Showing posts with label Ben Highmore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Highmore. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 November 2025

Camouflage/Concept and Design : Re-Working Aesthetics/The Everyday

Everyday Aesthetics : Ordinary Lives

If the everyday can be considered an ecology where passions circulate in a perpetual state of intensification and entropic decline, the empirical self (and not just David Hume's version of it) is essentially in a state of flux. This posits the human as an organism constantly adjusting to its passionate environment, with a self that is constantly appearing and disappearing, crystallising and dissolving.

Ben Highmore









Camouflage : Neil Leach

Camouflage offers  a mechanism of locating the self against the otherwise homogenising placelessness of contemporary existence. It thereby promotes a sense of attachment and connection to place.

Camouflage may  therefore provide a sense of belonging in a society where the hegemony of traditional structures of belonging - the family, church and so on - has begun to break down. This aesthetic sense of belonging can be compared to other modes of belonging, such as religious devotion or romantic attachment.

In highlighting the creative capacity of human beings to adapt to their environment, this book offers a more optimistic account of human existence, which valorizes the present as the site of productive endeavor.

Here we might cite the work of more positive thinkers, such as Fredric Jameson who looks to the realm of representation for a mechanism of reinserting the individual within society. Jameson has  developed a notion of  ‘cognitive mapping', which serves  to overcome the lack of spatial co-ordinates within a society of late capitalism. He sees the potential of such mapping within the aesthetic  domain. What we need today, Jameson seems to be saying, is a viable form of aesthetic expression that reinserts the individual into society. The aesthetic  domain can therefore be seen to be somewhat Janus-faced. It is  both the source of many  of our problems, in a culture in which everything is co-opted into images and commodities, and potentially the way out.

Aesthetic  production should maintain the capacity  to operate as  a mediation between the self and the environment, but only aesthetic production whose design has been carefully  controlled can achieve this. The difference between productive and unproductive modes of expression is therefore a question of design. In this respect we can recognise the important social role of design in providing a form of connectivity for ‘cognitively  mapping an individual within the environment. 

Design becomes  a crucial consideration for the effective operation of camouflage.

Design plays a crucial social role in offering a form of connectivity, a mode of symbolisation, that allows  people to relate to their environment. Exquisitely designed works such as S, M, L, XL can therefore be interpreted not simply as highly aesthetic publications that could be accused of a process of ‘glossification’ — of turning the world into a designer representation of itself. 
Rather they  can be seen to be operating in the very space of contemporary culture, a space that is highly visual.

The concept of ‘Camouflage’ can therefore also respond to some of the questions that Koolhaas himself raises. In his essay on the Generic City, for example, Koolhaas offers a critique of the placelessness of the contemporary cityscape, where each city is virtually indistinguishable from the next. The theory  of camouflage, however, would seem to suggest that design itself can overcome this  condition by  providing a mechanism for relating the individual to the environment. 

Design here must be contrasted to junk. If the junk  city  has  become the placeless  generic  city, the exquisitely  designed city  can become the city  of a new form of spatial mapping. This  theory  of camouflage is therefore presented not only  as  a retroactive manifesto through which to appreciate Koolhaas’s work, but also as a contribution to the debates which he initiates.
The concept of ‘Camouflage’ will allow us, at least, to move beyond the often simplistic denigration of the aesthetic realm within recent critiques of postmodern culture, and to grasp the complexities involved in our negotiation with the world afforded through that realm. Above all, it will allow us  to recognise the important strategic  significance of aesthetics in contemporary culture in general and in Rem Koolhaas’s work in particular.







The Architectural Plan

An Anthropology of Architecture

Embodiment and Architectural Form
Process-Relational Philosophy







Building The Drawing

The drawing as analogue allows more subtle relations, of technique, material and process, to develop between drawing and building.
Immaterial Architecture
The Illegal Architect
Jonathan Hill

Oak Tree
Oil
Paper
Plaster
Rust
Sgratfito
Silence
Sound
Steel
Television
Weather

Frosted Light
Index of immaterial architectures

TRANSPARENCY : LITERAL AND PHENOMENAL
Colin Rowe, Robert Slutzky

Interactions of the Abstract Body
Josiah McElheny

Object Lesson
Interactive Abstract  Body (Square)
The Spatial Body (After Fontana)

Tracing Eisenman
Stan Allen
Indexical Characters

FABRIC=MASS+ FORM
Alan Chandler
The interest in fabric formwork is in its deployment in a building process, which is faster than conventional formwork. Fabric formwork is inherently more sustainable due to the minimising of both concrete and shuttering, and more radically, allows the constructor to intervene in the process of casting even as the cast is taking place.


