Art and Anthropological Concerns : Spatial Agencements : Processual Circulations.
Material absorbed in its own thoughts :
Sunday, 12 July 2026
Correspondences~Relational Fields : Other Affordances : Analogous Experience~Clay~Thinking
CLAY/Propositions/Correspondences : Letting the material speak for itself/Technicity/Generative AI.
Claywork/Correspondences/Vibrant Matter : Situated interactions between bodies and habitats.
Reading with Deleuze and Spinoza~Radical Intuitions : Interacting with clay.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton
https://www.anglianpotters.org.uk/members/russell-moreton
"Claywork/Correspondences" explores how clay, as a material, and the resulting artforms, can reveal situated interactions between bodies and habitats, emphasizing the material and relational aspects of human-environment connections.
Here's a deeper dive into the concept:
Clay as a Material of Connection:
Clay, being a natural material found in the earth, becomes a tangible link between humans and their environment. The act of working with clay, from gathering the raw material to shaping and firing it, involves a direct engagement with the earth and its processes.
Correspondences and Situated Interactions:
The term "correspondences" suggests a relationship or connection between different things, in this case, the human body and the habitat. By examining claywork, we can understand how humans interact with their environment, how their bodies are shaped by their surroundings, and how these interactions are reflected in the art they create.
Examples in Art and Culture:
Ceramics and Pottery: The creation of pottery and other ceramic objects demonstrates a deep connection to the earth and its resources. The process of shaping and firing clay involves a careful manipulation of the material, reflecting a knowledge of its properties and behavior.
Figurines and Sculptures: Clay figurines and sculptures can offer insights into the beliefs, practices, and social structures of past cultures. The forms and materials used in these objects can reveal how people perceived themselves and their relationship with the natural world.
Glazing and Decoration: The application of glazes and decorations on clay objects can further enhance the connection between the material and the artist's vision. Glazes, with their diverse colors and textures, can transform the raw material into a vibrant and expressive medium.
Beyond the Object:
The study of claywork can extend beyond the object itself to encompass the broader context of human-environment interactions. By analyzing the materials, techniques, and cultural meanings associated with clay, we can gain a deeper understanding of how humans have shaped and been shaped by their environments.
Mind and material engagement | Phenomenology and the Cognitive ...
1 Dec 2018 — The preferred analytical convention is to break the line's cognitive life into pieces: first by separating ourselves fro...
Springer
Clays and the Origin of Life: The Experiments - PMC
In our view, the most promising theory to explain the origin of life is centered around the interaction of active sites on clay mi...
PubMed Central
Cherokee Unaker, British Ceramics, and Productions of Whiteness ...
But there is a key difference: in contrast to the map, Indigenous human life on land is omitted. However, three small figures can ...
British Art Studies
Generative AI is experimental.
Clay/Fire/Space-Situatedness.
The Becoming of Continuity/Relations.
In/Out of Material, Tony Cragg.
An Exploratory Ceramic Based Inquiry.
The Ways/Movements of Practice.
Ceramics In The Environment.
Clay, is always a working idea, a matter/material process between things, a form of thinking in process.
The Durational Time of Play/A Lure For Feeling.
You don't need a choreographer to dance, what you need is a choreographic proposition. Propositions are ontogenetic, they emerge as the germ of the occasion and persist on the nexus of experience to take hold once more through new occasions of experience. For Manning what else is an associated milieu but a cornfield for crafting of the as yet unthought, where the microperceptual meet to create new movements in the making.
William Forsythe, Erin Manning, Always More Than One, Individuation's Dance. 2013.
https://axisweb.org/artist/russellmoreton
Crucible Bowls. 2020.
Slab Facades. 2021.
Rutile/Yellow Ochre/Red Iron Oxide/White Raku Slip/Transparent Raw Glaze.
The Moon Tower, Nina Hole. 2000.
The Watchdog, Michel Kuipers. 1990.
Intertwinining Thinking and Making.
Painting in Form of a Bowl.
Quietus, Cinerary Jars.
The Vessel/The Human Body.
Volumes/Voids
Clare Twomey.
