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==Steve's notes==
<span style="color:#009999"> [What a GREAT START! there is a really rich mix here: your diaristic style works very well, the visual material you draw on is germane, and the references are there, without being didactic. My '''suggested edits are in bold''' and my comments are green. On Thursday let's discuss how you can bring in material from proposal, public moments, fake assessment, into the thesis (to describe project &c).]</span>
=== '''Intro - draft''' ===
In '''[title]''' I reflect on how we perceive our direct surroundings. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted. But maybe we can learn to look at them diffrently to see those spaces as something that we make rather than discover. Through the following chapters, I delve into the tools that shape our vision, the methods that encourage spontaneous encounters inspired by the Situationists, and the role of attentiveness. Drawing insights from documentaries and early cinema I aim to uncover ways of paying attention to our surroundings.
=== '''Chapter 1 - draft''' ===
Reading the city isn’t just about observing it from a distance. The more I observed, the more I realized how complex and multi-layered cities are, interwoven with countless stories. Reading a city means being genuinely curious about its people and surroundings. It means engaging with the world and continually evolving your perception of it.
<span style="color:#009999">  [S notes:<< you are describing a methodology for reading a city]</span>
It involves being open to unexpected opportunities that arise IN unfamiliar streets, IN shadowed corners, IN familiar spaces, IN chaotic streets, IN the spaces in-between, IN spaces of certainty, IN neighborhood park, IN museum courtyards, IN crowded markets, IN city squares, IN quiet side streets, IN leisure spaces, IN shared spaces, IN spaces full of people, IN parking spaces, and open spaces. There are PEOPLE always in a hurry, PEOPLE who sing to themselves, PEOPLE who take detours, PEOPLE who carry notebooks, PEOPLE lost in their thoughts, PEOPLE who bike everywhere, PEOPLE who dream vividly, PEOPLE who miss their hometowns, PEOPLE who never stop questioning, PEOPLE walking alone, PEOPLE who adore symmetry, PEOPLE who enjoy getting lost, PEOPLE who love surprises, PEOPLE who stay up late, PEOPLE who speak with their hands, PEOPLE who feel out of place, PEOPLE walking slowly, and PEOPLE speaking many languages, shaping the spaces we inhabit. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted, moving through them daily withou t much thought. But maybe we can learn to see them differently: TO SEE the long way home, TO SEE the stories in gestures, TO SEE the endless possibilities, TO SEE the rhythm of the city, TO SEE the connections, TO SEE the hidden textures, TO SEE the passing time, TO SEE the absurdity, TO SEE the hidden shortcuts, TO SEE the unexpected, TO SEE the structures, TO SEE the stories, TO SEE the choices in how we move, TO SEE the city’s edges, TO SEE the city as a game, TO SEE hidden playgrounds, TO SEE new paths, TO SEE the extraordinary in the ordinary, TO SEE the absence, TO SEE with the greatest precision, TO SEE what’s written in the street. When we learn to see, nothing will stop us from reimagining these spaces anew—other uses, other functions, other possible ways of navigating them. I believe the first step is to pay attention.
'''It started''' this summer, with a pair of binoculars I bought at a market for three euros. Totally absorbed, I spent hours on Yana's balcony, observing the rooftops of Sofia — textures, antennas, and edges. Gradually, fragments of the city revealed t'''hemselves.''' Serendipity played a role in these observations, and I couldn’t have been happier, as I noticed things that usually go unnoticed. The binoculars became my tool for "reading" the city and found a permanent place in my routine. <span style="color:#009999">[How so, it would be interesting to describe the experience of seeing anew through this new "lens". Please describe a particular moment. What is happening? The reader can then share the immediacy of that experience]</span> I became obsessed. Through them, I observed Sofia, Warsaw, Frankfurt-Oder and Słubice, Rotterdam, and Groningen. It fascinated me how even the simplest tool, with its inherent limitations, could open us to unexpected opportunities. How narrowing the field of vision, allows for looking at the city piece by piece and brings a specific fragment to the front.
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 23.42.15.png|thumb]] '''I built a camera obscura''', large enough to step inside and place it in public space. I was curious to see how our perception changes when we view an image upside down. Would we notice something extraordinary in what we see '''every day'''? Unfortunately, the costs of constructing such a device overwhelmed me. Instead, I realized this idea within the confines of my room. Using cardboard and the properties of light, I transformed my room, already positioned on the street, into a camera. I darkened the entire space, leaving a pinhole to create an inverted image. On my table, I saw a fragment of the bridge where train tracks once ran. At that moment, I knew I was inside the camera. The projection was smaller and blurrier than I expected, yet I observed the bridge fragment with a level of attention I’d never given it before. For two years, that view had been the first thing I saw when opening my door. It wasn’t until I saw it upside down that I truly paid attention.<span style="color:#009999"> [where did you make this?]</span>
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 23.43.12.png|thumb|center]]
I continued observing my surroundings. '''For days,''' I sat in a square, observing at specific times. I watched my street through the frame of my window. I observed the street corner framing it from a café. I built a device '''— a tube –''' for reading the city. I watched the city through a paper frame, a camera, and a film camera lens. I became an expert observer.
But do we really need tools for this? <span style="color:#009999">[The other question is: what do you gain from using such tools? Why is it satisfying for you to frame? What happens when you crop? What happens when you frame?]</span> Isn’t curiosity and simply being in a space, observing what surrounds us, enough? Devoting time and attention seems sufficient, yet so much escapes us and remains unnoticed. We cannot take in the entire city at a glance; we need separation and pauses to interpret what we see. Otherwise, everything becomes a continuous stream of unprocessable information. What matters to me is how this observation can contribute to our active participation in a space. It is in this context that I want my magazine to become a frame for urban observations and situations. And thats also what I mean by a tool.
