Neo Baroque, Postmodern rendered/computer generated surfaces.
New Forms of Media Aesthetics, Peter Greenaway
Mesh Topologies
Material absorbed in its own thoughts :
The theme of the human body as landscape and the biological link between humanity and nature.
Filmic Modalities
An Ecology of Mind
We are so accustomed to thinking of aesthetic phenomena as a discursive or representational construct, that we often forget that without arousal of perception, no aesthetic experience is possible.
Going beyond what it may represent into the important psychic information it contains
Bateson credits art with playing the role of confronting the quantitative limit built into consciousnesses
Art assists mind in recognizing that the potentiality of heightened consciousnesses exist and that it resides in you and in me
Perception of Environment/Relational Situations
Tim Ingold
Each thing framed dwells in the world differently.
The frame and framing, through its configuration, must never offer a gap or a bridge through which as it were, the world could get in, or from which the picture could get out.
The picture frame reminds us that the work of art, while it hangs in our room, does not disturb our day-to-day sentient and perceptual ecologies.
It is like an island in the world that waits until one approaches it and which one can as well pass by and overlook.
On The Picture Frame, Simmel
Art becomes art by virtue of literal and institutional framing
Aesthetic contemplation blurs reals and emotional space in a way that produces tangible affects in the world
The thinking hand that mediates a haptic bridge in which creating and holding, becoming and grasping are all practical everyday activities extending the thinking body
Objects that stand in two worlds at once and becoming drawn into the movement of practical life through the virtue of being held in the hand
The intermingling of persons and objects in pictorial space and the aesthetics of the intermingling of function and form in everyday things
The pictorial space is one in which persons and images intermingle and passions can be aroused.
Art and Agency, Alfred Gell
I would like to conclude this analysis of Tarkovsky’s unique use of nature as a ‘comfort zone’ by saying a few things about his two science-fiction films, Solaris and Stalker. Solaris is based on the great same-titled science-fiction novel by Stanislaw Lem. The many philosophical and ethical differences between the novel and film can be summarized by the fact that, whereas the novel begins in space on the Solaris space station orbiting the planet Solaris, the film begins with a 45 minute prologue on earth, which establishes the importance of home, family, and ‘mother’ earth to the psychologist Kris Kelvin (and by extension all humans), who is soon to leave for outer space. The theme of the human body as landscape and the biological link between humanity and nature is established right from the opening, a (second) slow motion close-up shot of plant life swaying under a crystal clear stream that slowly pans right to reveal the hand of a man wearing brown trousers and a dark leather coat standing amidst waist high reeds.
Outpost 131223
Body Movement.
Robert J. Yudell.
The interplay between the world of our bodies and the world of our dwelling places is always in flux. We make places that are an expression of our haptic experiences even as those experiences are generated by the places we have already created. Whether we are conscious or innocent of this process, our bodies and our movements are in constant dialogue with our buildings.
Problems of Method.
Novalis/Bachelard.
No vision invites him to do so, it is the very substance he has touched with his hands and lips which summons him. It summons him materially by virtue of what seems to be a magical participation. The dreamer undresses and enters the pool, only at this moment do the images appear. They emerge from matter, they arise as if from a seed out of a primitive sensual reality. A rapture which cannot yet project itself on the feminine substantiality of water. Water becomes woman against his breast.
Gaston Bachelard would like to develop a philosophy that has no point of departure, and a philosophy that is not a point of departure. Bachelard in his books, attempts to systematize formal material and dynamic imagination.
Space contains compressed time.
On Poetic Imagination and Reverie.
The Autobiography of Lost Possibilities.
Gaston Bachelard.
A dispersed philosophy that must constantly operate on its very edge, at the very limit where its systematizing impulse is challenged by the actual creations in other domains of human activity. Bachelard becomes a 'hinge' between totalizing metaphysical systems and polyphilosophy.