Tony Cragg.
Eduardo Chillida.
Paul Soldner.
Julian Stair.
Bryan Newman.
Gordon Baldwin.
Hans Coper.
Lygia Clark.
Richard Hirsch.
Edmund de Waal.
Juhani Pallasmaa.
Steven Holl.
Ceramic vessels and surfaces for a reflective solitude, an architecture of light,silence and innerness.
Spaces between Objects/Things/Making, Giorgio Morandi.
The House is all about the poetry of shelter and siege from the elements and cosmos.
Gaston Bachelard.
Volume And Space.
Alberto Giacometti's sculpture, 'Man Pointing,' is an important statement in Western art for many reasons, not the least of which is what it says about volume and space. The elongated and spindly form gestures vaguely in the vastness of the space surrounding it. The gesture seems more about the space opened up by it and around it than it does about the physical. There is power in space more palpable than substance. This also is the conceptual heart of the Japanese garden.
Scott Meyer.
Paintings of nothing, ceramic, raw material, dry pigment, wax.
With Fire.
Richard Hirsch.
A Life Between Chance And Design.
Scott Meyer.
The Psychoanalysis Of Fire.
Gaston Bachelard.
Gaston Bachelard was intrigued by the process of imagination, the way in which the pensive mind brings to any given reality a multiple perspective. About many substances such as earth, air, water, and fire, he contended, we harbour subconscious convictions which modern science may disprove in fact but cannot seem to eradicate from artistic reverie.
Northrop Frye. 1964.
Against Hylomorphism.
Gilbert Simondon. 1964-89-2005.
Individuation, the generation of things, should be understood as a process of ontogenesis in which form is ever emergent, rather than given in advance.
The Clay can take to the mould and mould the clay.
Simondon, took the essence of matter or the material to lie in form-taking-activity.
Brian Massumi. 2009.
Concepts rendered into material relations.
Making new aesthetic utilities, materialities for thinking about the world.
Making is central to our legacy as a society, materially, economically, ecologically and socially.
A modern version of hylomorphism is enacted by a culture that furnishes the forms and nature the material. In the superimposition of one upon the other, human beings create the material culture with which, to an ever increasing extent, they surround themselves.
Tim Ingold.
Urban Spaces, palimpsest, impressions, traces, ecologies, redundancies.
Frames, Handles and Landscapes.
Georg Simmel and the Aesthetic Ecology of Things. 2016
Eduardo de la Fuente.
The tool/the thinking hand, has grown to be a part of the hand, using a tool is both a practical and aesthetic action involving the artful manipulation of material by hand.
Juhani Pallasmaa.
Affordances of Things.
Affordances provide strong clues to the operation of things. A psychology of causality is at work as we use everyday things.
Donald Norman. 2002.
Ecological Approaches to Aesthetics.
Aesthetic Patterning/Matters in Everyday Life.
Organism-Person-Environment
Ecological, interested in the organism-environment relationship.
An aesthetic ecology, each thing is a mere transitional point for continuously flowing energies and materials, comprehensible only from what has preceded it, significant only as an element of the entire natural process.
Theory/Culture/Society, Simmel 1994.
Matter and materials are lively and require attention.
Materials continue to thwart us in unpredictable ways.
Jane Bennett.
Aleatory, by chance, lots of the 'acts' of nonhuman agents are aleatory exactly because they are not directed by any intension.
In And Out Of Material. 2007.
Tony Cragg.
All our senses scan the space in front of us; the future, in both a literal and metaphorical sense, lies before us.
Tony Cragg, 1998.
Cutting Things Up.
Material In Space.
Scale.
Impulses through Drawing.
Working Things.
A diffractive methodology is a knowledge making process, understood by the physical phenomenon of an energy or force as it flows across an obstacle. Diffraction is the process of ongoing differences, and ass such it can be used as a tool for analysis, as it attunes us to the differences generated by our knowledge.
Karen Barad.
Areas Of Presentation and Participation.
Historic and Social Sites, Art Venues and Exhibitions.
Making Theoretical Objects, Installations and Interventions.