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 14.12.17.png|thumb|cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -  ]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 14.17.02.png|thumb|cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -  |center]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 14.17.59.png|thumb|cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -  |left]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 14.13.22.png|thumb|600x600px|cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -  <nowiki>https://archive.org/details/de-oldify-scheveningen-in-the-roaring-twenties-2-audio-c.-1922-1920x-1080-prob-3</nowiki>|center]]
I decided to narrow my focus, choose a fragment, and frame it for closer examination. Inspired by Alison Knowles's '''1967 poem''' ''The House of Dust'', <span style="color:#009999"> [<describe that text in a sentence or so]</span> I developed a script to list various locations, people one might encounter there, and observations. The script randomly combined entries from each category, generating statements that I treated as prompts for further focused observation.
<span style="color:#009999">[Note: With the script, you are creating another technology for looking (like the camera obscura, binoculars and tube). It seems to be different to mapping a space. It is about apprehension of a space, more than about its relation to other spaces. Are these devise about providing an encounter with a particular space? It is interesting how the aesthetic that is developing mirrors early film and photography. What do you think the relation is, for you? (there are no wrong answers here).]</span>
Thus, the first issue of ''Fragments Magazine'' is dedicated:
'''FOR PEOPLE''' who always carry a notebook
'''TO SEE''' the choices in how we move
'''IN''' open spaces
(I searched for photographs in archives and video materials from early cinema because I wanted to work with these fragments. I wanted to use cropped images to illustrate the choices in how we move, and I got lost in a sea of colorful frames from Scheveningen in the Twenties.)
<span style="color:#009999">Suggested texts</span> <ref>The Production of Space, Henri Lefebvre</ref>
<ref>Silent City Films (early 20th Century): https://library.fiveable.me/city-in-film/unit-2/silent-era-city-films-urban-modernity/study-guide/uxbdekHKTNFoe9U4</ref>
<references />
==Outline==
<u>Chapter 1</u>
<u>What does it mean to read the city? - Part 1</u>
<u>Tools for reading the city - Part 2</u>
* The Production of Space, Henri Lefebvre
* Smooth City, René Boer
* Creative Processes in the Human Environment
<u>Chapter 2</u>
<u>Methods for spontaneous encounters - Situationists approach and the art of chance</u>
* The term "society of the spectacle”, introduced by French theorist Guy Debord in his book The Society of the Spectacle, describes a society influenced and dominated by images, advertising, and media, where appearances are more important than authentic experience. Following this thought I would like to dive into "Report on the Construction of Situations" by Guy Debord (1957). In this manifesto, Debord explains the concept of "constructed situations" encouraging interventions in urban spaces that provoke new ways of seeing and interacting with the city.
* This chapter is a space for critical reflection on how I can activate the magazine in public spaces.
<u>Chapter 3</u>
<u>Scripts or unintentional adventures? - What documentaries taught me?</u> 
* In this context, the book Why I Make Documentaries by director Soda Kazuhiro is especially important to me. In it, he discusses observational filmmaking, speaking about rejecting the idea of preparing a script before shooting and instead creating a story based on discoveries that happen during the process. He also talks about the unexpected discoveries, encounters, and unintentional adventures that the observational filmmaking approach brings. I agree with not strictly adhering to a script, as it’s so easy to cut out even the most interesting scenes simply because they don’t fit a narrowly defined topic. On the other hand, I believe that a script that remains open to interpretation can actually enhance imagination and open up new ways of exploring public space. I believe that scripts and unpredictable encounters can complement each other, and I’m curious how I could explore this further.
* There was this film that I saw during the French film festival - where two characters decided to walk always in a straight line —- so they had to walk on top of the car cause it happen to be on the way.
<u>Chapter 4</u>
<u>Cutting, fragmenting, rearaging - as a way of rewriting our spaces</u>
* Dziga Vertov – Man with a Movie Camera (1929) - This documentary film captures a day in the life of a Soviet city through the eyes of a "movie camera man.” There is no one plot, the film maker is experimenting with montage techniques. Vertov’s approach presents the city as a dynamic, interconnected system.
* Drawing from these examples I will reflect on my practice, which incorporates image-making. I still record and photograph a lot, but then I use this footage to translate it into a collage.  fragmenting and rearranging as reimaging. A lot of this happens in my notebook
'''
==Intro==
==Intro==
In this work I reflect on how we perceive our direct surroundings. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted. But maybe we can learn to look at them diffrently to see those spaces as something that we make rather than discover. Through the following chapters, I delve into the tools that shape our vision, the methods that encourage spontaneous encounters inspired by the Situationists, and the role of attentiveness. Drawing insights from documentaries and early cinema I aim to uncover ways of paying attention to our surroundings.  
With this paper, I dedicate time to moving through various places and observing them with curious eyes. It brings together fragments from my notebook, making the writing a dialogue with walking, collecting, and rearranging fragments. This text is an opening to the unexpected, to accidental discoveries and observations. I aim to uncover alternative ways of seeing and relating to our cities. I seek ways to open to different experiences, searching for unpredictability and surprises in the city, exciting connections, and interactions with others in shared spaces.
 