Bachelard does not develop a fully fledged philosophy of values, rather his books offer lessons for working, reading, breathing and dreaming well, all of which constitute an art of living poetically. Throughout his work he developed the paradox, that the primitiveness of poetic consciousness is not immediately given, it can only be a conquest. Images reveal nothing to the lazy dreamer.
Colette Gaudin.
Guiseppe Penone.
Souffle 6. 1978.
A large earthenware jar on which the artist has stamped the imprint of his own body. This process shows a sensorial conception of art, a concentration on the organic and the original, reasserting the permanent nature of myths and an animist conception. A vitality of matter, material and object.
The National Museum of Modern Art.
Georges Pompidou Centre.
Arte Povera as an artistic praxis, highly critical and anti-cultural. An art that explores a 'strange area' that is interested in elemental human situations. It was the art critic Germano Celano who in reference to the research done by the polish theatre director Jerzy Grotowski, outlined in his book 'Towards a Poor Theatre' proposed the notion of Arte Povera in 1967.
Epicurean Asceticism.
The Phenomenological Approach.
Problems of Method.
Reading as a dimension of consciousness.
For Anna Teresa Tymieniecka, the essence of life is not a feeling of being, of existence, but a feeling of participation in a flowing onward necessarily expressed in terms of time, and secondarily expressed in terms of space.
Poetry as a synthesis of human existence.
Bachelard's auditive metaphor 'reverberation' for the poetic image brings together through sound, both time and space. In its reverberation, the poetic image will have made a sonority, a situatedness of being.
Science and Poetry.
Concepts and images develop along two divergent lines of spiritual life. The image cannot give matter to the concept, the concept by giving stability to the image would stifle its existence.
Nascent Material/Media.
Drawings rendering an insistent corporeality.
Drawings loosing their haptic senses of mark-feeling and becoming increasingly camouflaged into an image based on representation of an objectified art form/context.
Life Drawings subdued by visual representation.
Is the initial situation/situatedness/awkwardness of drawing process becoming overwritten.
Drawings feeling the body marking its presence in the space /stage of drawing.
Outpost 270224
In the body of knowledge, there is a mind in the flesh quick as lighting.
Artaud/Newman
Drawing ultimately corresponds with/to a mobile field of properties.
The Haptic Engagement.
The Stage of Drawing.
Gesture and Act.
In drawing it is this potentiality and instability of the 'framed image/object' that reinforces our uncertainty of any definitive definition. We are not so much looking at the thing itself, but at its suggestion and its very possibility in a formation that has yet to occur. There is the uncertainty (and its anxiety) as to what stage of language it is, in its becoming.
Looking with the eye and touch of an artist, even to a point of scrutiny, while keeping the societal content in which they emerge in mind. What forms the overall connection between the drawings in the exhibition is the value attached to gesture, as a primordial act of consciousness and to its trace on the paper.
Catherine de Zegher, Avis Newman.
Drawing is conceived in the midst of loss and anxiety.
Within the realm of visual representation, drawing is present as an act of tracing absences.
Opened and closed by the mark, an inscriptive game that is both motional and emotional, that enables an active control/participation over separation anxiety. While at the same time unlocking the way to the child's independence.
The earliest drawings are not guided by visual exploration of space, but by an exploration of movement and spatial concerns.
Bodily responses to drawing acts, of trying to bring about a visible language from visual inscriptions. Gestural traces in drawings evidence a continuous process of situating being/becoming.
Drawn from the body of knowledge into the/onto the surface event of experience.
Drawing for me always seems to manifest the endless repetition of remaking, and as such as a sensation it constitutes the space of anxiety, a childhood anxiety.
Moving Bodies
Spatial Thresholds
In architecture we enter space and its poetics.
St Jerome in his study.1474-75.
