Showing posts with label #performativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #performativity. Show all posts

Friday, 14 March 2025

Spatial Practices/Forms of Enactments : Speculative Vocational Learning Processes

Archive 2012
Teaching Academy/Brockwood Park School.

Undone-Without-Unfitting-Entangled
Performativity/Practice/Assemblages
Responses perceived as the enactment to make something as yet non existent.










‘The crisis is not in the economic world, nor in the political world. The crisis is in consciousness. I think very few of us realise this.’

—From the book THE NETWORK OF THOUGHT 
Krishnamurti

Monday, 5 June 2023

Life Drawing : An Emotional History of The Performative/Rhizomatic Body

Humanity : An Emotional History
Stuart Walton. 2004


Fear
Anger
Disgust
Sadness
Jealousy
Contempt
Shame
Embarrassment
Surprise
Happiness


Oxford Dictionary of Geography: spatiality
 
The effect that space has on actions, interactions, entities, concepts, and theories. Physical spatiality can also be metaphorical. It is used to show social power—thrones are higher than the seats of commoners, and ‘high tables’ for university teachers in most Oxbridge colleges physically elevate the teachers over the taught. People use proximity to show how intimate they want to be with others (See personal space), or orientation; we may face someone or turn away from them. Institutions and governments have used large architectural spaces to invoke awe, while restaurateurs may create ‘cosiness’ in small spaces.


LIFE DRAWING : Phenomenological Reductions

The body is not an object, but the condition and context through which I am able to have relations with others. 
Merleau-Ponty

A study of one body in front of another body.

Our body is our connection with the world and all its phenomena, it is fundamental in our communication and interactions.

The body is a force of creative action and a site of resistance.

An exploration in various forms of physical dialogue between performing bodies.
Energetic flows from others, what energy and phenomena will these relationships bring about on these bodies and the space they inhabit.

Personal and public boundaries of others, a being towards things through the intermediality of the body.

For Deleuze and Gauttari the body is rhizomatic (containing multiplicities, intensities and flows) and in active connection and interaction with its becomings, surroundings and situatedness.

What a body can do, what a body is capable of

The body without organs (BwO) is an attempt by Deleuze and Gauttari to denaturalize 'human bodies' and place the body in direct relation and connection to flows and particles of other bodies and things, creating constellations from its modes of organization of disparate substances.
















"Spatial turn" The increased attention to matters of space, place and mapping in literary and cultural studies, as well as in social theory, philosophy, and other disciplinary fields.

Spatiality, Robert T. Tally Jr. Routledge 2013.

The origin of "True Humanity" : Tim Ingold





Saturday, 23 April 2022

 Outpost 220422


Immateriality and Transparency

The Poetics of Glass.







Architecture is fundamentally a haptic art-form and the atmosphere of alienation in today's architecture seems to arise from its exclusive visuality. We experience our being as an embodied haptic experience not as a retinal picture.


The multiple essences of the material, its simultaneous brittleness and malleability, hardness and fragility, immateriality and solidity, heaviness and weightlessness.


A work of art or architecture is not a symbol that represents or indirectly portrays something outside itself; it is an existential image or object that places itself directly in our experience.


In the basic alchemy of architecture there are only two fundamental categories of matter: opaque matter and transparent matter. One creates separation, privacy and shadow, the other provides connectedness, view and light.


The ultimate success of architecture will always be measured by its experiential qualities and its 

psychic impact.


We animate our buildings unconsciously; we encounter buildings the way we encounter creatures of the living world.


From Form to Matter.


Whereas Modernism was primarily concerned with form, structure and space, the past three decades of artistic work have introduced a deepened interest in matter and time; the depth, opacity, weight, patina and ageing of materials have emerged in all forms of art. 


This development has been equally clear in painting, sculpture and architecture. The Arte Povera Movement, the physical works of Richard Serra and Eduardo Chillida, as well as the material poetry and expressions of Jannis Kounellis and Anselm Kiefer all exemplify this new interest in materiality.


This shift results from a change in our attitudes towards place and time, signalling a new desire for  rootedness and perhaps, paradoxically of an acceptance of our own mortality. We need to feel enrooted in our world and to experience our belonging to a specific place and time. Enrootedness, rather than the ideal of abstract and placeless generality, makes the the thought of death tolerable.


Temporary Darkroom

Loading/Unloading Pinhole Camera.


Robert Macfarlane

Landmarks


To a three – or four-year-old, “landscape” is not backdrop or wallpaper, it is a medium, teeming with opportunity and volatile in its textures. Time if fluid and loopy, not made of increment or interval. Time can flow slow enough that a mess of green moss on the leg of a tree can be explored for an age, and fast enough that to run over leaves is to take off and fly.


What we bloodlessly call “place” is to young children a wild compound of dream, spell and substance: place is somewhere they are always in, never on.


