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<u>Pre-notes</u>
''NOTE: I reference Tom Sachs here alot, this was written before the Curbed article which documented that his studio environment was very unhealthy.''


Remember title: text on (in) practice
=== '''Text On (in) Practice''' ===
<big>This text is a result of a practice I call wall writing (although, I’d like to come up with a better name). In this practice, large rolls of paper (2 meters wide) are measured out to just above my head, and then stuck onto the wall in my living space. On these scrolls of paper I practice a number of things:</big>


(these notes (so far) were written whilst I was ill, and stayed ay home for a whole day - probably important to note this. However what preceded this was 4 weeks of intense work/play).
''<big>free writing, jotting down ideas on the go, drawing images from current work/future work, writing in shapes/word art, long form essayistic writing, fears/ worries, lyrics, recurring questions, cataloging feedback and drawing shapes of narratives etc.</big>''


Perhaps I want to talk about a geological, multiplicity in our approach to narrative.
<big>All of these activities come together to form a kind of map on the wall.</big>
What do interactions brings?
The writings on the wall are intuitive, and then immediately concrete (Rosella), but then perhaps it's more like suddenly seeing a town on a map. Given a blank piece of paper, and then you see the roads and put them in. Yes indeed it is 'concrete' to an extent. So is it really about mapping, rather then layering. How important is the place of words?


The history of oral storytelling (aural for those listening).
<big>Map making as a way of tracking the progression of thought, of eliciting connections, of moving whilst making, of making non-digital work, of forming images through word and discovering non-conventional narrative shapes. Fundamentally, this act stems from a desire-cum-frustration to reveal the circuitry/wiring between ideas I’ve seen. A process-practice with means to an end (a function in other words) but also a form of simple self expression in and of itself. The dual nature of this act is important. More on this later.</big>
The point being introduce, to loosen, to entice, to hold, to open, to create a space, to wonder why, to be in the presence of something that is alive, to play with hypnosis, to practice witchcraft.
I want to bring in a craft practice, a physical practice, I would like to play with the idea of function through a physical craft. Why should I be binary about the physical/digital.


Though you want to resist a binary, you have to bring a standard of logic to the practice. Working to code.
<big>I am currently only writing in black ink on white paper. I use specific pens which have a soft felt tip, with an inky feel. I stand, squat or sit on the floor (being physically dynamic is important to my personal experience and it of course has an effect on the output). I have not cut the paper yet, but I do intend for there to be an end to this wall writing. Then I will begin another. I would like to create a rolling paper machine from hand (please see Appendix), inspired by the artist Van Neistat, he replied to an email I sent him and told me how to make it.</big>


So, what do you have? I have writing, narrative, image, sound, animation, screens, voice performers (or actors), performance, written text, subtitling, credits, script.  
<big>I am editing but showing the edits, making them visible (so far…). Whenever I begin chastising myself on the page ''(example? Or see Appendix?)'' I will edit (leaving the edit visible) to suggest a more open, accepting approach*. This is not just for kindness sake (although there is nothing wrong with kindness (kin-ness, Harraway)), but the chastising reveals other people's standards (gates and borders) I have ingested. Resisting those standards is very significant, as a definition of 'artist' I have come to adopt is a set of your own internal standards of excellence (Tom Sachs).</big>


What do I want to explore having or play with? Some physically built element, something 'live', something 'reactive', multiple screens, promenade (i.e. movement of the audience), music, drawing (ref. gothic/medieval), cartography, sets, theatre approaches, duration, performer on screen, smell, smoke, fog, steam, vibration.
<big><nowiki>*</nowiki>Interestingly, my course mate Yalou, suggested that the polishing of a document perhaps feels linear (maybe a better word is final? A faux finality?).</big>


