Showing posts with label Claire Bishop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Claire Bishop. Show all posts

Friday, 15 August 2025

Slow Philosophy : Diffractive Over Layering/Accretions Of Making.


Diffractive Readings/Visual Material and Resources.

Over Layering/Accretions : Asperity~Inhabitation~Urbanism

Of interiors, constructions and abject deconstructions into and around the ruinous. White (bleached) and soot fumed stains, textures, patinas of process and time, usage and possible shelter. Urban vessels poetically conveying a visual, tactile complexity, that of built and lived in spaces.

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





Orange School Graph Books 

Harleston 2020-2021


A Species of Spaces

The Social Turn

Museum Site and Display

Political Philosophy


Makers work in a world that does not stand still

Iteration allows for continual correction (material conversation) in response to an ongoing perceptual monitoring of the task as it unfolds, mixing the potential for blending or combining matter that already exists into new combinations

Tim Ingold 2010


The social life of making

Making speaks in vivid dialogue with two associated themes, material and skill

Creativity involves not merely a spark of innovation or the execution of artistic inspiration. But the capacity to respond to unfolding iterations with materials. To use slowly accrued haptic knowledge to manipulate processes on the fly, and to judge how to counteract error and seize opportunities as they evolve 


Making becomes a process of iteration, and a maker works with this iteration prolifically 


Matter and materials are lively and require attention, materials continue to thwart in unpredictable ways, decaying and breaking down or wearing or breaking under force

Vibrant Matter, A Political Ecology of Things

Jane Bennett 2010


Attending to the process of making opens up prospects for following the lead of the material, where the properties of the materials themselves shape the direction in which making proceeds

Tim Ingold 2010


New Urban Adventures in Collaboration/Conceptual Ceramics

Ceramic Practice as a form of research engaged in a process/ecology of inquiry, an exploration of ideas predicated on and exploiting the characteristics of clay


The transformation of the material is a central concern and semiotic significance unfolds with making

Seeking a symbiotic relationship between idea and object 


Materials are substances in becoming

Karen Barad


Towards an Ecology of Materials

Tim Ingold 2012


From the 'objectness' of things to the material flows and formative processes wherein they come into being. It means to think of making as a process of growth or ontogenesis

 

Materials-Centered Perspective


Making, almost defies precise definition

The composition and/or manipulation of materials that bring into being new or revised objects

Tim Ingold 2010


Cultures of thrift and scavenging, maintenance and repair

Making encompasses the ingenuity of fluid, locally situated and adapted technologies


Materials carry on overtaking the formal destinations that, at one time or another, have been assigned to them


Sensibilities and dispositions that are centred on a deep and considered relationship with materials

The Craftsman, Richard Sennett 2008


Crafting, often reconnects mind and body in the sites and processes of production, thereby potentially reconstituting labour processes in ways that ascribe agency to workers


Makers finding ways to resist norms of gender and neoliberal entrepreneurial subjectivities, finding ways and spaces for ethical practice to predominate



Contemporary conceptual ceramics operates at the permeable boundary between art and craft, partaking of aspects of both, and ultimately demonstrating (or performing) that permeability


The emergence of the museum as proactive laboratory of social evolution


Extradisciplinary Investigations/Operative Principle

At work here is a new tropism and a new sort of reflexivity, involving artists as well as theorists and activists in a passage beyond the limits traditionally assigned to their practice


Microtopias, small contained sites of functioning democracy


Tropism conveys the desire or need to turn towards something else, towards an exterior field or discipline


The New Institutional Practice

Projective Enterprises (should unsettle, activate, and raise questions)


The exhibitions to emerge through new institutionalism are considered as points of exchange and collision, made through intersections of social, economic and political relations, it follows that the predominant forms of artistic practice included are the social, the spatial, the interdisciplinary 


So our understanding of site has shifted from a fixed , physical location to somewhere or something constituted through social-economic-cultural and political processes

Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity

Miwon Kwon 2002


Collaborations and its Discontents

Claire Bishop 2006


The motivating factors for participatory projects is its critiquing of the essentialising of site and community in context-specific activities/exhibitions


A complex environment, awash in affect and subjectivity

When subjective and analytic processes mesh together to form a new productive and political 'contexts' of communicational labour  


