Material absorbed in its own thoughts :
Sunday, 22 September 2024
Derrida, Memoirs of the Blind 1: The Trait--Singularity and Universality
Wednesday, 18 September 2024
Inside Phenomena : Innerness and Interior : Material Matters
Saturday, 14 September 2024
Conceptualizing the impalpable fabric of reality.
Outpost 180624
The cell of myself fills with wonder.
The white-washed wall of my secret.
Pierre Jean Jouve, Les Noces.
Bachelard comments, once we have been touched by the grace of super-imagination, we feel in the presence of the simpler images through which the exterior world deposits virtual elements of highly-coloured space in the heart of our being. The image with which Pierre Jean Jouve constitutes his secret being is one of these. He places it in his most intimate cell.
An abode of intimate space, it is Blanchot's inner room.
Here everything is simpler, more radically simple.
The room in which the poet pursues such a dream as this is probably not 'white-washed.' But this room in which he is writing is so quiet, that it really deserves its name, which is, the 'solitary room! It is inhabited thanks to the image, just as one inhabits an image which is 'in the imagination.'
Here the poet inhabits the cellular image. This image does not transpose a reality. It would be ridiculous, in fact, to ask the dreamer its dimensions. It does not lend itself to geometrical intuition, but is a solid framework for secret being. And secret being feels that it is guarded more by the whiteness of the lime-wash than by the strong walls.
The cell of the secret is white. A single value suffices to coordinate any number of dreams. And it is always like that, the poetic image is under the domination of a heightened quality. The whiteness of the walls, alone, protects the dreamer's cell. It is stronger than all geometry. It is a part of the cell of intimacy.
The Dialectics of Outside and Inside.
Gaston Bachelard.
The Poetics of Space demonstrates Gaston Bachelard's ability to bridge scientific logic with poetic analysis. As a phenomenological reading of the poetic image, it probes the geometrical divide between inside and outside through an analysis of the imagination of matter. It resists simplification, engaging with both physical and psychological body-space relations, and describes an exchange between interior and exterior in which the latter might be 'an old intimacy'. The dialectical condition of 'interior immensity' and the 'immeasurable outside', attests to the spatiality of being as a reflexive inquiry on interiority, what Bachelard calls intimate geometry grounded in imagination.
INTIMUS
Interior Design Reader.
Unlearning Conceptual Frameworks/The Inconceivable.
Dante, like any traveller who knows that the first step, that of abandoning the familiar paths is the most difficult.
White Holes
Inside The Horizon
Carlo Rovell. 2023
Every place in the universe has its own time, different places can send each other signals, like the 'hiss' sent to us from the black hole at the centre of our galaxy. But time passes at unequal rates in different places, and no single one of these times is 'truer' than any other.
There is no universal time, rather there is 'temporality' which is the network formed by many local times and the possibility of exchanging signals.
The Distortion of Time.
Bringing into doubt something that seemed self-evident to us.
Einstein, General Relativity.
Rovelli asks, how did an idea as bizarre as the relativity of time come to be devised and accepted?
In order to digest new ideas there lies a difficulty, not so much with the new concept, as it does with becoming liberated from old ones that seem so obviously to be true. To bring them into doubt seems inconceivable. We are always convinced that our natural intuitions are self-evidently right, and it is this that prevents us from learning more. The difficulty lies not in learning, but in unlearning.
Conceptualizing the impalpable fabric of reality.
Practices that are all about the continual reorganization of our conceptual space, of what we call meaning.
Art/Science/Philosophy, all have within them the capacity to change the organization of our thoughts , that allows us to leap forward. To produce singularities by re-conceptualizing reality. Our conceptual structures are neither the definitive ones, nor the only one possible, rather they are the ones that evolution has led us to cobble together in order to negotiate our daily needs, and often they do not work beyond that.
Making clay+ceramics, taking liberties, playing with and through a creative analogical reasoning.
Situated Practices/Theoretical Objects that develop a conceptual structure through analogy and recombination.