Work on my weaknesses: consistency, archiving
<big>So, what are ‘your own internal standards of excellence’? These are protocols to help me function as an artist, these are to be ‘fostered’ (Sachs) through the practice. What are the details you attend to? What is that, that moves you in an image? What is your aesthetic standard? What does engagement mean? And…these questions are not a definitive list, they are some seedlings, first stitches, lily pads to leap from (it’s about movement/flux).</big>


The work I make (in the end) is not intellectually driven, although thinking deeply, to engage deeply is a part of the practice. In the end, its a hidden passage to the work. So this can be quite daunting, although I think it's always been that way. That said, I don't have to disinclude it - perhaps not centre it.
<big>A standard I have been exploring through the mapping (and more), is developing a specific approach to passage of time (sculpting of time) in my work. The struggle here has always been this: stories, and I mean ‘once upon a time there was a dog’ kind of stories, Chekov, Saunders, Bilge-Ceylan etc. You know the ones with the beautiful simple (simplicity, simplicity, simplicity - Einstein or maybe (really probably) his wife) structure. The ones that follow a character as they trudge or squeel or meander along a roman road of thought and action; have acted as a great bird, with great soft wings, to lay down upon and now (see!) life is quite beautiful. In other words they have been some of my most vital aids. And yet, there is a natural rebellion I hold against this synthetic/taxidermic relationship to the passage of time, it’s fundamentally retrospective. One brick does not have to lead to the next (remember when it was just sand? Remember it’ll become sand once again). There is also a political and philosophical resistance - ‘fuck linear time, it’s poison’ said the artist Tooth just last week. But, boy does it feel good to travel In The Cart* of Father Time.  </big>


I've put objects on the paper, a photograph, a token.
<big><nowiki>*</nowiki>"'''In the Cart'''" (Russian: На подводе, romanized: ''Na podvode'') is an 1897 short story by Anton Chekhov, also translated as "'''The Schoolmistress'''".</big>


“The truth is like a gnarled tree, made up of many layers that are twisted all around each other. Some layers holding others inside them, and sometimes being held. The truth is something that can be expressed in many tales, for it is like that garden The Sages entered in which each of them saw something else.” Book of Jacobs
<big>With this in mind, and slightly connected is another idea. I am trying to remove how central the finished work is to my practice, these works are destinations where I may arrive at, I circle, I return to but they are held by and do not exist without the roads that led me there, and the roads that do not. And this map making - it helps to stop thinking in a 'I need to make a thing' head space. More on this later.</big>


AND, WHAT ON CHARACTER? (ERGO YENTE)
<big>I will write a list of my currently active influences:</big>
“This is the fulfilment of a process begun somewhere in Padolia. One old winter, when her great tempestuous love, the fruit of which is Samuel, took its unjustly short place - a duration of the blink of an eye amongst all the events on this flat stage. Yet, Yente sees this order, this accord. Yente, whose body is slowly turning into crystal on Chlulyounta cave. The entrance to it is now almost competley over grown with black lilac, their umbles filled with lush, ripe berries already fallen to the ground…." Book of Jacob


TO THE STUDIO
[[File:Inspirations.pdf|900x900px]]


"The *lab is a place that allows us to make interesting mistakes as fast as possible." Bruno Latour
<big>I am pulled along by story and "beauty" and function*. Function, this is an important concept in my practice - a relatively new one. I have begun to understand and perhaps even respect the part of myself that likes to make and study systems, to be pulled into understanding how something functions - what the processes are, under the hood.</big>
<nowiki>*</nowiki>for sake of being specific and consistent, let us swap lab for studio.