ANTI OBJECT
Kengo Kuma
We are composed of matter and live in the midst of matter. Our objective should not be to  renounce matter, but to search for a form of matter other than objects.
What that form is called- ARCHITECTURE, GARDENS< TECHNOLOGY is not important.

ReThinking Matereriality
The engagement of mind with the material world
Elizabeth DeMarrais, Chris Gosden, Colin Renfrew

The Affordances of Things
Towards a  Theory of Material Engagement
Aesthetics, Intelligence and Emotions
Relationality of Mind and Matter

Material Agency
Towards a Non-Anthropocentric Approach
Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris

At The Potter's Wheel : An Argument for Material Agency
We should replace our view of cognition as residing inside the potter's head, with that of cognition enacted at the potter's wheel.

The Neglected Networks of Material Agency : Artefacts, Pictures and Texts

Material Agency as Cognitive Scaffolding

The Cognitive Life of Things
Material Engagement and the Extended Mind
Lambros Malafouris, Colin Renfrew

Minds, Things and Materiality
Michael Wheeler

Communities of Things and Objects : A Spatial Perspective
Carl Knappett

Imagining the Cognitive Life of Things
Edwin Hutchins

Things and Their Embodied Environments
Architectures for Perception
Structuring Perception through Material Artifacts
Charles Goodwin

Leach Pottery, Studio and Museum
A Potter's Book
Bernard Leach

Adventures of the Fire, Vessels Through Time
Ceramic Pavilion
People make space, and space contains people
Ceramic space and life

Gordon Baldwin
Objects For A Landscape
David Whiting
Vessels-Spaces that cannot be drawn, rather they  need to be experienced.
Imagining a Vessel in a Rock on a Beach, 2006,(charcoal on paper)

The Architecture of The Ceramic Vessel
The use of the vessel in the investigation of our world.
The exploration through the dichotomy of the analysis between exterior and interior, of one pot to another and from  the message they convey.

MATERIAL MATTERS
ARCHITECTURE
AND MATERIAL PRACTICE
Katie Lloyd Thomas

PLENUMS : RETHINKING MATTER, GEOMETRY AND SUBJECTIVITY
Peg Rawes

ARCHITECTURE
IN THE AGE  OF DIVIDED REPRESENTATION
The Question of Creativity in the Shadow of Production
Dalibor Vesely
The Nature of Communicative Space
Creativity in the Shadow of Modern Technology
The Rehabilitation of Fragment
Towards a Poetics of Architecture

The Projective Cast
Architecture and its Three Geometries
Robin Evans
Architects do not produce geometry, they consume it

Analysing ARCHITECTURE
Simon Unwin
Geometries of Being
Architecture as Making Frames
Space and Structure













Monday, 27 January 2025

The Centrality of the Human Body to Architecture : Quotidian Aesthetics/Interventions

Outpost 270125









https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/

In-Transit


The Complex Process of Knowledge Production.

The Narrative of Theoretical 'Unravelling'.

What Is An Artist?

Irit Rogoff. 2006



Robert Morris

Catalogue Entries.


Columns, 1961

Passageway, 1961

Box For Standing, 1961

Portals, 1961

Box With The Sound Of Its Own Making, 1961

Early Minimalism

Measurement, 1963

Imprints And Body Casts, 1963-64

Site, 1964

Leads, 1971

Felts, 1967-83

Dirt, 1968

Continuous Project Altered Daily, 1969

Observatory, 1971-77

Rubbings, 1972




INFRA-THIN

Sensations between objective knowledge, difference and truth.

Post-structuralism, A very Short Introduction.

Catherine Belsey.


The Architecture of Emergence.

The Evolution Of Form In Nature And Civilisation.

Michael Weinstock.


The Architecture Of Continuity.

Lars Spuybroek.


The Body.

The Lived Body.

The Flesh of Things

Donn Welton


Written On The Body.

The World and Other Stories.

Jennette Winterson.


Painting for Bacon was a visceral event a sensation, driven by emergent behaviours and phenomena.


Ceramic spatial inceptions with circulating totems. 

Slab built, Stoneware. 2025


Tentative/Theoretical/Speculative Landing Sites.

Between Organism-Person-Environment and its Spatial/Architectural Body.


Preface.

Stefan Fichtel


Well-made animated information graphics are based on clear decisions about what matters and what should be left out.


Human Body/Indexical Trace on dot-matrix paper.


The Centrality of The Human Body to Architecture.




Undone/Assemblages of Concern.

Collage as the third aesthetic.

Ranciere argues for collage as 'third' aesthetic: it can combine two relations and play on the line of indiscernability, between forces of sense's legibility, and the force of non-sense's strangeness.

The Dark Monarch.

