes both the epical path and the
future relations it manifests. Composed of several thousand coloured
squares or hexagons cut from shredded, readily coloured, roughly
woven cotton imported from China, the core pattern of a taorei is a
singular assemblage of a number of pieces of cloth of the same shape
(usually a hexagon) and size, differing only in their colour. The core
pattern is arranged in the shape of a square, and this squared core pat-
tern is then replicated in an iterative and transitive manner across the
surface of the quilt, which measures 3.5 to 5 square metres in total.
Considerable variation is possible in how the core pattern is arranged:
it can be enlarged to fill the entire surface of the quilt, or it may be
replicated in either a horizontal or diagonally offset symmetry across
the surface of the patchwork. A piecework coverlet of this kind is care-
fully planned and worked out mathematically in order to avoid the situ-
ation that coloured cloth is left over or that not enough has been bought,
as cloth available on the island is bought in bales whose colour changes
subtly with each purchase, thus making the completion of a badly
90 Theory, Culture & Society 34(7–8)
planned coverlet impossible. The planning starts with the metric of the
core pattern.
The composition of the core pattern follows a number sequence
recalled and told to others by the woman leading a sewing bee as num-
bers of coloured patches are threaded in the order specified and taken
home by each woman to sew the component section of the core motif.
Each core pattern is stitched by two women, with the pattern itself being
divided into triangular parts that mirror each other exactly. The number
of times the core pattern is repeated across the surface of the quilt, each
demanding two women for sewing, depends on the number of women
working together in the sewing bee and will have been reflected already in
the size of the individual pieces of cloth. The number sequence, which
appears as the outer framing row of coloured patches on each of the two
sides of the triangle, gives the order of operation, allowing subsequent
internal rows to be recalled and offered up as a number of coloured
patches to the group of workers.
Core patterns are thus metric in kind, remembered and told to others
who are working together to stitch a coverlet. The number sequences
running along the outer frame or path (pu) of the two sides of each
triangle, doubled to create a square, are identical and are identifiable
as noncommutative number sets, with the order in which the numbers
are presented as coloured pieces being significant. The internal rows of
each triangle are deduced from the sequence of the outer row, although
some woman take the liberty of creating their own internal, doubled
designs, deviating from the mathematics laid down in the path (pu) of
the pattern. In mathematics we know such algebraic systems as forming
quaternion groups, and Cook Islands women make use of this mathem-
atical idea of a relation between two identical sets of sequences of num-
bers and rules for their combination. It is certainly not the case that Cook
Islands women are consciously constructing quaternion quilts, but they
are using what Claude Lévi-Strauss has aptly called the ‘canonical
formula’ to imagine a complex system of numerical relations whose
epistemic purchase we can begin to grasp when delving deeper into the
question of how tivaivai works and what it does (Fischer, 2005).
We now understand that number sequences and their relation to one
another evince the idea that any new sequence is never new but only a
transformation of an existing relation, in much the same way as Claude
Lévi-Strauss (1963a) has shown for cycles of myth. Quaternion number
systems are also used in digital rotation of geometric objects, making the
reference of sequence to the wave formations associated with the landing
site of an apical ancestor’s canoe not as strange as it might first seem. In
fact, the sequence of numbers along the sides of a patched pattern serve to
translate a three-dimensional geometric object, topologically conceived,
into a two-dimensional surface, thus allowing the relation between the
pattern and the wave formations characteristic for the landing site.
Küchler 91
The giving and the receiving of tivaivai connects those who may be
living apart for most of their lives, but they also demarcate moments of
endings and beginnings of sequences of biographically charted events.
In more than one way, each new tivaivai anticipates other ones to be
made in the future, budding like the flowers on a tree. We may think of
its surface as a skin-like, self-replicating and layered-cloth thing, whose
successive folding and unfolding traces the frequent departures and the
many returns that mark Cook Islands life. Marking points of departure
and new beginnings, the stitched surface is a shroud that conjoins per-
sons as its ties together those who are divided by fate and circumstance in
life, at the same time as it differentiates those inhabiting the same small
island. No doubt as a result of the complex system of hierarchy at work
in the Cook Islands (Siikala, 1991), social differentiation is marked on
the islands, with persons and households multiply intersecting with com-
peting narrations of biographical relations as a result of intermarriage
between distinct image-based polities. The sewing bee operated by
women heading distinct households exists at the fault line of identity
and differentiation, with each group sharing a bank account and acting
as a unit in all aspects of economic and political life. The knowledge with
which women engage sewing tivaivai as core economic and political activ-
ity enables them to assert an idea of relation whose metric is shared and
yet differentiated.
