Making Week Day One

Today we made stuff out of mainly cardboard and tape- back to basics stuff with 'one day till the final exhibition' we had to crack out our final piece in 5 hours. I used the day to push one idea around-
The First was looking at a display type item, lets say a shelf with a window type thing- pretty similar to the window on a pool table- where objects are placed into it and then after enough accumulation has happened the first objects exit the system to be destroyed on the floor.

The second was looking at a similar kind of thing where some kind of conveyor belt moving around displaying at different angles and positions moved through the system and then at the pinnacle or perhaps end, it would have its roller coaster type photo taken and then sent into some kind of archiving system- either the photo or the object.

Next was something i had to get out- a box with different compartments: a kind of Russian doll in layers.

The final thing was better in the drawing a spiral shelf in a room where items enter and exit at top and bottom respectively- similar to the roller coaster and the pool ball window.

I like this idea of movement in display and collection- the slopes add to the idea of movement and time being a factor in the accumulation process.

Tutorial No.1

I had my first tutorial today with Laura, it went well and hopefully i need to just carry on. Laura asked us to send her a brief overview of our territories to get to know what was going on and one of the things was listing 3 weaknesses and 3 strengths with the project- this was interesting as it helped me get out some of the things i was thinking about but hadn't externalised- some things were: that i think people outside of a design context (and of course within it) will be able to relate and engage with the project, i reckon everyone collects something- (this is something i need to come back to and explore more- i think a questionnaire for the moment would suffice with a follow up 'collection of the week' book for some of them to be photographed and displayed.) Mini projects are good. I need to get more people involved- collectors, curators and people who might be interesting. I've been wanting to do this but my to-do list is finally getting shorter and so i should be able to get involved on another level next week- interviews, by either email or video will be good. I also want the time to do some drawing- bad Luke- draw all the time.

Terratories/ Things I Have Made

Had our territories presentations, I presented around collections and accumualting, curation, criteria and frames & boundaries. Here are some of the things I put in that I've been making the past week or so. net-etc.jpgThis is the paraphernalia needed to collect, kill, mount and display butterflies and moths. I'm looking at the process with a view to creating some kind of machine that will collect and display in one artifact- perhaps the jar- i like the likeness to taxidermy display glass domes. shelf.jpgThis is a very long shelf, about ten metres, in the studio. I created it as a space for a collection to occur but one which changes as people move things on and off it. It's just sort of looking at the boundaries for a collection and thinking about seriality in collections. It was directly inspired by the last Russel W. Belk quote from the previous post.matchbox-pile.jpgThis is a pile of matchboxes. I intend to collect and curate an 'exhibition' a week- I was originally worried about what format this should take, an actual physical display would be too cumbersome and not bounded enough, a website would be forever unfinished and I didn't like that. I settled on a book- hopefully inkjet print when i get a printer and saddle stitched- this gives a consistent format for the curation side of things to be given more scope- i intend to use different labeling and organising systems- mainly to play and use them and get a better understanding of them- I realise the flaws in the actual acquisition of my 'collections' i.e. they are not true collections due to the contrived nature in which they were obtained (these were bought as a set from Deptford Market) but the real purpose is in the curation and indeed of the once a week thing, i will, through repetition be collecting collections.

Notes on... a week and a tutorial

Had a good one today, talked with Matt and he was positive that i had a territory but was looking too big, instead of getting in and being specific. He mentioned something that i want to keep up which is small projects rather than sprawling experiments or one massive thing, but a project based on a quote or a drawing or one idea. I like this way of doing stuff, it'll hopefully keep me feeling productive and give me good momentum. I thought i should take the opportunity to recap my key things that i want to keep ticking over. My project is essentially to do with collecting but I've tried to narrow it down into the specifics I'm interested in. Accumulation, Curation and Frames and Boundaries. these drawings help show some of my starting points.drawing02.jpgdrawing03.jpgdrawing04.jpgdrawing05.jpgdrawing06.jpgdrawing07.jpg

Other important things at the moment (still) are that  frames create context. A box of 'x' helps describe 'x'. you can't have a box of ... whatever 'x' is a description or a name, it helps create a criteria or typology for the artefact(s). Creating a space for that same 'x' helps validate 'x's reason for being there.

That the repetition of something- an artefact- on mass has the effect to impress only when it is extra ordinary in scale. Something uncommon, unseen or disproportionate to it's parts. Words like awesome are good here i think.