Magic and Modernity in British Art. 2010



The Bricoleur/sweeping the floor/movements in matter/spatial layering, thought in motion.


Embodying Emotion Sensing Space:

Introducing emotional geographies.

Joyce Davidson, Christine Milligan. 2004


Studio Floor Material.


The Artist's Reality

Philosophies of Art

Mark Rothko.


Culture, Creativity and Environment.

New Environmentalist Criticism.

Fiona Becket, Terry Gifford.


Ecology Without Nature.

Towards a Theory of Ecological Criticism.

Timothy Morton.


Visual Ecology

Transparency : Expressing the Unseen.


Transparency-the ability to see into and understand the inner workings of a landscape-is an absolutely essential ingredient to sustainability. In a world where more and more of the technology controlling our lives is not only beyond our individual control but is also invisible and incomprehensible to the average person, the landscape sreves not only as the foundation for our only genuine 'tangible' reality, but as the only mechanism by which we can really know where we are-and how and why as well. It can be argued that as humans we have a right to know where we are, how we are connected, and how we are doing.

Gray World, Green Heart.

Robert L. Thayer, Jr. 


Julia Kristeva

Black Sun.

Depression and Melancholia.


Susan Sontag

Under the Sign of Saturn


After Hiroshima

elin o'Hara slavick


On Pictures and the words that fail them.

On An Image Of A Bottle

James Elkins


A Field Guide to Melancholy

Melancholy and The Landscape

Locating Sadness, memory and reflection in the landscape.

Jacky Bowring



Who Comes after the Subject?


The essays collected in this volume present the current research of nineteen contemporary French philosophers on one of the great motifs of modern philosophy: the critique or the deconstruction of subjectivity.

Eduardo Cadava, Peter Connor, Jean-Luc Nancy.


The Enchantment Of Modern Life.

Attachments, Crossings, and Ethics.

Jane Bennett


Ordinary Lives.

Studies in the Everyday.

Ben Highmore.


Everyday/Quotidian Aesthetics.

Ranciere is perhaps the contemporary writer most alive to the productive and necessary confusion between aesthetics as a general field describing the realm of sensate perception, and the more limited meaning relevant to the field of art that has taken shape in the West in the last two hundred or so years. And it is this confusion (a confusion that infuses both the general and the limited economy of aesthetics) that we can find the materials to help us build a quotidian aesthetics.


The Politics of Aesthetics.

The Distribution of the Sensible

Jacques Ranciere.


Emergent behaviours/phenomena to generate buildings.

Screen-shot CCTV.

Fire exit intervention WSA. 2008





The Centrality of the Human Body to Architecture.

Framing/Temporal Containment/Instances and Immediacies : Human Bodies/Spatial Bodies.


Sunday, 7 May 2023

Raveningham/Trails and Wayfaring/ Finding enlightenment in the ground beneath one's feet. J. G. Bennett.

Existing between the subjectivity between things.


You Are The Weather.

Roni Horn.


Clouds and Clocks.

The project arises between a dialectic between the poetic and the systematic.

Between Science and Art.


The Embodiment of Minimal Gesture.













Wanderlust, A History of Walking. 

Rebecca Solnit. 2002

The Mind at Three Miles an Hour.


Everyday Aesthetics : Ordinary Lives

What shall I do next?

Tim Ingold.

Finding enlightenment in the ground beneath one's feet.

J. G. Bennett.

Tim Ingold is an anthropologist who has looked at the interface between people and the environment. In The Perception of the Environment, he argues that ecological psychology and the philosophical writings of Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty share the view that the world becomes  meaningful through active inhabitation, or 'dwelling', rather than cognitive representation. 

Curriculum Making : The Enactment of Dwelling in Places.


In a world of materials, nothing is ever finished : 'everything may be something, but being something is always on the way to becoming something else'

Tim Ingold 


Raveningham/Scripted Places

Garden/Ground/Circulation Diagrams.

Doing Slow Philosophy : Materials/Objects/Things/Walking/Listening to the wind 


Boundaries/in the making between the personal and the commonly shared.

A space where the individuals mental reality meets cultural narratives.


Few boundaries are impenetrable

They are rather, semi-permeable membranes providing housing while allowing selective commerce

In a world of materials, nothing is ever finished : 'everything may be something, but being something is always on the way to becoming something else'

Tim Ingold 2011


The Autonomy of The Natural Environment.

Sculpture/Playing with the existence of things.

Field Studies : Pathways around the Sun.

Drawing : Assemblage of Lightness and Weight.

Enmeshed Space : Working Drawing with Handwritten Notes.

Lawn Deliberations/Mappings of Human Agency/Space/Time.