New curatorial initiatives must unpack the terminologies we use to distinguish one project from another

A playful psychogeographical situation, that resists the representative, illustrative and thematic narratives

Unsettling-Complicit

Provocative-Strategic

Interventionist-Collaborative


Perforative Curating/Prescribed Participation

Creating new/more coded patterns of behavior/conventions/role play for visitor's


New Institionalism and the Exhibition As Situation/Social Experiment

Claire Doherty 2006


Participation

In which people constitute the central artistic medium and material

In the manner of theatre and performance

Participatory art is both a social activity and a symbolic one, as it is both embedded in the world and at one, remove from it


The artist is conceived less as an individual producer of discrete objects, than as a collaborator and producer of situations

The contemporary artwork is finite, portable, commodifiable product, and is reconceived as an ongoing or long term project with an unclear beginning and end

Artists are more interested in the creative rewards of participation as a politicised working process, than the relational aesthetic which renders discursive and dialogic projects more amenable to museums and galleries


Artificial Hells (exposing the political and aesthetic limitations in the work)

Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship

Claire Bishop 2011


Site-Specificity/Spatial Practice

The distinguishing characteristic of today's site-oriented art is the way in which both the art work's relationship to the actuality of a location (as site) and the social conditions of the institutional frame (as site) are subordinated to a discursively determined site that is delineated as a field of knowledge, intellectual exchange or cultural debate

Miwon Kwon 1997


Whilst temporary exhibitions can expand the scope of medium-specific discourse, they can also impose alternative, but equally restrictive frames

Participation, creating a bridge between socially engaged practice and the permanent collection


Expressing itself expressing 


Creating a conceptual and linguistic dexterity between absolutes, certainties, definitions


Dissolving the intellectual relevance, with its symbiotic relationship with utility to create 'vessels' beyond art and artifact


The strategy of making artworks as response

The Ceramic Object, by means of preservation and display becomes a vehicle/vessel for a social and historical narrative/entanglement/engagement


Making vessels, beyond the examining and intellectually impoverished questions 


A vessel is identified as such by its physical disposition, giving shape to the contents and clarifying what is inside and what is outside


Few boundaries are impenetrable

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


Like the vessel, the house shapes and nurtures the life contained inside


The Factory I build in the Tate is a place to discuss the transactions and transformations of Labour that Create Knowledge and Community

In the Factory we will examine skills and how we form Exchanges at Work , with ourselves and with others

Clare Twomey, Lead artist at Tate Exchange 2017


Post Studio Ceramics

Interfaces between Making-Makers-Museums

Exploring object engagement beyond the known historical models of clay practice


'Generate' Historical Material and Spatial Relations as they interacted with the work, and reflected on the role of the Museum/Hospital

Clare Twomey


Ceramics In The Environment 

An International Review

Janet Mansfield 2005


With Fire, Richard Hirsch

A Life Between Chance and Design (invites the unknown)

Scott Meyer 2012

Hirsch takes us to the heart of the interface between ageless earth and the spare evidence of the rhythm of human utility 


Raku as an Ideology

Breath-Energy-Immanence


Raku, A Review of Contemporary Work

Tim Andrews 1994


The Poetry of The Vessel

A calm invitation to thought and imagination

Chris Tyler


The vessel (making, thinking, subject) as both a historically grounded form, and a vehicle to examine abstract aspects of the physical body and the natural world


Arte Povera/Germano Celant, an aesthetic-philosophical movement

An eclectic synthesis of knowledge fields, that emerges into a total space where disparate categories can meet; a art that asks only for the essential information, that refuses the dialogue with the social and cultural system, and aspires to present itself as something sudden and unforeseen



Thursday, 29 May 2025

bricolaged notes from STUDIO UNBOUND : Lane Relyea

251022

Institutional Critique : Studio/Post Studio Activity

The Function of the Studio
Daniel Buren

The Studio is no longer as seen as belonging to a system.
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.

Networks are both integrative and decentralizing in that they privilege casual or weak ties over formal commitments.

Being part of a network that privileges itinerancy and circulation over fixity, that diminishes hierarchies and boundaries in favour of mobility and flexibility across a more open extensive environment. 