<big><nowiki>*</nowiki>One perspective on the wall writings, is perhaps I am attempting to make my thought behaviour function for me as an artist (Yalou and Aitana).</big>


<u>Notes from Y and A</u>
<big>With all this said. I also deeply respect mystery (the hidden passage to the work) and to not look at the finger pointing to the moon, but the moon itself (Buddhist). It's a balance of creating processes and understanding how my practice functions whilst also remembering that not everything is understood or reduced down to functions, that there is always a slither of the infinite that surrounds a work which moves me. Yet, although you want to resist a binary, you have to bring a standard of logic to the practice. Working to code (Sachs).</big>


Rich, use of precise vocabulary. If you are a native speaker, you may be floral - but the maker isn't
<big>It is important to note that my desire to create protocols and standards for myself as an artist came from a commitment to the profession of being an artist. This practice is something which is of course important to me on a personal level, 'the basement that allows the rest of my life to function' (Anne Berest) but also this is what I will do for my work and there is something very serious about this. I have to find a way to make it stable, something that I can come to every day. I need some kind of map then.</big>


Conversation with herself…


Somehow this text is the result of the wall writing.
----


I have some doubts, whether …forming images through word - how does it look? How do we define it? Through images…we need the mental image. Using more visuals in the text, and maybe more definition? '''Being more precise with how these images and words look.'''
==== <big>Influences Written as List</big> ====
*<big>Tom Sachs (for his emphasis on processes, specifically 10 bullets and studio design).</big>
*<big>Grayson Perry (the way he uses mapping and cartography in his illustration specifically thinking of one I saw in a gallery in Eastbourne, its called Map of Nowhere).</big>
*<big>Olga Tokarczuk (her writing from above, use of maps and appendixes in her novels. Narrative structure - non linear, almost geological, perhaps more about layering and multiplicity than anything else. I have just finished The Books of Jacob. Her ideas around truth (“The truth is like a gnarled tree, made up of many layers that are twisted all around each other. Some layers holding others inside them, and sometimes being held. The truth is something that can be expressed in many tales, for it is like that garden The Sages entered in which each of them saw something else.”).</big>
*<big>Pina Bausch (for movement, for composition of image).</big>
*<big>Sayaka Murata (for their way of self expressing and unapologetic personal standards of absurdity, mainly in her interviews).</big>
*<big>Iain Mcgilchrist (their insistence on mystery and their thoroughness/depth of thought).</big>
*<big>Karl Diesseroth (for his weaving analogy, and his web-like perspective on his experience as a neuroscientist and psychiatrist).</big>
*<big>Tarkovsky (non-linear but not Freudian or Associative, he creates a very specific time space *ref cinema cartography).</big>
*<big>Medieval word art, Cihad has also shown me some examples from historical Arabic word art.</big>
*<big>George Saunders, particularly his book on writing: A Swim in The Pond In the Rain. What he has to say about narrative, and also the voice he uses to write about it.</big>
*<big>Kendrick Lamar's storytelling, specifically in a track called FEAR. It is a story which takes place across generations, with the character of Fear being the link between each generation.</big>
*<big>Andre 3000’s verse on Blonde (Solo (Reprise)), the stream of consciousness, flipping back and along time).</big>
*<big>In general storytelling in music, most present in hip-hop and folk music has always been a key influence - if I start writing musicians I will never stop, I mean it.</big>
*<big>Mamoru Oshii the way they deal with moments in their films.</big>
*<big>Julie Mehretu, for the way they work with lines and general visual approach, see her album cover for Pharaoh Sanders and Floating Points, as well as Congress and her show title 'A UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF EVERYTHING AND NOTHING’.</big>


Forming images through words - it would be great to see this. '''Present this.'''
==== <big>Bibliogrpahy</big> ====
<big>Barthes, R. (2020) ''Camera lucida''. London: Vintage Publishing.</big>


The maker wants to reach for non-linear telling, this could mean it becomes chaotic and hard to follow. How is the maker going to present this? '''How can one create, and oceanic or geological experience of narrative - in that nature is at once complex and simple.'''
<big>Bausch, P. (2019) ''DEAD CAN DANCE''. Available at: <nowiki>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAdJ3XbUoK8</nowiki>.</big>


‘This act stems from …’. I want to know more about the duality, and how do you imagine this END. What is the ‘process-practice’ what is this END. Do the wall writing when the maker finishes a project? '''Define what the end is, define your terms (process-practice etc.)'''
<big>Boyer, A. (2014) ''Questions for poets'', ''Mute''. Mute Publishing Limited. Available at: <nowiki>https://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/questions-poets</nowiki></big>