Generation/Generative/Material.
I think mass and energy need to be generated, any effective change has to be generated. It's to do with a positive directed initiative to change things.
“Generative” for me, in terms of my work, is the fact that within my own work, within any given period the work generates itself and there is a self-generating characteristic. The work I'm making today is only possible because of the previous work of three or four months ago and that was only possible because of the work of nine or twelve months ago.
Even if it's not a linear thing, things are generating. There is a sort of self-propagating, self-generative energy that is inherent in the material, I think. And even in the term “generative”, from “genus”, is the idea of making a family group of things, whether making an associative group of things or creating a population, a species of things which “relativise” generation.
Tony Cragg.
The material is just part of the vocabulary of meaning.
Cragg wanted to give the materials 'more meaning, mythology and poetry' He used the skills available to him at the EKWC residency to create ambiguities and tensions, to suggest past and present, to complicate rather than to describe.
European Ceramic Work Centre, Netherlands. 1990, 1992.
With the return of Cragg to studio based work in the early 1990s, when he was experimenting with clay; ideas around humanness, archaeology, and ritual were being explored within different areas of the fine arts. In addition, studio ceramics were frequently using the vessel as an initiating point to develop new forms and sculptural ideas.
Laibe, with its rich possibilities of interpretation that incorporates the past in the present and the universal aspects of human survival within the ceramic vessel form, lies at the heart of these complex and overlapping areas of practice.
Imogen Racz. 2009.
The Ceramics Reader. 2017.
Andrew Livingstone.
Kevin Petrie.
Ceramics : Materiality and Metaphor.
Why are Ceramics Important?
The Existential Base, Philip Rawson.
Containers of Life: Pottery and Social Relations, Silvia Forni.
Ceramics and Metaphor.
Analogy and Metaphor in Ceramic Art, Philip Rawson.
Sculptural Vessels, Tony Cragg's Laibe and the Metaphors of Clay, Imogen Racz.
Ceramics in Contexts.
Historical Precedents.
Studio Ceramics.
Sculptural Ceramics.
Ceramics and Installation.
Theoretical Perspectives.
Conceptual and Post Studio Practice.
Contemporary Clay, Clare Twomey.
Extending Vocabularies: Distorting the Ceramic Familiar
Clay and the Performative 'Other', Andrew Livingstone.
Gender, Sexuality and Ceramics.
Identity and Ceramics.
Image.
Figuration and the Body.
Ceramics in Education.
Ceramics, Industry and New Technologies.
Museum, Site and Display.
Re-defining Ceramics through Exhibitionary Practice (1970-2009), Laura Breen.
Ceramic Houses and Earth Architecture.
How to build your own.
Beginning.
Model Making.
We will begin practising by constructing a room and covering it with a simple dome or a vault.
Once a person has constructed a model, within hours, he or she is encouraged to learn and understand more. The knowledge thus gained will trigger quests in building with earth. It is possible to learn the basics of thousands of years of earth architecture within a day if it is taught in the simplest terms, and if all our senses are involved in the learning process.
Nader Khalili.
Re-imagining learning, workshop session, conducted and initiated a walk across a landscape with clay being actively manipulated by a number of participants as they engaged with the material, their bodies and the landscape.
Beach firing at St. Ninian's Scotland, experimental kiln and site built reduction pits excavated from the beach. Pots fired and reduced with found materials, then washed in the Irish Sea.
Hans Coper, essay on professional practice, including his architectural ceramics.
Crafts Study Centre, Farnham.
Sectional Works.
Slab Constructions.
Plasterwork, Pressmoulding.
Working with materials/substances/drawing and traces of making.
Raku, engobes, slips, oxides, templates, spray diffuser, stencils, fabric inclusions, intermediaries, Indentations, found objects, ferric chloride,
Reduction materials, woodland branches through shredder.
Clay body additives, molochites, mica, vermiculite. other material,
Clay Tools : Block Strips and Combs.
Sound Vessels.
Capacitors/Insulators.
Passive, encapsulated layers.
Architectural Slab Works.