The Memory Police.
Yoko Ogawa. 1994
English translation, Steven Snyder. 2019
I sometimes wonder what was disappeared first, among all the things that have vanished from the island.
In those days, everyone could smell perfume. Everyone knew how wonderful it was. But no more. It's not sold anywhere, and no one wants it. It was disappeared the autumn of the year that your father and I were married. We gathered on the banks of the river with our perfume. Then we opened the bottles and poured out their contents, watching the perfume dissolve in the water like some worthless liquid. Some girls held the bottles up to their noses one last time-but the ability to smell the perfume had already faded, along with all memory of what it had meant. The river reeked for two or three days afterward, and some fish died. But no one seemed to notice. You see, the very idea of 'perfume' had disappeared from their heads.
It doesn't matter, she said. To you, this is no more than a few drops of water. But it can't be helped. It's all but impossible to recall the things we've lost on the island once they're gone.
It seems strange that you can still create something totally new like this-just from words-on an island where everything else is disappearing, he said, brushing a bit of dirt from one of the pages as though he were caressing something precious. I realized then that we were thinking the same thing. And what will happen if words disappear? I whispered to myself, afraid that if I said it too loudly, it might come true.
Friday, 13 September 2024
Creative Ecologies/Drawing Concepts : Clay/Fire/Space-Situatedness.
Clay/Fire/Space-Situatedness.
An Exploratory Ceramic Based Inquiry.
Propositional Drawing/Speculative Architecture.
Drawing Inscriptions : Situatedness in Ceramics
Notes Towards a Conditional Art.
Robert Irwin.
Shallow - Space Constructions
Veils
Structural Cuts : Skyspaces
Skyspaces : Autonomous Structures
Site Specifity
Dark Spaces
Autonomous Structures : Models
Perceptual Cells
James Turrell
Fundacon 'la Caixa' 1993.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/
The House is all about the poetry of shelter and siege from the elements and cosmos.
Gaston Bachelard.
Volume And Space.
Alberto Giacometti's sculpture, 'Man Pointing,' is an important statement in Western art for many reasons, not the least of which is what it says about volume and space. The elongated and spindly form gestures vaguely in the vastness of the space surrounding it. The gesture seems more about the space opened up by it and around it than it does about the physical. There is power in space more palpable than substance. This also is the conceptual heart of the Japanese garden.
Scott Meyer.
With Fire.
Richard Hirsch.
A Life Between Chance And Design.
Scott Meyer.
The Psychoanalysis Of Fire.
Gaston Bachelard.
Gaston Bachelard was intrigued by the process of imagination, the way in which the pensive mind brings to any given reality a multiple perspective. About many substances such as earth, air, water, and fire, he contended, we harbour subconscious convictions which modern science may disprove in fact but cannot seem to eradicate from artistic reverie.
Northrop Frye. 1964.
Against Hylomorphism.
Gilbert Simondon. 1964-89-2005.
Individuation, the generation of things, should be understood as a process of ontogenesis in which form is ever emergent, rather than given in advance.
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.
Concepts rendered into material relations.
Making new aesthetic utilities, materialities for thinking about the world.
Making is central to our legacy as a society, materially, economically, ecologically and socially.
A modern version of hylomorphism is enacted by a culture that furnishes the forms and nature the material. In the superimposition of one upon the other, human beings create the material culture with which, to an ever increasing extent, they surround themselves.
Tim Ingold.
Frames, Handles and Landscapes.
Georg Simmel and the Aesthetic Ecology of Things. 2016
Eduardo de la Fuente.
The tool/the thinking hand, has grown to be a part of the hand, using a tool is both a practical and aesthetic action involving the artful manipulation of material by hand.
Juhani Pallasmaa.
Affordances of Things.
Affordances provide strong clues to the operation of things. A psychology of causality is at work as we use everyday things.
Donald Norman. 2002.
Ecological Approaches to Aesthetics.
Aesthetic Patterning/Matters in Everyday Life.