Anna Shepherd's belief in bodily thinking gives The Living Mountain a contemporary relevance. We are increasingly separated from contact with nature. We have come to forget that our minds are shaped by the bodily experience of being in the world – its spaces, textures, sounds, smells and habits – as well as by genetic traits we inherit and ideologies we absorb.


The Living Mountain/Phenomenology of Perception.


For Merleau-Ponty, post-Cartesian philosophy had cleaved out a false divide between the body and the mind. Throughout his career he argued for the foundational role that sensory perception plays in our understanding of the world as well as in our reception of it. He argued that knowledge is “felt”: that our bodies think and know in ways that precede cognition. Consciousness, the human body and the phenomenal world are therefore inextricably intertwined. The body “incarnates” our subjectivity and we are thus, Merleau-Ponty proposed, “embedded” in the “flesh” of the world. He described this embodied experience as “knowledge in the hands”; our body “grips” the world for us and is “ our general medium for having a world”. And the material world itself is therefore not the unchanging object presented by the natural sciences, but instead endlessly relational.


We are co-natural with the world and it with us – but we only ever see it partially.

Sunday, 5 September 2021

Photographic Stages/Beholding of the Light : Performativity in Architecture and the Visual Arts

The beholding of the light is itself a more excellent and a fairer thing than all the uses of it

Francis Bacon 1561-1626


Is there no other ways for architecture to survive but to stand tall and arrogant?

Kengo Kuma 2004






















Heidegger's Topology
Things exist rooted in the flesh (R. S. Thomas)
Being, Place, World
Jeff Malpas. 2008

David Smith : Sprays, The Absent Object. Peter Stevens
Eidetic Image, Nearness/Proximity/Atmosphere
Temporal Structures,

Unthinking Eurocentrism
The Political Writing of Adam Kuper and Tim Ingold
Justin Kenrick. 2011

Pottery, The mindfulness of making social
Anthropological Notebooks 17

The War of Dreams
Exercises in Ethno-Fiction.
Marc Auge

The Culture of The New Capitalism
Richard Sennett.

VISITORS
a film by Godfrey Reggio

The World of The Anthropologist
Marc Auge, Jean-Paul Colleyn. 2006

The Field

The basic methodology of anthropology is ethnography. This is the famous 'fieldwork' in which the researcher shares the daily life of a different culture (remote or close), observes, records, tries to grasp the 'indigenous point of view' and writes.

Objects of Anthropology
Politics is also the art of administrating and producing subjects, citizens.


The Woman in The Dunes
Kobo Abe

Site-Specific Art
Performance, Place and Documentation.
Nick Kaye

Heidegger For Architects
Adam Sharr
Poetically Man Dwells

The Perception of The Environment
Essays in Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill.
Tim Ingold

Hans Coper
Sensations in the Vessel/Innerness
Clay and The Engagements of Mind and Body

Peter Zumthor
Thinking Architecture/ A Way of Looking at Things
Zumthor mirrors Heidegger's celebration of experience and emotion as measuring tools.
The physicality of materials can involve an individual with the world.

The Visual Poetics of Jannis Kounellis
Suzanne Cotter and Andrew Nainre
He translates the painterly relationship of figure and ground into the space of real situations
Kounellis's engagement with the social and historical content and with the material fabric of a given space is critical to his art.

The Castelvecchio in the Opus of Carlo Scarpa
Possibly until very recently Scarpa's work was still judged as anachronistic, small scale and craft intensive.
An Attitude to History, The Drawings, Formal Language,
Technical Specifications of Materials.

What is the relationship between the visual arts and 'performativity'?
Site-Specific Art. Nick Kaye

Wittgenstein : The Duty of Genius
The work of art/aesthetics/ethics seen 'under the form of eternity'
Schopenhauer discusses, in a remarkably similar way, a form of contemplation in which we relinquish 'the ordinary way of considering things', and 'no longer consider the where, the when, the why, and the whither in things, but simply the what'.

Spatial Practices : Thinking Sociologically

'What does it do'?
Oren Lieberman




Thursday, 22 July 2021

Opening Collages : Ambiguous Borders

Curatorial Practices
The Alchemy of Building
Collages/Inclusions : Creative Ecologies

Yvonne Buchheim
Wish you were here to trip up memory lane. Belfast 2000
http://www.acid.uwe.ac.uk/buchheim/belfast1.htm

Alberto Perez-Gomez
POLYPHILO
or The Dark forest Revisited
An Erotic Epiphany of Architecture

Robert Mangold

Sarah Purvey
Landscape Series, Rhythm. 2012
Crank vessel with slips

Robert Macfarlane
The Old Ways
A Journey On Foot

Kengo Kuma
Transparent Pavilion


























Tuesday, 7 March 2017

The waste City - Perfomance El Prado



Audiovisual product of an artistic project titled The Waste City. 
Consisting of an action with Danza Butoh dancers in the Prado Museum, Madrid's most famous monument.