Ceramic and gesso/whitewashed/waxed/painted/bound/surfaces and structures.
The Chapel Of St.Ignatius.
House, Black Swan Theory.
Steven Holl.
Nail Collector's House, New York.
White plaster walls, hickory floors, and cartridge brass siding nailed in pattern over a wood frame, create a tactile weathering for this structure, a poetic reinterpretation of the industrial history of the site and the pre-Civil War architecture of Essex.
The jewel-like Chapel of St. Ignatius contains the essence of Holl's vision, his interest in the phenomenology of space, his passionate investigations of form and material, and his use of reflected light and colour.
The angst of a concept before spatial definition, interior and exterior are simultaneously explored.
The largest 'tilt-up' slab weighs 80,000 pounds and is filled with reinforcing steel. Its greatest stress is during the lift.
Working from the specific towards the universal.
The Built and The Unbuilt.
A theory of architecture that is mutable and unpredictable.
The body as a theoretical object doing/architecture (architecting its situatedness, Oren Lieberman)
The Ceaseless Flux of Disappearances/The Examination of Sight.
Outpost 240923
Drawing in Charcoal : Sensing through Movement.
#The Examination of Sight.
The act of drawing refuses the the process of disappearances, and instead proposes the simultaneity of a multitude of moments.
#Light.
The Ceaseless Flux/Causality Of Disappearance.
#Seeing.
On Disappearances Opposed By Assemblage.
The Drawing Challenges Disappearance/Oblivion.
Catching The Light : The Entwined History of Light and Mind, Arthur Zajonc.
Drawn To That Moment.
A drawing is more than a memento, more than a device for bringing back memories of the time past.
From each glance, a drawing assembles a little evidence, but it consists of the evidence of many glances which can be seen together. On one hand there is no sight in nature as unchanging as that of a drawing or painting, on the other hand what is unchanging in a drawing consists of so many assembled moments that they constitute a totality rather than a fragment.
For Cezanne, one minute in the life of the world is going by, paint it as it is.
For John Berger, how does a drawing or painting encompass time?
What does it hold in its stillness?
Thus if appearances, at any given moment are a construction emerging from the debris of all that has previously appeared, might it be understandable that this very construction may give birth to the idea that everything will one day be recognizable and the flux of disappearance cease.
Because the faculty of sight is continuous, because visual categories, red-yellow-dark-thick-thin remain constant, and because so many things appear to remain in place, one forgets that the visual is always a result of an unrepeatable-momentary-encounter.
Any image, like the image read from the retina records an appearance which will disappear.
The faculty of sight developed as an active response to continually changing contingencies, and the more complex the view of appearances it could construct from events.
For the faculty of sight to become developed, the mind uses recognition as an essential part of the construction of appearances, and recognition depends upon the phenomenon of reappearance sometimes occurring in the ceaseless flux of disappearance.
An event in itself has no appearances.
To draw is to look, to examine the spectrum of appearance.
Drawings reveal the process of their own creation, and their own looking.
On Drawing/John Berger.
Drawing into awareness.
Things/Feelings that are both hermetic and infinite.
Drawing 'situates' impressions between relations and responses.
Between seeing and feeling.
Butades/Haptic trace, inscription.
Derrida/Blindness inherent in drawing.
The drawing is as much about a haptic experience as it is an optical one, the actual contact between paper and brush informs me that a mark will materialize, a mark marking the abstract and the concrete, a hybrid image of reality.
Perceptual Psychology.
My desire is to set up a situation to which I can take you and let you see.
My art deals with light itself, not as a bearer of revelation, but as revelation itself.
Immersive architectural environments to carry the inner world into the outer spaces, so that our sense of lived-in-territory is increased.
James Turrell/Deer Shelter Skyspace.
In the trajectory of the intermezzo.
The Working Diagram.
Relays between points/paths.
Nomadology, Deleuze/Guattari.
Wednesday, 8 July 2026
Architecture, Nature and Subjectivity : Atmospheric ecologies/architecting through situated learning.
The Black Workbooks : Forces of juxtaposed areas.
