Outpost 030125
Living Architectures/Wayfaring.
Environments formed/experienced through Movement and Attention.
Lines.
Tim Ingold.
Art's Use of Architecture: Place, Site and Setting.
Artists in 'Psycho Buildings' explore architecture's psyche, through the production of places, sites and settings, sites and settings, which engender spatial experiences that connect the viewer psychically, as well as perceptually and conceptually, to broader social issues and cultural phenomena.
Art and architecture are frequently differentiated in terms of their relationship to 'function' or 'use'. Unlike architecture, art may not be useful in pragmatic terms, for example in responding directly to social needs, providing shelter or somewhere in which to perform open-heart surgery, but we could say that art provides a place for other kinds of function – self-reflection, critical thinking and social change. If we consider this expanded version of the term function in relation to architecture, we realise that architecture is seldom given the opportunity to consider the construction of critical concepts and spatial relations as its most important purpose.
Jane Rendell.
Processes/Processual Thinking that constitute entities.
Moving Attentively In The Field of Material Structure.
The Itinerant Library of Excessive Tendencies.
Heterogeneous matter driven by disparate parts and elements of assembly.
Bricoleur Performing Practices.
Discursive Inquiry/Reading/Making.
Abjection flows between bodies, it never solely concerns one body.
For Kovar, when abjection is one of those processes, a very particular assemblage manifests itself. Where boundaries are disrupted, connections made and zones of proximity that are otherwise absent, are reached. Abject(ion) causes an inherent schism on the physical and psychological levels.
It opens bodies, to one another.
It opens up bodies for 'exchange'.
Such that they are in a perpetual process of being made and unmade, unfinished bodies.
It is precisely because abject(ion) is not only psychological but also physiological that it straddles both genders and is not solely reducible to the feminine. Abject(ion) is both feminine and masculine.
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