'The Studio made into a showroom display'
Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics. 2004
Claire Bishop

The Individual and The Social
A place where meanings, properties and behaviors fluctuate radically.
Bennett Simpson. Can you work as fast as you like to think. 2003







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


The hosting/re-created artist's workspaces, like a threshold between private and public actuality and potentiality.

Spaces of Fluid Interchange Between Objects, Activities, People.

Today studio and museum are superseded by more temporal, transient events.

The Notion of the Evolutionary Exhibition.
Placing greater emphasis on INFORMATION, DISCUSSION and GATHERINGS

Establishing NETWORKS, fluctuating between highly specialized work by scientists, artists, dancers and writers
Obrist/Vanderlinden, Laboratorium, Antwerp. 1999

MODULATION, Deleuze

Immaterial Social Acquaintances/Information

Along with the rise of Networks comes a new Ideology, one that Advertises Agency, Practice and Everyday Life.

The Dividual (The New Mobile Creator) Deleuze
Someone who is 'UNDULATORY In ORBIT, in a CONTINUOUS NETWORK



Colour Nexus : Promiscuous Mobility

Material Flows 2007/2017 Towards Disentanglement

Social behaviour is trapped in inescapable patterns of interaction coded by techno-linguistic machines, smartphones, screens of every size, and all of these sensory and emotional devices end up destroying our organism's sensibility by submitting it to the stress of competition and acceleration.
Franco "bifo" Berardi

OBSCURED MATERIAL
The Modulation of the Image








Tuesday, 30 July 2024

Visual Poetics/Bricolage/Red is not a colour : The Studio/Space of Real Situations

Spatial Collage : Research/Discourse/Apparatus

Farnham University of the Creative Arts


rhythmanalysis : Space, Time and Everyday Life.

Lefebvre


Jannis Kounellis

Carlo Scarpa


Translates the painterly relationship of figure and ground into the space of real situations

The Visual Poetics of Jannis Kounellis, Suzanne Cotter and Andrew Nairne.

Modern Art Oxford, 2004-2005.


Timothy Morton : Realist Magic

The elasticity of sensation, affective and wonderous







Red is not a Colour. Bernard Tschumi.

bricolaged notes  from STUDIO UNBOUND : Lane Relyea

Institutional Critique : Studio/Post Studio Activity


SPATIAL AGENCY : Spaces of Fluid Interchange Between Objects, Activities, People.

Today studio and museum are superseded by more temporal, transient events.



The Function of the Studio

Daniel Buren

The Studio is no longer as seen as belonging to a system.

No longer a retreat but it now INTEGRATES

It is all exterior.


Material Flows 2007/2017 Towards Disentanglement

Social behaviour is trapped in inescapable patterns of interaction coded by techno-linguistic machines, smartphones, screens of every size, and all of these sensory and emotional devices end up destroying our organism's sensibility by submitting it to the stress of competition and acceleration.

Franco "bifo" Berardi


The Network places the artist as a 'like item' within an integrative inventory or database.

Networks are both integrative and decentralizing in that they privilege casual or weak ties over formal commitments.

Being part of a network that privileges itinerancy and circulation over fixity, that diminishes hierarchies and boundaries in favour of mobility and flexibility across a more open extensive environment. 



'The Studio made into a showroom display'


Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics. 2004


Claire Bishop



The Individual and The Social


A place where meanings, properties and behaviors fluctuate radically.

Bennett Simpson. Can you work as fast as you like to think. 2003


The hosting/re-created artist's workspaces, like a threshold between private and public actuality and potentiality.


The Notion of the Evolutionary Exhibition.


Placing greater emphasis on INFORMATION, DISCUSSION and GATHERINGS



Establishing NETWORKS, fluctuating between highly specialized work by scientists, artists, dancers and writers

Obrist/Vanderlinden, Laboratorium, Antwerp. 1999

MODULATION, Deleuze


Immaterial Social Acquaintances/Information

Along with the rise of Networks comes a new Ideology, one that Advertises Agency, Practice and Everyday Life.