Monday, 6 July 2026
Diffused Ecologies : A reflective building is an echo not a statement : SENSING AND SPATIAL PRACTICE
Anarchive Material~Readings
ON MAKING SPATIAL RESEARCH
Sensing Affective Spaces in Art and Architecture.
IMMATERIAL ARCHITECTURES FOR SENSING IN THE LANDSCAPE.
RAVENINGHAM SCULPTURE TRAILS 2018/2020
The House-sheds : Camping
There's more truth about a camp than a house. Planning laws need not worry the improvising builder because temporary structures are more beautiful anyway, and you don't need permission for them. There's more truth about a camp because that is the position we are in. The house represents what we ourselves would like to be on earth: permanent, rooted, here for eternity. But a camp represents the true reality of things: we're just passing through.
Roger Deakin
WILDWOOD
A Journey Through Trees
Russell Moreton, Speculative Spatial Practices
A reflective building is an echo not a statement.
Haptic devices/seating/dwelling in the landscapes of the mind. Landscape assemblages and the significance of solitude.
The immensity/intimacy and its immediacy to the imagination. Immensity is within ourselves Bachelard
The site a Raveningham offers the spatial practice of a social event and the opportunity to playfully engage with architectural forms, fine art surfaces and textures.
The sensing space, a sculptural assemblage created at Raveningham is an inquiry into 'making' and 'reflexivity' amongst a social landscape.
SENSING AND SPATIAL PRACTICE
Creating a new viewer, who has to look in two self contradictory/self annihilating directions at once. Darkest Spaces of Our Times, Therese Oulton, Jacqueline Rose.
CONTEMPORARY ART AND ANTHROPOLOGY : SPATIAL PRACTICE Making Place/Tools, cognitive enactments/materials and performativity/wellbeing Sociological aspects of the Arts
Archaeology, Anthropology, Architecture, Art, Tim Ingold
A FIELD GUIDE TO GETTING LOST : Rebecca Solnit
Experiential anthropology / Walking as 'being/becoming in place'
Sensate, Sensing Sensuality, Otherness
WHITEBOARD : PAVILIONS/RAVENINGHAM
Art as Contemplative Practice : An Applied Praxis/Inquiry
Expressive Pathways/Building/Making as an extension to the Self/Selves In Response : To Place/Site and “Dwelling/Hut”
Subjective Hypothesis Bricolage/Tectonics
Poetic Abstractions/ Components, Elements
Physical Experience/Experiential Phenomena ( Light/Gravity/Air) Sculptural Assemblage, Building/Making an Exposition of Itself
Smithsons, The Parallel of Life/Art the everyday/quotidian Grounding/Earthing/Dwelling/Home : Reflexivity/Reflection/Reverberations
Knowing Through Making/ Embodying Insights, Tim Ingold
MAKING : Deliberation/Awareness : Constructed Situations/SURFACES and TEXTURES SENSING, Sensorium/Embodied Experience, Sensate, Intra/Intervention
PLACES that transform Chaos into Cosmos, Karsten Harries
PERCEPTUAL psychologist, J.J. Gibson departs from 'the classical approach to depth or space' in favour of an
ECOLOGICAL approach to VISUAL SPACE PERCEPTION, which take SURFACES and TEXTURE as its starting point.
Socializing a Sculptural Practice, Jack Robins 2015
Strange Tools, Art and Human Nature, Alva Noe 2015
Visual Tool, Post Studio, Daniel Buren
INDEXICAL, Traits/Traces and subjective narratives Situational/Relational Aesthetics, Victor Burgin, Nicollas Bourriaud
Handmade, Repetition, Empirical, Experiences.