Is the process a piece, is it for the audience or the maker? '''Is this for the audience?'''
<big>Deisseroth, K. (2021) ''Projections: A story of human emotions''. Manhattan: Random House Inc.</big>


Maybe she doesn’t feel a necessity to share this - but people want an outcome? Will there be an outcome?
<big>Ocean.F, Blake.J & André 3000 (2016) Solo (Reprise) [CD], Blonde. Austin, Texas: Jon Brion, Frank Ocean & MIKE DEAN.</big>


Will this paper, become something and presented by her? Or will it be up to the audience to make their ‘own way’.
<big>Fosse, J. (2019) ''The Other Name: Septology I-II'' .Translated by Damion Searls. London: Fitzcaraldo.</big>


It feels like this is very intimate.  
<big>Lamar.K (2017) ''FEAR.'' [MP3], ''DAMN.'' Sound City Studios, Los Angeles, California: Daniel Alan Maman.</big>


It’s engaged with the maker herself?
<big>Mamoru,O. ''Angel's Egg'' (1985) ''Angel's Eggs''. Studio Deen.</big>


Maybe she wants to define if she wants to share something?
<big>McGilchrist, I. (2021) The matter with things. Our brains, our delusions, and the unmaking of the world. London: Talisker.</big>


Is it about the piece or presenting this way of making?
<big>Mehretu, J. (2004) “Stadia II.”</big>


‘I stand, squat, sit’ - why is it so important? What about the physical, they want to know more. There is a performative aspect. Why do you feel the need? Physical space. '''What is important about the standing and squatting?'''
<big>Neistat, V. (2021) ''Why Comedians Are The Most Important Artists of Our Time''.</big>


Chastising. This is interesting to Aitana. The censorship - she thought about being a teenager and writing diaries. She wanted to hide it. It is interesting, to show the edits as a process. It looked like an acceptance or curiosity of the self censorship.  
<big>Perlroth, N. (2023) ''This is how they tell me the world ends: The cyberweapons arms race''. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Publishing.</big>


“Every step needs to be visible” (Yalou) or “Or the knowledge” (Aitana)
<big>Perry, G. (2008) “Map of Nowhere.”</big>


There seems like a visible standards, between internal and external standards.
<big>Sachs, T. and Furgason, J. (2005) ''Ten bullets''. N.Y.: Tom Sachs.</big>


The struggle between, liner non linear
<big>Saunders, G. (2022) ''A swim in a pond in the rain: In which Four Russians give a master class on writing, reading, and life''. London: Bloomsbury.</big>


There is no polishing on the page, and polishing feels linear (Yalou) '''Does polishing feel linear?'''
<big>Tokarczuk, O. (2021) ''Books of Jacob''. Translated by Jenifer Croft. London: Fitzcaraldo.</big>


It’s complex non-linear for the reader, and how do you still be kind to the reader? '''How to be kind to the reader?'''
<big>Tarkosky, ''Stalker'' [DVD] (1979). Russia: Mosfilm.</big>


Aitana keeps mentioning fight…
<big>Tzu, L. (1997) ''Tao Te Ching''. Edited by A. Waley. Hertfordshire: Wordsworth Classics.</big>


Is there a need to embrace linearty. There is something about loving linear stories. Having several linear stories, you can play with the linear - and appropriate what a linear story is. '''Is it really about multiplicity? Or some other term, we are working with geological, oceanic...'''