Organism-Person-Environment
Ecological, interested in the organism-environment relationship.
An aesthetic ecology, each thing is a mere transitional point for continuously flowing energies and materials, comprehensible only from what has preceded it, significant only as an element of the entire natural process.
Theory/Culture/Society, Simmel 1994.
Matter and materials are lively and require attention.
Materials continue to thwart us in unpredictable ways.
Jane Bennett.
Aleatory, by chance, lots of the 'acts' of nonhuman agents are aleatory exactly because they are not directed by any intension.
In And Out Of Material. 2007.
Tony Cragg.
All our senses scan the space in front of us; the future, in both a literal and metaphorical sense, lies before us.
Tony Cragg, 1998.
Cutting Things Up.
Material In Space.
Scale.
Impulses through Drawing.
Working Things.
Generation/Generative/Material.
I think mass and energy need to be generated, any effective change has to be generated. It's to do with a positive directed initiative to change things.
“Generative” for me, in terms of my work, is the fact that within my own work, within any given period the work generates itself and there is a self-generating characteristic. The work I'm making today is only possible because of the previous work of three or four months ago and that was only possible because of the work of nine or twelve months ago.
Even if it's not a linear thing, things are generating. There is a sort of self-propagating, self-generative energy that is inherent in the material, I think. And even in the term “generative”, from “genus”, is the idea of making a family group of things, whether making an associative group of things or creating a population, a species of things which “relativise” generation.
Tony Cragg.
The material is just part of the vocabulary of meaning.
Cragg wanted to give the materials 'more meaning, mythology and poetry' He used the skills available to him at the EKWC residency to create ambiguities and tensions, to suggest past and present, to complicate rather than to describe.
European Ceramic Work Centre, Netherlands. 1990, 1992.
With the return of Cragg to studio based work in the early 1990s, when he was experimenting with clay; ideas around humanness, archaeology, and ritual were being explored within different areas of the fine arts. In addition, studio ceramics were frequently using the vessel as an initiating point to develop new forms and sculptural ideas.
Laibe, with its rich possibilities of interpretation that incorporates the past in the present and the universal aspects of human survival within the ceramic vessel form, lies at the heart of these complex and overlapping areas of practice.
Imogen Racz. 2009.
The Ceramics Reader. 2017.
Andrew Livingstone.
Kevin Petrie.
Ceramics : Materiality and Metaphor.
Why are Ceramics Important?
The Existential Base, Philip Rawson.
Containers of Life: Pottery and Social Relations, Silvia Forni.
Ceramics and Metaphor.
Analogy and Metaphor in Ceramic Art, Philip Rawson.
Sculptural Vessels, Tony Cragg's Laibe and the Metaphors of Clay, Imogen Racz.
Ceramics in Contexts.
Historical Precedents.
Studio Ceramics.
Sculptural Ceramics.
Ceramics and Installation.
Theoretical Perspectives.
Conceptual and Post Studio Practice.
Contemporary Clay, Clare Twomey.
Extending Vocabularies: Distorting the Ceramic Familiar
Clay and the Performative 'Other', Andrew Livingstone.
Gender, Sexuality and Ceramics.
Identity and Ceramics.
Image.
Figuration and the Body.
Ceramics in Education.
Ceramics, Industry and New Technologies.
Museum, Site and Display.
Re-defining Ceramics through Exhibitionary Practice (1970-2009), Laura Breen.
Wednesday, 11 September 2024
Studio Works : In art we conceive and combine new forms that enrich our lives.
Outpost 281123
Studio Works.
Human beings are unique in retaining the capacity for play.
In art we conceive and combine new forms that enrich our lives.
To live more intensely than usual, inhabiting the whole of our humanity.
Mythology is an art form that points beyond history to what is timeless in human existence, and as such it (myth) helps us to get beyond the chaotic flux of random events, and perhaps allows a glimpse at the core of reality.
A Short History of Myth.
Karen Armstrong.
The Haptic Sense of Making.