The Dividual (The New Mobile Creator) Deleuze


Someone who is 'UNDULATORY In ORBIT, in a CONTINUOUS NETWORK

Colour Nexus : Promiscuous Mobility

OBSCURED MATERIAL




OUTPOST STUDIO 3.16

Notes from sketchbooks


Apokatastasis : Jim Jarmusch, Jozef Van Wissem

Spatial Asperity/Mesh, Membrane and Gauze


Drawing and its attempts to map out/make visible contingent things

Contingency, is what remains, as it comes up against causality/constantly passing through

Objects/Things conceptualized by the exploration of drawing (intervals of blindness)


Linking Surface to the Aesthetic Experience of Space.

Experiences incorporating interests with environmental textures into Art.

Points of Contact/Confluence of Circumstances

Materials bound by contact/canvas

Patina, absences, gesso, textile wrappings, field chalk, exhumed oyster shells, yellow ochre,


A philosophy of Reading

Solitude/Libraries : Cell/Court/Domain

Clay, Waxed Surface, Liquid Rust, Calico,


Sensate Bandages/Windings/Armatures : Corporeal Landscapes/Assemblages/Things


Social Architectures/Anthropologies/Imaginary Projects


Sally Mann : Matter Lent/Collodion wetplate negatives

Corpus, liquid light, flesh, spirit, trace, outline, human body, performative,

Wednesday, 1 November 2023

A Body of Relations/On The Drawing Process.

Outpost 051023

The Process of Production

Seeing beyond concepts of looking.


The Dematerializing of the Art Object.

The process rather than art object as the primary site of the artist's creative output.

Lucy Lippard, Six Years: The Dematerialization of The Art Object from 1966 to 1972.

 

A Body Of Relations:

Reconfiguring The Life Class.






The reconfigured life class provides a performative, discursive, social space to empower the life model to actively engage in the production of his/her own self-image. In addition the research re-frames the life class as a site in which the discourses of contemporary art as 'relational' and 'performative' can reach its apotheosis as a de-materialized performance event, whose trace exists in the dispersed materiality of the artist's body and whose silenced subject, the life model, becomes a full individual subject.


Yuen Fong Ling. 2016


2.5. Black Market, Pawel Althamer. 2007


In the artwork titled Black Market by Pawel Althamer, the exhibition sees participants making an effigy of the artist. The work neither focuses on the reference or the final outcome, but on the process of production. Polish Africans are trained in basic skills of carving and sculpting by the artist; they demonstrate their skills in a workshop environment presented as an installation in the exhibition. 


This active delegation of skills passed on by the artist to his participants, begins to fold traces of the artist in a process of transferral, where participant's subjectivities are merged with that of the artist. 


This framework for open contingent and non-scripted outcomes are rooted in Althamer's education under the tutelage of artist Grzegorz Kowalski, who was in turn influenced by Oskar Hansen's theory of 'open form' a form of architectural practice that encompassed 'collective thought' to dislocate any singular vision or use in the production of building design.


Artworks produced under these conditions meant that artworks were co-authored restrained  by time scale and the given situation. The artist in the role of teacher or tutor, to facilitate participant's ideas inflected in the production of the artwork. Althamer highlights intimate and often emotional inter-subjectivities. Rather than the distanced, silenced, objectified mode of temporary  participation.


The result is a sculpture that is a receptacle of negotiation, a choral self-portrait that depicts Althamer's as much as it captures an image of those who created him. 

Gioni, Massimiliano, The Hero with a Thousand Faces : Pawel Althamer. 2008


For Yuen Fong Ling, Althamer's image, as surrogated in figurative sculpture, through a delegated performance of participants, both united in a personal and political struggle with society and the realms of its reality.


Althamer's use of the open form methodology aims to democratize the formation of authorship in the artwork. Through the inclusion and collaboration of participants, Althamer has gradually developed the participant's active role and position. 


This 'delegated performance' as described by Claire Bishop allows Althamer to exercise his personal politics and his participants right to choose to partake in an art event, furthermore Althamer begins to physically manifest an object containing the participant's innate subjectivity. Bishop comments an agreement with the artist's own intent versus the participant's own inherent being. Participant's as active producers, influenced, even taught by the artist, potentially conditions the participant, in view of a pedagogic project of the artist.


Claire Bishop, Artificial Hells: Participatory Art  and the Politics of Spectatorship.2012




The Drawings of Richard Diebenkorn.

John Elderfield.


To reveal what has been discovered.

Subjects enlarged across a surface as a condensation of carnal knowledge.





Thinking In Drawing.