Messina examines 'earthly limits', St Jerome is sitting in a small study that seems to have been dissected to reveal its interior. The place, environment for his writing and any other material needed to cultivate his mind. As if to say that space can be crossed with a mind capable of entering and crossing limits. This is the greatness of the mind, and also in architecture, that it is capable of crossing/entering spaces beyond there physical limits. In transcending physical limits Scarpa is setting up a spatial poetics of liminal spaces, is perhaps the main theme of his work at Brion Cemetery, alongside of the real physical and actual architectural figures of solid material. Thus for Scarpa, every time a threshold is crossed the limits between life, humanity and nature in the landscape are traversed as well.
Brion Cemetary by Carlo Scarpa.
Ina Macaione. 2017.
Enric Mestre.
Architectures For Silence And Meditation.
Building models, blueprints for larger constructions.
Sculptures of the hidden, the concealed and the enclosed.
The work of Enric Mestre is much indebted to the principles of ancient classical form as to the vocabulary of modern architecture and sculpture. He is an artist who has a particularly sensitive feeling for massing, for the planar and spatial relationships of contemporary building, and how to size this down into pieces which possess their own particular intimacy.
His works are enhanced by the nuanced and controlled colouration of their clay fabric. Mestre produces patinas of great subtlety and variation that relate more to the fabric of a building than to traditional sculpture. Gritty open textures and smooth surfaces both soften and temper the austerity of his forms, in which he also uses sober tones and colourations to distinguish different sections, surfaces and planes.
Mestre's work echoes the sculptural beauty of expressive functionalist building, it has the same starkness, the same asceticism that shares a strong sense of memorial and of elegy. They are deeply contemplative objects, that go beyond exercises in harmony, chromatics, proportion and formalism.
They present a quietude that contains a profound sense of memento mori. For Whiting there is a sepulchre like quality about such of Mestre's work, for repositories of memory perhaps, sentinels of some unspecified commemoration. Sculptures where one's own imagination is allowed to roam in a disquieting world of urban areas and industrial like structures.
Their cenotaph like solemnity creates a sense of isolation and loneliness, and we are left to make our own narratives, our own stories.
David Whiting.
Invisible Cities.
Italo Calvino.
With cities, it is as with dreams; everything imaginable can be dreamed, but even the most unexpected dream is a rebus that conceals a desire or, its reverse, a fear.
Cities, like dreams, are made of desires or fears, even if the thread of their discourse is secret, their rules are absurd, their perspectives deceitful and everything conceals something else.
What is more mysterious than clarity?
What more capricious than the way in which light and shade are distributed over the hours and over men?
Eupalinos of the Architect.
Paul Valery.
Christopher Wilmarth
Drawing Into Sculpture.
Christopher Wilmarth (1943?1987), an American artist best known for his expressive sculptures constructed from plate glass and steel, was also an innovative draftsman. This compelling book?the first to focus on Wilmarth's use of drawing throughout his career?offers fascinating insights into his artistic practice and poetic personal vision. Edward Saywell considers three aspects of Wilmarth's drawings: his student and early works; the remarkable crossover that he made between two- and three-dimensional works in a series of drawings constructed from etched glass and steel cables done in the early 1970s; and the independent drawings he made directly after or during the construction of his sculptures as a means to think through completed work and to look forward to new creative ideas. Saywell also draws on previously unstudied materials, such as sketchbooks, preparatory maquettes, and letters selected from the Christopher Wilmarth Archive recently presented to the Fogg Art Museum by Susan Wilmarth-Rabineau, in order to shed new light on Wilmarth's working process.
Momentum Wheel : Lucie Rie Installation.
Clay/Ceramics as a concept to a way of thinking.
Speculative Tectonics : A Poetic of Construction.
The Clay can take to the mould and mould the clay.
Simondon, took the essence of matter or the material to lie in form-taking-activity.
Brian Massumi. 2009.