Metonymy, Cristina Iglesias ( Metonymic Thinking Processes)
Architecturally Speaking, Practices, praxis between art .architecture and the everyday. Visual Perceptions/ The Image
Surreealist Techniques, Collage, Photograms. Decalmania, Frottage. Assemblage, Brutalist/Modemity/Intervention
Minimalist/Drawing/Painting ARCHAEOLOGY : Mark Dion
Agency/Nature/Subject Matter. Collection of Finds, Metaphors/Interpretations for the lived experience. AN ANTHROPOLOGY OF LANDSCAPE :
Taskscapes/Relationscapes
Anarchism, everyday Aesthetics/The aesthetics of everyday LIVING Pragmatist Aesthetics/Interpretation of Concepts
Materiality, material makes more than one language possible, excess of material. LANDSCAPES for an excess of Interpretation/Politics
EXPLORING THE LANDSCAPE, through/with the CORPOREAL EXPERIENCE of OTHERS
A STRUCTURE INTERPOSED between the sunlight and the interior space it encloses. Poetic abstractions/Physical experience
Soft/Blurring boundaries between art and the everyday making/becoming REFLEXIVITY / TRANSLUCENCY surfaces into an architectural presence TEXTURES ILIMINALITY on the absence of material
STATIC ENVIRON I ANIMATED THROUGH THE BODY
THE ARCHITECTURAL SKIN / SURFACE. Blurring, revealing, masking, filtering, ARCHITECTURAL FEATURE / WALL / ARCH / PASSAGE /
VISUAL TOOL / POCHOIR, hand coloured through stencils
SCULPTURAL ASSEMBLAGES, towards Speculative Forms/Expression TECTONICS IN MAKING, and the tectonics of immateriality/traces hidden by building.
Concerned with bringing the material from its physical form into the meta-physical world.
PAVILION
FUSELAGE
THE CAMP/HUT
represents the true reality of things, Deakin.
The building as nothing more than an exposition of itself.
A subjective hypothesis, a drawing developed into an objectivity for experience/leaming.
SITE, the undoing of PLACE
BRICOLAGE / HEURISTIC PRACTICE, Using things at hand, temporal, self constructions, becomings, mind forming explorations.
MOBILITY MOVEMENT
TEMPORAL CONSTRUCTED SPACE
A building component, scaffold, joists and fixings, a surface of absences and the movement of others come together.
MAKING, from form to programme.
WAVENEY VALLEY SCULPTURE TRAIL 2018 RAVENINGHAM
AUDIT OF NOTE FRAGMENTS 27 August 2018
Archive as a generative form/membrane Tarlaton, mesh, paper, liquid light,
Presenting, Creating, Synergies, that further explore site embodiments. The Politics of Things
Diffractive Practices : Agential Cut, Barad, Learning Spaces,
Brockwood Park School. Reimagining Education
In The Cave/Canvas of the Cave
ART. began with the questioning of the involuntary, trace of a human hand, an otherness.
Moments, Nowness, The Instant, Actuality,
Habitus of Difference
Robert Mangold text on painting/drawing minimalist interrogation into the spaces around perception Minimalist Works / Working Processes represent fields of energy/causality within our experiential perceptions.
Drawing is the experience of seeing made visible/manifest Rhizomic feedback and flow, Deleuze
Research Horizons,
Culture drives growth, wellbeing, social enterprise and community
Lines of intervals, linerality, chains of codes, intersections, utilities, interventions Causality and Chance of ideas, creative acts, art,nature, becoming, the everyday,
Quotidian/Everyday Interests, Complexities of Contemporary Life. Ambients, Phenomenas, Objects, Subjectivities,
Everyday aesthetics, heuristic practice,
Photography, Social pathology of traces layered into ecologies (Anthropological localities of desire)
Photography, The Body, Life, Death, Flemish Painting, Vivitas, Domestic Life, Nature on reclaiming the void left by the death of the mind
Walking creates its own feedback loop, The Journey, The Return,
The specific, Here and Now
Psychogeography, Dossier, Forensic Study, Inquiry.
Spatial Abstractions : Reflexivity on Reflection. Embodiment on Experiential Subjectivity LANDSCAPES Constituted by creative practice
Walks as erasures, sedimentation, (Gardiner)
Getting Lost, Walking whilst deep in thought/embodiment in the environment
Working Towards a Secular Retreat in the Landscape
Between PLACE and SITE
Art Poverva, Materiality, Agency, Making, Nesting Building, NASCENT FINDINGS
Encoding DATA, LANGUAGE
Entanglements of Visual Data and Abstract Language CATHEDRALS OF INTELLIGENCE
The Urban Documentary,Text, Sebalt, The River : The Colour of Light
Albers/Colour Perceptions
Vernacular Architectures, Building/Making beyond the design
Footings, Voids, Roof Structures, Cavities, Between Walls, Sensing Spaces in the very making of the building.