Maybe she needs to relax a little and embrace (Aitana) and accept the linearly a bit. '''How can you also embrace the linearity?'''
==== <u><big>Appendix</big></u> ====
 
[[File:Wall as of 15thFeb23.jpg|thumb|Wall Writing]]
Perhaps combing the linearity of multiple could be a way to work. Working with multiple linearities. '''Working with multiple linearitities?'''
[[File:WR 1.jpeg|thumb|Wall Writing 1]]
 
[[File:WR 3.jpeg|thumb|Wall Writing 4]]
Reference, Jacqueline Wilson.
[[File:WR 4.jpeg|thumb|Wall Writing 3]]
 
[[File:WR 2.jpeg|thumb|Wall Writing 2]]
Forming images through words. And images.
[[File:Scan MFP-529 2711 001.pdf|thumb|Paper Rolling Mechanism 3|left]]
 
[[File:Rolling paper 4.pdf|left|thumb|Paper Rolling Mechanism 4]]
‘Allows us to fall into it’ Yalou
[[File:Rolling paper 1.pdf|thumb|Paper Rolling Mechanism|left]]
 
[[File:Rolling paper 2.pdf|thumb|Paper Rolling Mechanism 2|left]]
By writing and reading through language, how can the language act the visual imagery. Only the sound and the words, your imagination creates images.  
 
Producing texts, through drawing. Every form of text, and visualizations are on the big paper. These different ways of text and visualizing might make in non-linear. All bundled in one. '''All bundled in one'''
 
What do you mean non-linear? Are there other concepts that the maker could use? Is she also talking about non-conventional, perhaps there are other words she can search for or see. '''Again, go deeper on the term.'''
 
Yalou is definitely interested in the references, and I would like to see them. Right now its a bit ungrabbable that part. '''More visualisation of the referneces.'''
 
Towards the end, after the reference. I am pulled along by story and beauty and function.  
 
The function allows me to think about wall writing. The maker seems to be interested in how things work and the use of the paper (i.e. the actions). '''How do things work? This is what the wall writing also seems to be, how do things work?'''
 
Aitana wonders if this something that the artist would be interested in sharing with someone or not at all.
 
Are there parts she could use for a more open practice. For her it doesn’t look very open. '''Is this an open practice?'''
 
Yalou asks whether it is not open because we haven’t seen, or because its new, or because the maker doesn’t want you to see. But then goes back to the machine? '''They want to see the machine, could I perhaps draw this?'''
 
 
<u>Talk at Rijks</u>
 
 
Stories tell stories, whose story is writing the legal documents?
 
We is slippery, in a good way.
 
Editing, a series of decisions on what you are writing.
 
"novels in voice" - who said this?

Latest revision as of 19:18, 5 July 2023

NOTE: I reference Tom Sachs here alot, this was written before the Curbed article which documented that his studio environment was very unhealthy.

Text On (in) Practice

This text is a result of a practice I call wall writing (although, I’d like to come up with a better name). In this practice, large rolls of paper (2 meters wide) are measured out to just above my head, and then stuck onto the wall in my living space. On these scrolls of paper I practice a number of things:

free writing, jotting down ideas on the go, drawing images from current work/future work, writing in shapes/word art, long form essayistic writing, fears/ worries, lyrics, recurring questions, cataloging feedback and drawing shapes of narratives etc.

All of these activities come together to form a kind of map on the wall.

Map making as a way of tracking the progression of thought, of eliciting connections, of moving whilst making, of making non-digital work, of forming images through word and discovering non-conventional narrative shapes. Fundamentally, this act stems from a desire-cum-frustration to reveal the circuitry/wiring between ideas I’ve seen. A process-practice with means to an end (a function in other words) but also a form of simple self expression in and of itself. The dual nature of this act is important. More on this later.

I am currently only writing in black ink on white paper. I use specific pens which have a soft felt tip, with an inky feel. I stand, squat or sit on the floor (being physically dynamic is important to my personal experience and it of course has an effect on the output). I have not cut the paper yet, but I do intend for there to be an end to this wall writing. Then I will begin another. I would like to create a rolling paper machine from hand (please see Appendix), inspired by the artist Van Neistat, he replied to an email I sent him and told me how to make it.