Drawing from life, at the threshold of painting.


When we talk of drawing as spontaneous, we refer not only to the sense of immediacy produced by the finest drawings, but also to how a drawing's very identity presents itself to us, to an extent beyond that of any other work of visual art, as the direct record of the movement of the artist's hand.


A drawing is intrinsically the record of movement in time. Hence, it can indeed be more purely impulsive than any other work of visual art-unless another such work partakes of drawing as its very structure. More often, of course, a drawing comprises a network of recorded movements, which tend usually to slow in their accumulation. And our appreciation of a drawing like this requires that we retrace these movements, their duration and their accumulation, from the evidence they have left behind.


Diebenkorn is always composing his subjects, ordering their shape. Forms are overlapped by other forms to weld everything together in that particular pose. If the model is shown  performing some action, she performs it very slowly indeed. Usually, she is immobile. The eroticism of the body reveals itself simply by holding a pose-in its intermittence: in the intermittence of hands brought together and held for that moment in that  particular pose: in the intermittence of that part of the body suddenly revealed by limbs as they form that particular pose.


We should notice at this point that, by and large, Diebenkorn's best figure drawings are frontally composed. He faces his subjects and enlarges them across the surface, sacrificing proportion if necessary for pattern, thereby discovering a sequence of contours-some arabesque, some geometric, that read almost autonomously as condensations of carnal knowledge. 


We should also notice that while Diebenkorn faces his subjects, they are generally do not have him. His models usually look down or away. They seem self-absorbed. Part of the reason for this is that Diebenkorn does not want to make psychological contact with the face. He wants us to grasp the meaning of the work from the whole composition and not have it filtered through the personality of the model.


This is also why he spreads a sense of corporeality beyond the contours of the model: to give the sheet as a whole living vibrancy. But there is another reason. It can be discovered in the kind of self-absorption his models display. They are not melancholy, or secretive, or brooding, or even bored. They seem quietly contented, self-assured, harmonious, at peace of mind. They may look distorted, altered from what we expect to see. But  they tell of the harmoniousness of their condition.


But drawing, unlike painting, picks out the artist's preferences at once. His means are immediately at hand and therefore his meanings are given immediately, the artist is forced to deal with the model's reality, to emotional reactions to particular things.


The drawings in question include a great series in charcoal, heavily worked and extensively revised until they comprise condensed symbols for the body of the model; some works in pencil and crayon where an almost geometric scaffold of echoing severe lines composes the body of the model and some boldly designed, extremely flattened studies of this drawing studio itself.


Each work on paper is a prolonged meditation on what drawing can accomplish at the threshold of painting. 


The drawing insistently designs or divides the field, which partakes of the density of drawing.


Firstly, something done on paper cannot be worked quite as long as something on canvas. There will be a point beyond which the surface can be bruised no more and will actually collapse in final failure. Some of the works on paper, therefore are extremely spare: the smallest possible number of notations that will suffice to realize their composition. However since the bruises do show more on paper than on canvas, perhaps the work on paper should not dodge them after all but, instead accumulate them, making such work far more explicitly a record of their accumulation than a painting can be. Diebenkorn prefers shiny, coated paper and he also uses masking devices to preserve the sections of a drawing he likes while scrubbing out others. Often this generates new imagery.


Secondarily, something done on paper, however need not be wiped clean if it is not working. Neither does it have to be painted out. It can be patched. This option is not available to painting: not Diebenkorn's painting. Some of his works on paper therefore comprise dense sandwiches of paper. But they are never collages that draw attention to the disparate character of their parts. For the point is always to adjust each fragment until the parts disappear into the whole. In the works of this kind, the artist does physically, materially, what he does more often by adjustment of linear boundaries: amalgamate a corpus of parts. At times, he will thus enlarge a work in its making, something impossible for him in painting.



Thirdly, the different scale of the small size is the scale of things close to hand. It is the scale established by the hand and the wrist and by the arm bent rather than extended. Everything is closer and more enclosed. Everything is therefore more intimate as well. And yet, the intimacy of these small works is that of research done privately but for publication, almost like scientific experiments. They do , in fact, test ideas. And while no painting will duplicate what a work on paper discovers, parts of paintings will remember parts of works on paper. Images discovered in these independent drawings are constantly cross-bred, hybridized and new drawings are grown out of them. Diebenkorn's images on paper are constantly dissected and reassembled from one work to the next, altering in the process.