Doing and feeling at the same time.
The physical/spiritual/corporeal sense of being/becoming.
The Spatial Dimension.
Defining Self/Organizing Experience.
The human body its feelings at the centre of the architectural form.
Making Atmospheres/Environments.
A Place Set Apart.
Mark Rothko.
WORK, volumes 1-6.
Don't Forget The Lamb.
Lamina.
Brian Clarke.
NOT FOR RESALE.
BOOKS FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY.
Sowing the seeds of knowledge.
Dawson Books.
Body, Memory, and Architecture.
In the hands of a brilliant craftsman like Mies van der Rohe, a spatiality of alienation may still provide its rewards through the elegance of material and construction. But the more extreme applications of Cartesian space present an insidious threat to our identity as individuals. The other extreme to alienation of the body is over-manipulation of the body. Our bodies are circuited out of existence as our world is realized in electonically stimulated sensation.
To help people inhabit the world, we feel, the basic act is not organizing but caring; the architect's client is not undifferentiated society but caring individuals. In the rhetoric of the past decades, the difficult act of dwelling , based on the act of caring, is elitist. It requires effort, and that sets some apart from others.
The architects' proper role, it seems to us, is an accepting and absorbing one, to encourage others to make the effort and to develop the physical surrounds that make dwelling possible and attractive. Curiously, the wholesale inhuman 'social' manipulation of urban form by twentieth-century architectural and planning offices has put a disproportionate emphasis on originality, on the unique.
Rather, we believe, the design of the environment is a choreography of the familiar and the surprising, in which the familiar has the central role, and a major function of the surprising is to render the familiar afresh.
Kent C. Bloomer, Charles W. Moore. 1977
Alternative Construction.
Contemporary Natural Building Methods.
Prototyping For Architects.
Sensing Spaces.
Marking The Line.
Ceramics and Architecture.
Sunday, 8 September 2024
Working Out of the Archive : Praesentia/In the Light of the Day.
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, 5 September 2024
Outpost 290824
Stranger Things.
The causal connectivity between lifeforms.
Grass is hard and lumpy and damp and full of dreadful black insects.
Oscar Wilde.
Painting Out Anthropocentrism.
The Abjection of Representation.
Veering towards the charismatic causality of artworks.
Matters of Concern.
The Humanities.
The Performativity of Aesthetics and Ethics.
Doesn't appreciating art have to do with allowing things to be ambiguous, you have no idea what this artwork will 'say' to you next. Art has an effect on me, unbidden to a large extent, I didn't ask for it. I am experiencing unknown effects on me, coming from something that I am caught up with in such a way that I can't tell who started it. Am I just imposing my concepts of beauty on to any old thing or is this thing totally overpowering me? My whole sense of what 'affect' means (feels like) has been transformed by this artwork.
Timothy Morton.
Shaping Our Perceptions.
How We Behave-Respond-Act.
Structural Attitudes.
Aesthetics-Ethics.
Shaping-Instances-Nowness.
Interconnected Indifferences.
Ambiguity arises/oscillating between familiar and strange.
Elliptical-Durations-Causalities.
Builders Marker/White Gesso/Hydrated Lime.
The Leaking Vessel/Body.
Dwelling through drawing/painting with matter in transition.
Marking discursive pathways, boundary conditions, formative structures.
Outline/Trace/Contour.
Line/Vector/Erasures/Points of Contact.
Liminality/Corporeal/Watery.
Organism-Person-Environment
A one room structure built of common or rustic materials.
A sophisticated container to carry an innocent message.
Open, Robert Motherwell.
The thematic conditions, continuities, and techniques that inform the artist's working methods.
Disturbances/Abject Objects/Reclaimations.
Deconstructing Beauty/Assembling Wonder.
Tuesday, 20 August 2024
Working Towards a Secular Retreat in the Landscape
Working Towards a Secular Retreat in the Landscape.
