space and consumed space according to stats/databedspaces-apartments- - floor plans? sq ft per personvillas-office- space calculator - lawshouse - average living space per person - uk 38m2 in 1991, 44m2 2001 - UWErestaurant - personal space - flowing data.comeconomies of scale - elements of scale
Research
07/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FRAME - Sketchbook & Research: Thinking about...





06/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FRAME - Sketchbook & Research: reading notes and thoughts
Thinking about steps and ladders in art as a means to get higher, climbing the ladder. How long is it? What is it constructed from?
climbing class, society, we talk about getting high as a means of aspiration, to rise up.
'in a field of destructive torrents and explosions, was the tiny, fragile human body’ (Benjamin 1973: 84). The juxtaposition of an industrial, technological and destructive force, with the ‘unprotected’ human body sets the scene not just for modern warfare but for modern life in general.' (p57, Highmore, B, 2003. Crashed out - Laundry Vans, Photographs and a Question of Consciousness)
delicate humans - embroidery - muslin - low thread count
thread - tension - life, everyday
traffic lights - speed, slowing down, control, restriction - pushed forward then pulled back. controlled freedom. (Influenced from Highmore, B, 2003. Crashed out - Laundry Vans, Photographs and a Question of Consciousness)
soft and tactile - rendering of structure of the city - its materiality - soften it - as it hardens us.
'What is being pictured is not the disciplined bodies of worker-soldiers, but the lithesome and mutable body of the dancer. The crash releases the body from the constraint of a certain attitude, it allows for another manner of being.' (p59. Highmore, B, 2003. Crashed out - Laundry Vans, Photographs and a Question of Consciousness)
The phrase Barthes (or his translator, Richard Howard) uses to insist on a weaving of the real through the threads of textuality is ‘image repertoire’. It is to this that we are condemned. (p60. Highmore, B, 2003. Crashed out - Laundry Vans, Photographs and a Question of Consciousness)
06/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FORM - FRAME - FRACTURE - Sketchbook: question
What does it mean that you use the same process; that your practice and the content of your work go through this habitual taming and liberation?
practical repetition - process & inspiration - mirroring & replication
reiteration
restatement
retelling
recapitulation - summarising & restating main point = dearted
reprise
iterane
reccurrence
reoccurence
replication
duplications
echo
Pattern: design, motif, system, arrangement, sequence, framework, composition, layout, shape
To use the same process.
Practice & content continually/habitually tamed & liberated
accumulation gives a sense of direction
repetition moves forward & descends in to controlled process produced chaos.
for me: repetition of process provides accumulation, which gives sense of direction, it moves forward, mirroring the everyday that takes persistently recurrentlyrepeatedly us through life.
collage created from own image archive
digital patterns created from own image archive.
utilising the symmetry of the architecture alongside perspective of image to generate new lines of symmetry
collage created from own image archive
collage created from own image archive of digitally manipulated photos
digital patterns created from own image archive.
digital patterns created from own image archive.
utilising the symmetry of the architecture alongside perspective of image to generate new lines of symmetry
05/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FRAME - Sketchbook: research quotes to move forward
Reading or to read: Rita Felski, Henri Lefebvre, Situationalists, Marx, Critique of everyday life, Ron Silliman's Ketjak, Attention Equals Life: the pursuit of the everyday in contemporary poetry - Andrew Epstein,
'forms based on repetition & accumulation can be a powerful tool in the quest to rescue the everyday from neglect' (Attention Equals Life: the pursuit of the everyday in contemporary poetry - Andrew Epstein)
'the deliberate structure of accumulation and repetition is directly tied to its desire to approximate the experience of everyday life' (Attention Equals Life: the pursuit of the everyday in contemporary poetry - Andrew Epstein)
'circularity and repetition that gives the everyday its flavour of ennui', sameness, art, perpetual reoccurrence'. (Attention Equals Life: the pursuit of the everyday in contemporary poetry - Andrew Epstein)
'each dawn (is) a return to an eternal conclusion' Silliman'distinguished from the exceptional moment.' (Felski, The Invention of Everyday Life, 2000)
'immanence rather than transcendence' (Felski, The Invention of Everyday Life, 2000)
'everyday rituals may help to safeguard everyday life.' (Felski, The Invention of Everyday Life, 2000)
'repetition can signal resistance as well as enslavement,' (Felski, The Invention of Everyday Life, 2000)
'the most repetitive of lives bears witness to the irreversible direction of time; the experience of ageing, the regret of past actions and inactions, the premonition of death.' (Felski, The Invention of Everyday Life, 2000)
05/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FRAME - Sketchbook & Research: a collection of thoughts
Look at colour & texture
Poetry about the city | diasporas | London | Brixton | Brooklyn |
refugee camps - stacking people - holocaust - concentration camps - comparison?
Low cost housing + -
City living - luxury vs necessity
Construction camps | labour camps- Flooding with people - council housing / Acton, London
The repetitive nature of a building - stacking recreated into another repetition - looming - unstable as architecture - repetitions of daily notices - subtract areas of image - create extra tall images then change fragments of the pattern so it doesn’t work (repeat).
architectual repeats
creating pattern from city scape
building upon the architects patterns
investigating won planning, city planning, pattern of dwelling, how cities grow & build skyscrapers (IE: book on building Effiel tower) - feeds into fractal patterns -
tower-diagram
05/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FORM - sketchbook: thoughts for progress
Transform digital works into large scale painted pieces - possibly spray/acrylic - with zones (dark) paint miniature scenes to fill them - from distance looks like solid colour, then texture - up close detailed narratives ‘everyone’s fighting their own battles’ with the geometry and the sort, routine of life, there are these changing patterns creating chaos.
Painted then embroidered canvas - cut through stitching to expose canvas beneath and created a rough tufted look.
scannable document 2 on 8 nov 2017 at 01_02_43
04/11/2017 - Task 2 - FFF - FORM - FRAME - Sketchbook & Research: installation thoughts
Room filled with pattern - from the doorway looks complete and contained. Plan view of floor plan reveals factored geometry.
Hanging in space from doorway - as you move through and negotiate the space it fractured and becomes a chaotic environment - structures to be supported b clear perspectives/ monofilament/attached to walls.
Snarkitecture's Daniel Arsham and Alex Mustonen used lengths of a synthetic non-woven textile to create the installation at Spazio Erbe in the Brera district of Milan – the same space in which COS exhibited its installation by Nendo last year. 2015, https://www.dezeen.com/2015/04/14/cos-snarkitecture-white-fabric-strips-installation-brera-milan-2015/
exhibitions_yayoi_kusama_21
exhibitions_yayoi_kusama_9
Yayoi Kusama, Dot Obsessions, experienced 2016 @ Sharjah Art Foundation - the repetition and infinite nature of the space is meditative, oddly comforting and predictable. I have previously experience her infinity room installation in Abu Dhabi in 2014 which had more of an affect due to the nature and subtly of the small twinkling LED lights.
http://sharjahart.org/sharjah-art-foundation/exhibitions/yayoi-kusama-dot-obsessions
jacob hashimoto
Jacob Hashimoto - Leila Heller Gallery dubai - 2017 - an overwhelming piece, that is striking yet delicate. How would the piece feel if the disks were larger and the viewer had to negotiate around them
http://www.leilahellergallery.com/exhibitions/jacob-hashimoto