Pres

Seriously I'm so behind the times with these posts. This is from a 4 day project about bringing about an upgrade through decay (like a snake shedding it's skin or muscle tearing to grow stronger.)001.jpg

These are some pretty pictures of decay- looking at tearing, ripping, and dying things rather than the dead.bannana010.jpg

Messing about with time in decay looking at how time plays a part in it.003.jpg

This was an experiment where a book cover was photocopied and then the copy was copied and so on for 150 pages creating a distorted, pixelated version.004.jpg

These coins were created by leaving in coke for different amounts of time- they followed thinking around the ideas of wholeness and subtraction and asked 'when is an artefact at it's best?'005.jpg

I created this stamp that would degrade over time to produce a smudge of its former self- this and the photocopies and the inbuilt change and decay in the outcomes produce interesting limited editions and groups.6003.jpg

This is as still from a short animation where the original shapes were copied and then that was copied, similar to the photocopies but more human and much more varied- the interesting part is that when 3 consecutuive frames are placed next to each otehr it is impossible to distinguish the first from the last. The decay is subtle and gradual. Each new variation is a change from the one before and if we accept that decay is change and that, as the saying goes, a change is a holiday (where a holiday is considered an upgrade) then decay = upgrade.rhino.jpg

This is an image which hit me hard and fitted the brief well. It speaks of conservation and challenges the perceptions of decay.

Repetition, repetition, repetition. Another 4 day project, this time concerned with accumulation and the effects of repetition. 008.jpg

These clock represent the start of my interest in collections and collecting- the separatley mundane clocks are brought together on mass to create an engaging collection.009.jpg

I began to think about how many trees make a forest- separatley there are 15 trees, but when put inside a frame the trees become bounded and layered creating a forest. I began to look at proximity through this aswell.line_02.jpgline_04.jpg

This experiment is concerned with rhythm and pattern, using the most basic form: a black line. I began to put these lines inside frames giving the image a greater pattern like appearance. Maybe the frame or boundary gives it's contents a context in which to be a pattern or collection. nobook_01.jpgnobook_03.jpgnobook_04.jpgnobook_06.jpg

For part of the project I collected photos of house numbers: a seldom appreciated artefact- and created this book which displays them numerically, both as a collection and, due to separate pages, on an individual basis. In this format the numbers can be appreciated singularly and favourites can be concieved.013.jpg

I also displayed them as a poster giving thought to their posisiton on the street in the layout so as to give more context. In the poster the whole group is viewed at the same time, leaving the space for similarities to be recognised- these similarities begin to form small patterns. 015.jpg

Last Slide.

100 Post-its

I guess I'm kinda behind the times with these next few posts- not been hanging at my computer as much as normal i guess. As part of identifying what we want to do for our final project we began by writing 100 hundred ideas on 100 post-its, easier said than done i found. After that we put them on the walls of the studio in categories which we found common ground on and approximately 24 headings developed containing in total approx 5000 post-its (54 people in the class). Every heading was assigned two people- and then these guys split the post-its in their heading into categories based on similarities or whatever. Then 3 brief ideas were presented and voted on for the 2 to be carried on a be written up- From these resulting 48 briefs we individually picked 2 to run with for 8 days- after which we presented what we had done and what we aimed to do in the next couple of weeks.

These are my 100 post-its:

clocks,

shaving/ coffee ritual,

goosebumps/ hair raising,

opposites,

anesthetic/ numb,

stair politics,

echoes,

game theory,

stale/ stagnation,

breathing in sync/ walking in sync,

repetition,

collect & accumulate (validated through it's peers),

collector as subversive and transgressive,

collector as organiser + criteria,

collecting trophies/ memorials,

raymears total canoe,

labyrinth,

insurance,

fortification,

dead photos/ slides,

piano tune/ roll,

house numbers,

keats and the imagined,

palimpsest,

advertising through artifacts,

valid/ invalid,

polarity,

locke and temporal flux,

multi valued logic,

moths,

using existing forms/ structures,

volume (sound etc),

pattern,

type in real,

fade/ decay/ texture,

tidal swimming pool,

numerals/ counting,

self contained things- crabs & mussels,

guilt,

hand written notes,

excess materials,

accumulation,

choice as a limiter,

constraints as liberating,

light as a material,

exhibition touching,

swarms,

sacrifice, hornets/ holey ice,

end grain, end cardboard,

symmetry,

stencils,

mushrooms,

prosaic,

implication, pragmatic linguistics,

mnemonics,

sticky tape,

immediacy of use/ feedback,

pain- ache - desire,

prioritising,

the act of staring something,

guild,

compromise,

joints/ fixings,

power in consistency,

metal type,

trains/ tracks,

tickets,

toilet door signs,

habits,

tautology,

spectacle,

slow design,

sleep in a book, sheets of a book, bed time story,

where you are = how you are,

non- action,

las vegas hooker cads,

facile,

irrational,

complete,

loneliness,

gray(-)scale,

inevitability,

mutant,

entropy,

segment,

gargoyle,

scythe,

some chemists mean contrivance,

mittens on string,

compassion fatigue,

canal locks, woman on phone "are you here?",

drawing machines,

originate,

tattoo fonts,

peg type boards,

cathartic (sis),

copy,

perennial/ ephemeral.