Space projected from the body is biased towards the front and right.

The future is ahead and 'up.'

The past is behind and 'below.'

Time as a structure/place to observe things in constant motion/relation.

Drawing Site/Spiral Windings/Diagram/Spherical Markers

Terracotta, lime wash/lamp black/blackboard paint/chalk/ink

Ground Pegs/Labels/Text Markings/Archival Information

Points becoming lines, Tim Ingold.


Reading Matter/Rooms.

The Lake of The Mind.

Stochastic Thinking.

Steven Holl.


Raveningham : Site-specific project place

The Garden of Ongoing Differences.

Diffraction/Energy/Analysis/Attunement 


Site Cyanotypes/Drawings/Intermediaries

Spatial Collages Reconfigured  

Walking/Thinking with Ideas/Observations.

Site Drawings and Observational Mappings.

Cultivation Field.

The circle and square together embody what I think of as human nature.

Dark Room, Garry Fabian Miller.


If the everyday can be considered an ecology where passions circulate in a perpetual state of intensification and entropic decline, the empirical self (and not just David Hume's version of it) is essentially in a state of flux. This posits the human as an organism constantly adjusting to its passionate environment, with a self that is constantly appearing and disappearing, crystallising and dissolving.

Ben Highmore


Rich Lyrical Motifs.


Brilliant Trees.

Within each lesson lies the price to learn.

David Sylvian. 


Artist's Development.

Planting Research

Vital Nourishment.

Raveningham Garden Project.

Circle/Linear Time/Centred on objects.

Spiral/Deep Time/Awareness between things.

Architectural Ceramics.




Inseminations/Sketchbooks

Cell/Seeds/Dispersal/Cloud

Organism-Person-Environment

Working Ideas/Proposals into Matter/Making

Contents/Description/Instructions/Diagram/Drawing


Presentation/Ritual/Repetition.

Art is contemplation and must act upon our consciousness.

Objects/Things are part of the artist's immediate existence.

Contemplative experiences become truly meaningful when they occur in everyday life and when nirvana or the state of superior awareness blurs into samsara or ordered time.

For Tapies, repetition is above all else a perpetual questioning or a perpetual becoming.

A working process that is additive, which incorporates changes and accidents and as such his methods are hardly erasing anything that is already present on the canvas.  

A Summer's Work, Antoni Tapies.


The Garden/Material of/for Forking Paths.


The Diagram/The Program/The Inquiry

Marking Durations.

Ground Mappings.

Solar/Daylight Observed/Shadows Recorded 


A Garden Observatory/Philosophy of Silence/Solitude. 


Raveningham Sculpture Trail. 

Site Visit 160423


Sculptural Spacings and Sensual Engagements.

Showing Points/Lines/Vectors of Change/Movement.

Dwelling Demarcations/markers of temporality and disappearance. 


A poetics derived/driven from both the systematic and the small wonders of the everyday.

Circular Breathing/Cyclical Lines. 


The Peripheral Movement/Moment

The Space/Time between things.

The Concept of Sculpting Invisible Materials.

The Array, a phonographic inquiry recording transits of the suns pathways across the sky. 

Wanderings, caught up in the wanderlust of stillness and slowtime.

Paths of movement, paths of observation, paths of existential abstractions following daylight.

The artist's creative act of a self amongst others.


A sculptural deliberation that engages with the experiences of working a site in the landscape.


Curatorial.

Spatial Practice.

Practice/Display/Audience.

Of the mason's who built them, we can say that they both designed as they drew, and drew as they designed. But their designing, like their drawing, was a process of work, not a  project of the mind.

Tim Ingold 'Making'

Camouflage : Neil Leach

Camouflage offers  a mechanism of locating the self against the otherwise homogenising placelessness of contemporary existence. It thereby promotes a sense of attachment and connection to place.

Camouflage may  therefore provide a sense of belonging in a society where the hegemony of traditional structures of belonging - the family, church and so on - has begun to break down. This aesthetic sense of belonging can be compared to other modes of belonging, such as religious devotion or romantic attachment.

Aesthetic  production should maintain the capacity  to operate as  a mediation between the self and the environment, but only aesthetic production whose design has been carefully  controlled can achieve this. The difference between productive and unproductive modes of expression is therefore a question of design. In this respect we can recognise the important social role of design in providing a form of connectivity for ‘cognitively  mapping an individual within the environment. 


Design becomes  a crucial consideration for the effective operation of camouflage.

In highlighting the creative capacity of human beings to adapt to their environment, this book offers a more optimistic account of human existence, which valorizes the present as the site of productive endeavor.


The thing contained is not the thing contained.

Manifesto for explorations of 'IN'

Steven Holl.