The task of architecture is to maintain the differentiation and hierarchical and qualitative articulation of existential space. Instead of participating in the process of further speeding up the experience of the world, architecture has to slow down experience, halt time, and defend the natural slowness and diversity of experience, architecture must defend us against excessive exposure, noise and communication. Finally, the task of architecture is to maintain and defend silence.
Juhani Pallasmaa : The Thinking Hand.
Existential and Embodied Wisdom in Architecture. 2009
This exploratory project centers around the heritage site of Waverley Abbey. This site has ruins from its ecclesiastical architecture that could be utilized in the sensory aspects of an architectural experience. The site offers up the possibility of constructing and choreographing enclosures and interiors by directly working with its unique sensitivities of place, mass, light, materials and surfaces. This project sets up real potentials to explore the possibility of crafting interior spaces that can host a rich layering of place perceptions. Currently my research has explored a number of themes and formal structures that might engender these concerns through my professional engagements with contemporary art practices and experience in the construction industry.
Peter Zumthor, Hortus Conclusus, Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 Adam Sharr, Heidegger for Architects 2007
Leon van Schaik, Spatial Intelligence 2008
Henry Plummer, The Architecture of Natural Light 2009
Architecture is not made with the brain. The labour of Alison and Peter Smithson.
Architectural Association 2005.
Smithson’s on modernity, not as a goal but as an established reality that needs to be interpreted.
Articulation of the volumes based on rigorous rules that derive from the ordering capacity of the necessities of daily life.
Holistic Practices.
The way person and work fit together so seamlessly.
Embedding building within a specific contemporary cultural context. (Krucker,2005:85)
Transitions between spaces.
‘Building relationships to relate to what already exists.’ Herzog and de Meuron The Parallel of Art and Life
Aesthetics about Perception Poetics about Production
‘The approach leads from the static object of the mere picture to the dynamic process of imagining. ’(Schregenberger,2005:82)
‘As found is a small affair, it is about being careful.’ (attentive awareness (anthropological) to people and place) Peter Smithson 2001
‘The ‘as found’ attitude is anti-utopian; its form is specific, raw and immediate. It calls the will to question. It is a technique of reaction and a concern for that which exists.’ (Schregenberger,2005:81)
Complex Ordinariness Bruno Krucker
Urban Structuring.
Importance of urban planning, specific responses to the surroundings generated different shapes. Testing out spatial bound volumes and aligning them with the site or urban fabric/passages of use and existing features.
The Everyday.
The necessities of daily life (the repetition of basic sequences) giving shape and layout to the architecture.
Heavy Prefabrication. Whole wall sections used to a homogeneous expression that emphasises their tactile qualities.
To systematise transitions of both components and internal spatial orderings. The sizes of elements are determined by the inner spatial ordering in an almost organic, non-schematic way.’
We developed elements that embrace the entire thickness of the wall.’ (Krucker,2005:85)
The search for directness while avoiding too much design, but still ensuring that our buildings look right in their surroundings.
Cultural Background.
Fitting in with the ordinariness of the environment, an ordinariness that only reveals its strength over time.
Embedding building within a specific contemporary cultural context. (Krucker,2005:85)
The anonymous settings of settlements and agglomerations create documents/cinematic presences of familiarity within these architectural contexts. It is important to go beyond any superficial fascination with the ‘periphery’.
Structural Thinking. Anti Object: Kengo Kuma.
Identity out of structure/layers of latticed structure.
Character-forming ability of structures, through the transitions of interior to exterior spaces. ‘Our approach was to act decisively at an urban and a spatial level and to create precise alignments that would strengthen existing elements. Within the structure, it becomes possible to give specific places an individual identity and to create an awareness of the relation between repetition and difference. Seen in this way , the facades are less a surface around a volume, and more the outer edges of the structure itselfi importantly the structuring becomes independent of the programme, which can change over time). ’ (Krucker,2005:87)
The power of a building originates from its structuring (a character of a building that is not wholly subservient to its programme).
Neutrality and Character.