Clay based inquiry around  practice led/speculative making.

Filling the Red Kiln, re-visiting/re-presentation of 'clay works'.


Friday, 9 July 2021

Collage Body : Diversions, Contradictions and Anomalies.

Collage : Diversions, Contradictions and Anomalies.

Body : Personal Relations and Spatial Values

Reading : Slow Philosophy


Collage's integral methods of discordance and displacement have so insistently reflected turbulent developments in twentieth century art, science and geopolitics that our response might be to categorise the whole genre as iconoclasm or subversive fantasy.

Sally O'Reilly





THE PERSPECTIVE OF EXPERIENCE


Yi-Fu Tuan

1959 : Patti Smith
Peace and Noise

Lingering at the threshold between word and image
Cy Twombly
Claire Daigle



Although his work resonates strongly with generations of younger artists, ranging from Brice Marden to Richard Prince to Tacita Dean to Patti Smith, it has a general propensity to polarise its audience between perplexity and unbridled admiration. 

Certainly, the fortuities of a name are being pushed too far here, but what does Twombly do but offer up words in all of their resonance: literal, metaphoric, corporeal, material? His citations often have the vanitas effect of graffiti: ‘Cy was here’. Lingering at the threshold between word and image, Twombly renders visible those things – experience, emotion, the body’s share – that lie beyond the reach of verbal articulation
















Research Material
Photographic Drawings

PETER ZUMTHOR ATMOSPHERES

Architectural Environments
Surrounding Objects
2006 Birkhauser, Basel, Switzerland.

The New Institutional Practice
Projective Enterprises (should unsettle, activate, and raise questions)

The exhibitions to emerge through new institutionalism are considered as points of exchange and collision, made through intersections of social, economic and political relations, it follows that the predominant forms of artistic practice included are the social, the spatial, the interdisciplinary 

So our understanding of site has shifted from a fixed , physical location to somewhere or something constituted through social-economic-cultural and political processes
Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity
Miwon Kwon 2002

Collaborations and its Discontents
Claire Bishop 2006

The motivating factors for participatory projects is its critiquing of the essentialising of site and community in context-specific activities/exhibitions

A complex environment, awash in affect and subjectivity
When subjective and analytic processes mesh together to form a new productive and political 'contexts' of communicational labour  

New curatorial initiatives must unpack the terminologies we use to distinguish one project from another
A playful psychogeographical situation, that resists the representative, illustrative and thematic narratives
Unsettling-Complicit
Provocative-Strategic
Interventionist-Collaborative

Perforative Curating/Prescribed Participation
Creating new/more coded patterns of behavior/conventions/role play for visitor's

New Institionalism and the Exhibition As Situation/Social Experiment
Claire Doherty 2006

Participation
In which people constitute the central artistic medium and material
In the manner of theatre and performance
Participatory art is both a social activity and a symbolic one, as it is both embedded in the world and at one, remove from it

The artist is conceived less as an individual producer of discrete objects, than as a collaborator and producer of situations
The contemporary artwork is finite, portable, commodifiable product, and is reconceived as an ongoing or long term project with an unclear beginning and end
Artists are more interested in the creative rewards of participation as a politicised working process, than the relational aesthetic which renders discursive and dialogic projects more amenable to museums and galleries

Artificial Hells (exposing the political and aesthetic limitations in the work)
Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship
Claire Bishop 2011

Site-Specificity/Spatial Practice
The distinguishing characteristic of today's site-oriented art is the way in which both the art work's relationship to the actuality of a location (as site) and the social conditions of the institutional frame (as site) are subordinated to a discursively determined site that is delineated as a field of knowledge, intellectual exchange or cultural debate
Miwon Kwon 1997

Whilst temporary exhibitions can expand the scope of medium-specific discourse, they can also impose alternative, but equally restrictive frames
Participation, creating a bridge between socially engaged practice and the permanent collection

Expressing itself expressing 

Creating a conceptual and linguistic dexterity between absolutes, certainties, definitions

Dissolving the intellectual relevance, with its symbiotic relationship with utility to create 'vessels' beyond art and artifact