Anthropologists like to build models that have comparative signifi-
cance and that also reflect the logic applied to understanding the behav-
iour of systems at the micro level of local life in ways Claude Lévi-Strauss
(1966) famously termed ‘the science of the concrete’. The models
proposed by anthropologists that enable one to understand the logical
ordering that is permitting the distinct scales of sociality to be compre-
hended and to be predicted in their relation to one another have always
been informed by mathematics, moving from a simple model of magni-
fication to one of fractal organization whereby parts are encompassed by
the whole, and the whole is generative of the parts which are infused by
the whole (cf. Kapferer, 2010: 191). While on the one hand the iterative
construction of the tivaivai appears to resonate with this latter model,
fractality as the value ascribed to social relations works only as long as
we disregard the operative idea behind the tivaivai, which as assemblage
invokes a translation of a three-dimensional rotational object into a two-
dimensional surface using a metric that is specific to each assemblage
while evoking the same elements and principles of combination. The
concept of fractality suggests a flat and homogeneous space, yet it is
not helpful when trying to comprehend the differential curvature of
wave formations associated with the different locations that are recalled
by origin narratives and mapped by tivaivai.
Riemannian differential geometry invoked in this article makes sense
of such patchwork and the model of social relations it resonates with in
92 Theory, Culture & Society 34(7–8)
Conclusion
Cook Islanders’ preoccupation with the making of large surfaces com-
posed of patches carries on largely unnoticed. Like so many textile arts, it
evokes little interest in anyone who is not a ‘maker’, something that is to
do with our misconception that flat surfaces are inert and shallow.
A composite of iterative stuff like sand and threads, and inherently
mobile and performative, the patterned surfaces described in this article
co-articulate action and the representation of action in ways that demand
we conceive of and imagine topological, transformative and systemic
relations that invite multiple views on a continuous multiplicity of
local space. The workings of the surfaces discussed in this article resonate
with ideas of multiplicity and closure, and forms of sociability, whose
social effects are resonant with complex systems of hierarchy and an
acceptance of instability and transformation. It is the recognition of
assemblages on the surface of coverlets as the qualitative identification
of local space via quantitative means that binds people to each other
passionately, and with a persistence and reach that surpasses the limita-
tions of memory.
Untrained in the art of abstract metric modelling, lacking the vocabu-
lary to attend to a logic of relation that dwells in the concrete, and ill
equipped to think with geometry in mind or to relate what is visible with
what is invisible, it is unsurprising that social science has such a hard task
in theoretically appraising what patterned surfaces are, how they work
and what they do. That the surfaces discussed in this article are at home
in maritime societies, in which information exchange operates across vast
distances, should make us look at our own preconceptions around metric
coding and the possibility of formalized informational surfaces that
Küchler 93
connect while achieving closure, and rethink how surfaces can bind an
inner, profoundly imagistic and yet metric and geometric world with an
intentional relation to the world. It is by recognizing the relation between
mathematics, ideas and the ‘physical real’, captured by Albert Lautman
(2011) and recalling the work on differential geometry by Bernhard
Riemann, that we can understand the kind of worlding in which infor-
mational surfaces can thrive.
Notes
1. As described by Tim Ingold (2007) in his treatise on our penchant for navi-
gating by walking along paths that have a beginning and end with lots of
memorable views in between.
2. I refer here to the essay by Walter Benjamin on ‘The task of the translator’,
published in his collected essays, vol. 1 (Benjamin, 1996). See also the work
by Patrice Maniglier (2006, 2013) on the enigma of the sign whose relations
are immanent (‘it represents itself within itself’ [Maniglier, 2013: 108]).
3. In contrast to Euclidean ‘finite’ geometry of three-dimensional linear point
configurations, differential geometry considers curved three-dimensional
spaces. It was first theorized in 1863 by Bernhard Riemann, who extended
Euclidean geometry to non-flat spaces. Rather than operating according to a
geometry of local spaces, as Euclidean geometry does, Riemannian infinitesi-
mal or differential geometry operates according to a conception of space that
is global, but constituted by an assemblage of locally discrete and therefore
heterogeneous spaces (see Duffy, 2013: 104).
4. The realization that ideas of relation are captured by mathematics has inev-
itable implications for social science that has far too long remained ignorant
of the fact that the idea of relation is fundamentally a mathematical one
(Ascher, 2002; Gell, 1998; Krämer and Bredekamp, 2013).
5. This idea, first articulated in Simmel’s 1916 essay on Rembrandt (Simmel,
2005 [1916]), and his later writings on artificial sociability and the sociology
of aesthetics, are captured in De La Fuente’s (2008) essay on the sociology–
aesthetics nexus in Georg Simmel’s thought.
6. ‘Much of what we believe we ‘‘see’’ directly is in fact not seen at all, but
rather, as one says, is ‘‘deduced’’’ (Simmel, 2005 [1916]: 17).
7. Dimensional translation has been famously analysed by Claude Lévi-Strauss
(1963b) in his work on split representation, involving the characteristic split-
ting of an image so that two halves face one another, which can be traced
across both Asian and American art. By tracing the splitting of an image to
the actions informing the process of the creation of this pattern via the trans-
lation of an image from three-dimensional into two-dimensional form, Lévi-
Strauss was able to draw a parallel with the characteristic collapsing of the
concept of person with a socially effective office in ways symptomatic of
hierarchical societies in which men compete over structurally and genealogic-
ally conferred status that outlasts the individual person.
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This article is part of the Theory, Culture & Society special section on
‘Visualizing Surfaces, Surfacing Vision,’ edited by Rebecca Coleman and
Liz Oakley-Brown