The Architectural plan/model and its proposal became the real virtual space for architectural energy and innovation.
TRANSACTIVE MEMORY Texts, Contents, Particulars, Process,
Working through ideas with things/devices/apparatuses Cognitive Landscapes /Relationalities ? Possible Worlds Subsumed by the causality of relationships/culture
Mies van der Rohe
The Art of Sculpture
Moholy Nagy
The New Vision Abstract of an Artist
Light brings the moment in time to us
Presence, Praesentia, exactitude of light on place and time LAND, LANDSCAPE, CLAY
Pot, Shard, Remnant, Culture, Jug, Dominion/Grounded Temporal/Spatial Perspectives
Light/Dark Room : Towards a new Interior Experimental Vision : Research Collage
Aesthetics of the Everyday Creative, Human Praxis
Mediating/Architecting the experience of LANDSCAPE
ART AS INDETERMINATE, able to arrest perceptions into different states (becomings) Stone Worlds
Narrative and Reflexivity in Landscape Archaeology Architecture and Ritual, how buildings shape society. Bought to Light
Photography and The Invisible 1840-1900 CURATORIAL / DEVICE / BENCH / INTERLOCATOR
Jannis Kounellis, Theatre, stage crew shifting actors during a performance. Interconnected, between contexts, opening places between the social fabric.
Making spaces, expanding vision to create spaces 'between' in which to write ourselves.
CONTEXT AND CONSIDERATIONS : MAKING, EXHIBIT, VIEW
ART MUSEUM CULTURE
THE CONTEXT FOR CONTEMPORARY ART IS THAT WE MAKE, EXHIBIT AND VIEW
MUSEUM DIRECTOR, CURATOR, COLLECTOR, ARTIST
None of that means anything anymore. Artists are now more DIVIDUALISTIC. They discover themselves not by securing a role within the historic narrative of a chosen medium. But by INTERGRATING into a more DIFFUSE ECOLOGY that involves not only making art, but also putting on shows, publishing, organizing events, teaching, networking.
THE STUDIO is no longer a retreat, but it now INTEGRATES, IT IS ALL EXTERIOR. THE NETWORK places the artist as a ’like' ITEM within an INTEGRATIVE
INVENTORY or DATABASE.
Friday, 3 July 2026
Overspilling Forms : Unnoticed Displacements/Tensions and Correlations~The Silent Transformations
The Fluidity Of Life.
(or how one is already the other)
The notion of silent transformations encountered in the corner of a page. How will these unnoticed displacements, the silent transformations one day be considered.
Francois Jullien
The Silent Transformations
Things Superimposed~Dispositive~Spill
Overspilling Forms~Sympathy~Abject(ion)
Jullien argues that our failure to notice the effects of cumulative changes over time is due to Western thought’s foundations in classical Greek philosophies of being, which encourage thinking in terms of determined forms and neglect the indeterminable nature of the transition taking place. In contrast, Chinese thought, having a greater sense of the fluidity of life, offers a more flexible way of understanding everyday transformations and provides insightful perspectives from which to consider our relation to history and nature. In particular, a Chinese approach, argues Jullien, allows us to discover that there may be occasions when it is more efficacious to yield to situations than to confront them head-on.
In The Silent Transformations, Jullien resituates Western philosophy by examining it in the light of traditions of thought that have developed from fundamentally different concepts and contexts. Jullien here opens a space for a new way of thinking, and this refreshing book will stimulate the interest of scholars in both Western and Eastern philosophy.
.jpg)


.jpg)






.jpg)










.jpg)
.jpg)
















.jpg)











.jpg)