‘This kind of structural thinking supports the search for a more anonymous everyday architecture that can nevertheless develop a character of its own.
The prefabricated parts generate complex volumetric forms that remain only partly visible after assembly. The effect is similar to that of Japanese timber construction, in which the simplicity and clarity of appearance belie the complexity of the joining techniques involved.’ (Krucker,2005:89)
‘The Smithson’s embraced an architecture that was not purely driven by formal intensions but by questions regarding content. This is an architecture that results from an attitude of openness towards the world (of worlds) and an acute awareness of the impact of the architect’s actions. Such an architecture insists on addressing the nature of real conditions and how they fit into the fabric of a larger context.’ (Krucker,2005:90)
Lessons Learnt from Alison and Peter Smithson Jonathan Sergison and Stephen Bates.
‘I remember finding the work awkward, even ugly in its removal from architectural conventions.’
Research Contexts/Materials
The Shift/Italian Thoughts, both became pivotal in the understanding of the intensions behind their work.
What does it mean to be an English architect? The lessons presented as six themes.
Strategy and Detail, as a design concept and method.
A manual for negotiating our way through the development of a project.
‘All our projects begin with an interpretation of the specifics of the programme and a response to the place we are adding to, either as a series of sketches or a model exploring a building form. A dialogue then begins about the ‘feeling’ of the project, its material presence and its language of construction; this provides a framework in which to take decisions and a structure that can be referred to.’(Sergison,2005:92) Trying it out, testing its placement in place, its on-site feelings.
A detailing of open brick perpends (a breathing building envelope) that is overlaid on all three elevations, giving a quiet expression to the building’s tectonics.
Conglomerate Ordering, as an overall interconnected building solution.
‘A bold simple form adjusted by the forces of the site, thereby containing an equivalence, an overall tonality through the concrete frame as a structural solution and the block infill and their aluminium dressings. The building form and plan arrangement were adjusted according to the particularities of the site and to rhyme with the geometries of the neighbouring industrial buildings.’ (Sergison,2005:94)
Ways, (a spine providing a variety of spatial experiences coupled with the means by which circulation is distributed) sometimes Ways are employed in a manner that is latent and discreet; in other instances they are the most public part of a project.
‘The concept of Ways as a means of organizing circulation and supporting activity.’ (Sergison,2005:94)
A simple organizing circulation element that can be read, at one level, as a street or lane running the length of the plan, linking the apartments. This space is given a strong material intensity, entirely timber-clad on floor, walls and soffit. At selected moments views of the city are framed or the sky is revealed.
Janus Face, origins in Italian Thoughts, teaches us to understand how mediation is possible between inside and outside, or between one side of a building and another; as all faces are equally engaged with what lies before them.
By focusing attention on the enclosing envelope and how the building should engage with the conditions around it.
The opposing forces of a site and its relationships to the different faces of the building can become multifaceted, through scale, the choice of material or even the layering of its construction; a discreet link is sought which connects rather than confronts.
‘The Solar Pavilion, is both a lookout over the distant landscape on the north facade, sitting on top of the existing cottage wall, and a garden pavilion mediating between two types of controlled landscape. It aims to provide a minimal enclosure that allows as immediate a relationship between interior and exterior as possible.’
(Sergison,2005:97)
Ground Notations, the need to find an existing physical structure, see ‘Shifting the Track’ (Smithson.)
‘The Smithsons’ search for a strong existing element that could be added to and adjusted, if necessary, ensures that a project is grounded in its place. Successful ground notations operate at varying scales, ranging from large pieces of infrastructure (roadways, etc) to natural, seasonal landscape infrastructure (trees and meadows). Once absorbed into an existing situation, new ground notations begin to refocus a place and act as the basis for subsequent actions’ (Sergison,2005:97)
Drawing on an existing topographic ground notation (earth-bunds) matrices of bundways that help irrigate the marshlands and define land ownership.