Clay Works --- In and Out of material : Clay plays the stone, the stone plays the clay
Tony Cragg
IN AND OUT OF MATERIAL
Demonstration
Tony Cragg : I basically mean the effectiveness of the object, of the material. But because the metaphysical and physical association are already occupied, I'm interested in somehow establishing some relationship with the materials and the things around me without using any preconceived notions of an already occupied language. It is a bit like taking away a Christian name and depersonalising something. What I mean is that it's an attempt on my side to restart the relationship with the material, which I think sculptors have to do anyway.
Jon Wood : Thinking of the increased awareness that this side of your work tries to capture and harness in the viewer, can you say a bit about the kind of sensitivities that you would like to be heightened? What would you see your work as demonstrations of and for? Your sculptures are triggers for what kind of thinking?
Tony Cragg : Well there is an attitude to looking at things and to looking at objects and materials which is based on a meditative tradition of contemplation : the universe in a grain of sand idea, or maybe even religious ideas where you actually get in contact on some level with the material world, on a deeper level than the one you obviously are capable of reaching in an everyday situation, so on an extraordinary level, outside of your own experiences.
I am not saying that that's not interesting or important. But I also think that this leaves the battleground for the everyday life to be governed by non-contemplative thought and non-meditative thought. And this may sound like a mixture of terms, but I think that there is a job to be done even on an everyday, “second for second” level of life—on the experiential level of life. I think there is a job to be done here improving the quality of contemplation about an awareness of the material world—the material world seen as an immediate extension of the communal social effort, the cultural effort that you are part of.
Jon Wood : How does it move from being an individual contemplative experience to being one that has a communal relevance?
Tony Cragg : In the main part it only has communal relevance. All you can do for yourself is formulate your sentences, cook yourself a meal that suits you, get dressed in a fashion that suits you, and everything else you have to put up with as having been made by other people for you. But obviously, even if they didn't ask your permission, there's something consensual about that, isn't there? Even though you don't like it, it doesn't look like you're making an effort to change it. And maybe there's some active thing there. My idea is that even if I don't like it, I wouldn't be able to change a great deal of it, but I could sow the seed for some change in the direction that I would feel would be important. It's a measure of how much responsibility one takes for the change. Looking for more in the visual world around me and looking for more language, in a sense, is one way of heightening sensibilities and expanding a vocabulary and then expanding the responses to a vocabulary is a way of heightening sensibilities. I'm not a politician, but I think we still live in a world that is greatly dominated by mesmerism and mystical models, which are very distracting because they actually stop us from really trying to face reality.
Realist Magic
Objects, Ontology,
Causality
Timothy Morton
Clay Work : Visceral Practices
Pastoral Space: Material, Inquiry and Craft.
Longshore drift is a geographical process that consists of the transportation of sediments (clay, silt, sand and shingle) along a coast at an angle to the shoreline, which is dependent on prevailing wind direction, swash and backwash.
This process occurs in the littoral zone, and in or close to the surf zone.
Material Agency : Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris
Visualising Environmental Agency.
"These latter artefacts are described with the term "index", to remove the appellation "art" and to imply that they are indexes of agency."
Some Stimulating Solutions, Andrew Cochrane.
Tectonics in architecture is defined as "the science or art of construction, both in relation to use and artistic design." It refers not just to the "activity of making the materially requisite construction that answers certain needs, but rather to the activity that raises this construction to an art form." It is concerned with the modeling of material to bring the material into presence: from the physical into the meta-physical world.
http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/78804
Situate them in such a way that useful space for life may form itself amidst them.
Kazimar Malevich 1924
Zaha Hadid on Malevich • BBC CH/4
Template and Form 2010.The Yard,Winchester.
Modern information theory claims that both the clay and the mould are engaged with matter and form. The clay is in a metastable state that possesses potential energy, unevenly distributed, but capable of effecting a metamorphosis. This quality of the clay is the source of its form. The mould places a limit on the expanding form of the molecular organisation of the clay as it fills the mould. The mould does not form the clay passively, but communicates a resonating action throughout the clay that alters the clay's molecular organisation.