Social apparatuses and agents that explore the possibilities of space. Other Worlds : Insistent moments of mark making/subjectivity. Russell Moreton
Sunday 15 August 2021
EMULSION : Photographic Landscapes/Drawings/Constructed Spaces
Twilight Abstraction : Liminal Zone
Exploring spaces between poetics of photography and the experiential values of dwelling/making/thinking through material.
I do not start with the idea but with the experience
Peter Lanyon
The Experience of Landscape
Paintings, Drawings and Photographs
South Bank Centre
An Anthropology Of Landscape
Christopher Tilley, Kate Cameron-Daum
The Poetics of Space. Gaston Bachelard.
The classic look at how we experience intimate places.
The Eroded Steps. Giuseppe Penone.
Dean Clough Contour Lines.
Land Drawings, Installations, Excavations. Kate Whiteford.
Remote Sensing. Colin Renfrew.
ECOLOGY WITHOUT NATURE
Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics
Timothy Morton
Ordinary Lives
Studies in the Everyday
Ben Highmore
The Art of Survival?
Jacqueline Rose
Essay for 'Elsewhere' Therese Oulton
Hermeneutic Philosophy and The Sociology of Art
Janet Wolff
Hermeneutics
Jens Zimmermann
Mesh/Material/Light, Cyanotype Process
Cyanotype is a photographic printing process that produces a cyan-blue print. Engineers used the process well into the 20th century as a simple and low-cost process to produce copies of drawings, referred to as blueprints. The process uses two chemicals: ammonium iron(III) citrate and potassium ferricyanide.
The English scientist and astronomer Sir John Herschel discovered the procedure in 1842.[1] Though the process was developed by Herschel, he considered it as mainly a means of reproducing notes and diagrams, as in blueprints.[2] It was Anna Atkins who brought this to photography. She created a limited series of cyanotype books that documented ferns and other plant life from her extensive seaweed collection.[3] Atkins placed specimens directly onto coated paper, allowing the action of light to create a silhouette effect. By using this photogram process, Anna Atkins is regarded as the first female photographer.[4]
Architectural Blueprint
Cell
Court
Domain
Drawing (performative) into the photographic process
Aerial, Social Mappings. Winchester Cathedral : Space for Peace
Pinhole Photograph (1019) Analogue Processes / Material Memory
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