I am editing but showing the edits, making them visible (so far…). Whenever I begin chastising myself on the page (example? Or see Appendix?) I will edit (leaving the edit visible) to suggest a more open, accepting approach*. This is not just for kindness sake (although there is nothing wrong with kindness (kin-ness, Harraway)), but the chastising reveals other people's standards (gates and borders) I have ingested. Resisting those standards is very significant, as a definition of 'artist' I have come to adopt is a set of your own internal standards of excellence (Tom Sachs).

*Interestingly, my course mate Yalou, suggested that the polishing of a document perhaps feels linear (maybe a better word is final? A faux finality?).

So, what are ‘your own internal standards of excellence’? These are protocols to help me function as an artist, these are to be ‘fostered’ (Sachs) through the practice. What are the details you attend to? What is that, that moves you in an image? What is your aesthetic standard? What does engagement mean? And…these questions are not a definitive list, they are some seedlings, first stitches, lily pads to leap from (it’s about movement/flux).

A standard I have been exploring through the mapping (and more), is developing a specific approach to passage of time (sculpting of time) in my work. The struggle here has always been this: stories, and I mean ‘once upon a time there was a dog’ kind of stories, Chekov, Saunders, Bilge-Ceylan etc. You know the ones with the beautiful simple (simplicity, simplicity, simplicity - Einstein or maybe (really probably) his wife) structure. The ones that follow a character as they trudge or squeel or meander along a roman road of thought and action; have acted as a great bird, with great soft wings, to lay down upon and now (see!) life is quite beautiful. In other words they have been some of my most vital aids. And yet, there is a natural rebellion I hold against this synthetic/taxidermic relationship to the passage of time, it’s fundamentally retrospective. One brick does not have to lead to the next (remember when it was just sand? Remember it’ll become sand once again). There is also a political and philosophical resistance - ‘fuck linear time, it’s poison’ said the artist Tooth just last week. But, boy does it feel good to travel In The Cart* of Father Time.  

*"In the Cart" (Russian: На подводе, romanized: Na podvode) is an 1897 short story by Anton Chekhov, also translated as "The Schoolmistress".

With this in mind, and slightly connected is another idea. I am trying to remove how central the finished work is to my practice, these works are destinations where I may arrive at, I circle, I return to but they are held by and do not exist without the roads that led me there, and the roads that do not. And this map making - it helps to stop thinking in a 'I need to make a thing' head space. More on this later.

I will write a list of my currently active influences:

Inspirations.pdf

I am pulled along by story and "beauty" and function*. Function, this is an important concept in my practice - a relatively new one. I have begun to understand and perhaps even respect the part of myself that likes to make and study systems, to be pulled into understanding how something functions - what the processes are, under the hood.

*One perspective on the wall writings, is perhaps I am attempting to make my thought behaviour function for me as an artist (Yalou and Aitana).

With all this said. I also deeply respect mystery (the hidden passage to the work) and to not look at the finger pointing to the moon, but the moon itself (Buddhist). It's a balance of creating processes and understanding how my practice functions whilst also remembering that not everything is understood or reduced down to functions, that there is always a slither of the infinite that surrounds a work which moves me. Yet, although you want to resist a binary, you have to bring a standard of logic to the practice. Working to code (Sachs).

It is important to note that my desire to create protocols and standards for myself as an artist came from a commitment to the profession of being an artist. This practice is something which is of course important to me on a personal level, 'the basement that allows the rest of my life to function' (Anne Berest) but also this is what I will do for my work and there is something very serious about this. I have to find a way to make it stable, something that I can come to every day. I need some kind of map then.