‘New topographical features containing the infrastructure necessary for development, with roads on top and supply conduits inside them. Public buildings were located on top of swollen bunds, for visibility and orientation, while the spaces in between bunds became serviced fields for new settlement.’ (Sergison,2005:98)
Could it be that where a human settlement seems structure less, without purpose, we invent and build ‘ground-notations’ to offer an analogous power to that offered by strong natural landforms?
‘As Found, is a small affair: it is about being careful, the as found (is) where the art is in the picking up, turning over and putting with.’ (Smithson.)
‘The essence of ‘as found’ as a concept lies in accepting the value of the everyday. Any aspect of the built environment can be interpreted and employed as a trigger for architectural propositions. To consider ways in which the ‘ordinary’ can be harnessed through reinterpretation.’ (Sergison,2005:98)
From One Place to Another : Contained Inner Spaces/Systems.
Thus we cover the universe with drawings we have lived. These need only to be tonalized on the mode of our inner space.
Gaston Bachelard.
The Poetics of Space.
Art is energy.
Graham Gussin.
https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/art-now-graham-gussin
From One Place to Another.
From Another System.
Contained Spaces/Systems.
It's true, I know, that there are more gaps in the island than there used to be. When I was a child, the whole place seemed ... how can I put this? ...a lot fuller, a lot more real. But as things got thinner, more full of holes, our hearts got thinner too, diluted somehow. I suppose that kept things in balance. And even when that balance begins to collapse, something remains. Which is why you shouldn't worry.
Yoko Ogawa.
The Memory Police.
Things oriented in time present themselves to us as irreversible phenomena.
Drawing, traces that create the intermediate spaces of perception.
Visual traces of both the macroscopic and microscopic phenomena/memory/of matter.
Art is all about energy (free energy from one system/person to another)
Durational/Immediate Matters of Concern/Media.
Things/Correspondences in their propositional state of becoming.
Developing the creative liberty with a conceptual structure. This development grows through analogy and recombination. Making an analogy involves taking an aspect of a concept and re-using it in another context, preserving something of its original meaning, while letting something else go. In such a way that the resultant combination produces new and effective meaning.
Carlo Rovelli.
Drawing as an analogically informing process.
Architectural/Conceptual Frameworks.
Making Immediate Spatial Relations/Situatedness.
What Remains?
Why Does It Remain?
The intermediate/immediacy space of drawing as the traces of disequilibrium.
The formation of every trace is nothing other than an intermediate step towards equilibrium.
If the present has traces of the past it is solely due to the disequilibrium of that past. It is for this reason that we remember the past not the future. Because of the disequilibrium in the past, we know the past, because there are traces of it in the present, in our memories for example. To say that the past is determined is to say no more that we have traces of it. It is not a direction intrinsic to time that makes the past knowable, determined.
What we call the past is how things were arranged at one point in time.
It is the disequilibrium of the past, only that, that gives rise to traces.
A meteorite that falls on the moon carries free energy with it, its crater is the trace that it leaves until the incessant unravelling of things erases it. In this intermediate phase, the crater is a trace of the impact/event, a memory of it. Only traces exist in this intermediate period.
The same goes for a photograph, for the memory in our brain, it exists thanks to the fact that free energy has arrived in a system, the camera film, our brain, from another system that was not in equilibrium with it, and the fact that it takes time for equilibrium to be re-established.
White Holes
Carlo Rovelli.
Notes
36. The low entropy of the past is the ultimate source of all the information contained in every trace or memory.
37. The distinction between causes and effects has no meaning in the microscopic description of phenomena. At the microscopic level of things there are regularities, physical laws, and probability and these notions do not distinguish between past and future. The distinction between past and future is a property of history of the universe from the variables that we call macroscopic, it is only for this reason that we can speak about causes.
Gaston Bachelard never developed a metaphysics capable of unifying his reflections on science and poetry.
Much that our powers here cannot sustain is permitted there.
We fly to the other side of space and of time.
The equations of quantum gravity describe a world more complex than a simple spatiotemporal continuum.




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