Influences Written as List

  • Tom Sachs (for his emphasis on processes, specifically 10 bullets and studio design).
  • Grayson Perry (the way he uses mapping and cartography in his illustration specifically thinking of one I saw in a gallery in Eastbourne, its called Map of Nowhere).
  • Olga Tokarczuk (her writing from above, use of maps and appendixes in her novels. Narrative structure - non linear, almost geological, perhaps more about layering and multiplicity than anything else. I have just finished The Books of Jacob. Her ideas around truth (“The truth is like a gnarled tree, made up of many layers that are twisted all around each other. Some layers holding others inside them, and sometimes being held. The truth is something that can be expressed in many tales, for it is like that garden The Sages entered in which each of them saw something else.”).
  • Pina Bausch (for movement, for composition of image).
  • Sayaka Murata (for their way of self expressing and unapologetic personal standards of absurdity, mainly in her interviews).
  • Iain Mcgilchrist (their insistence on mystery and their thoroughness/depth of thought).
  • Karl Diesseroth (for his weaving analogy, and his web-like perspective on his experience as a neuroscientist and psychiatrist).
  • Tarkovsky (non-linear but not Freudian or Associative, he creates a very specific time space *ref cinema cartography).
  • Medieval word art, Cihad has also shown me some examples from historical Arabic word art.
  • George Saunders, particularly his book on writing: A Swim in The Pond In the Rain. What he has to say about narrative, and also the voice he uses to write about it.
  • Kendrick Lamar's storytelling, specifically in a track called FEAR. It is a story which takes place across generations, with the character of Fear being the link between each generation.
  • Andre 3000’s verse on Blonde (Solo (Reprise)), the stream of consciousness, flipping back and along time).
  • In general storytelling in music, most present in hip-hop and folk music has always been a key influence - if I start writing musicians I will never stop, I mean it.
  • Mamoru Oshii the way they deal with moments in their films.
  • Julie Mehretu, for the way they work with lines and general visual approach, see her album cover for Pharaoh Sanders and Floating Points, as well as Congress and her show title 'A UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF EVERYTHING AND NOTHING’.

Bibliogrpahy

Barthes, R. (2020) Camera lucida. London: Vintage Publishing.

Bausch, P. (2019) DEAD CAN DANCE. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAdJ3XbUoK8.

Boyer, A. (2014) Questions for poets, Mute. Mute Publishing Limited. Available at: https://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/questions-poets

Deisseroth, K. (2021) Projections: A story of human emotions. Manhattan: Random House Inc.

Ocean.F, Blake.J & André 3000 (2016) Solo (Reprise) [CD], Blonde. Austin, Texas: Jon Brion, Frank Ocean & MIKE DEAN.

Fosse, J. (2019) The Other Name: Septology I-II .Translated by Damion Searls. London: Fitzcaraldo.

Lamar.K (2017) FEAR. [MP3], DAMN. Sound City Studios, Los Angeles, California: Daniel Alan Maman.

Mamoru,O. Angel's Egg (1985) Angel's Eggs. Studio Deen.

McGilchrist, I. (2021) The matter with things. Our brains, our delusions, and the unmaking of the world. London: Talisker.

Mehretu, J. (2004) “Stadia II.”

Neistat, V. (2021) Why Comedians Are The Most Important Artists of Our Time.

Perlroth, N. (2023) This is how they tell me the world ends: The cyberweapons arms race. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Publishing.

Perry, G. (2008) “Map of Nowhere.”

Sachs, T. and Furgason, J. (2005) Ten bullets. N.Y.: Tom Sachs.

Saunders, G. (2022) A swim in a pond in the rain: In which Four Russians give a master class on writing, reading, and life. London: Bloomsbury.

Tokarczuk, O. (2021) Books of Jacob. Translated by Jenifer Croft. London: Fitzcaraldo.

Tarkosky, Stalker [DVD] (1979). Russia: Mosfilm.

Tzu, L. (1997) Tao Te Ching. Edited by A. Waley. Hertfordshire: Wordsworth Classics.


Appendix

Wall Writing
Wall Writing 1
Wall Writing 4
Wall Writing 3
Wall Writing 2
Paper Rolling Mechanism 3
Paper Rolling Mechanism 4
Paper Rolling Mechanism
Paper Rolling Mechanism 2