== Chapter 1.  What does it mean to read the city? - Part 1 ==
Reading the city isn’t just about observing it from a distance. Reading a city means being genuinely curious about its people and surroundings. It means engaging with the world and continually evolving your perception of it. The language of the city lies in the situations and unexpected opportunities that arise. We read it with our eyes, ears, and feet 
 
IN unfamiliar streets, 
 
IN shadowed corners, 
 
IN familiar spaces, 
 
IN chaotic streets, 
 
IN the spaces in-between, 
 
IN spaces of certainty, 
 
IN neighborhood parks, 
 
IN museum courtyards, 
 
IN crowded markets,
 
IN city squares, 
 
IN quiet side streets, 
 
IN leisure spaces,
 
IN shared spaces, 
 
IN spaces full of people, 
 
IN parking spaces, and open spaces. 
There are 
 
PEOPLE always in a hurry, 
 
PEOPLE who sing to themselves, 
 
PEOPLE who take detours, 
 
PEOPLE who carry notebooks, 
 
PEOPLE lost in their thoughts, 
 
PEOPLE who bike everywhere, 
 
PEOPLE who dream vividly, 
 
PEOPLE who miss their hometowns, 
 
PEOPLE who never stop questioning, 
 
PEOPLE walking alone, 
 
PEOPLE who adore symmetry, 
 
PEOPLE who enjoy getting lost, 
 
PEOPLE who love surprises, 
 
PEOPLE who stay up late,
 
PEOPLE who speak with their hands, 
 
PEOPLE who feel out of place, 
 
PEOPLE walking slowly,
 
PEOPLE speaking many languages, 
 
shaping the spaces we inhabit. 
We often take these spaces for granted, moving through them daily without much thought. But what if we could learn to look at them differently: 
 
TO SEE the long way home, 
 
TO SEE the stories in gestures, 
 
TO SEE the endless possibilities, 
 
TO SEE the rhythm of the city, 
 
TO SEE the connections, 
 
TO SEE the hidden textures, 
 
TO SEE the passing time, 
 
TO SEE the absurdity, 
 
TO SEE the hidden shortcuts, 
 
TO SEE the unexpected, 
 
TO SEE the structures, 
 
TO SEE the stories, 
 
TO SEE the choices in how we move, 
 
TO SEE the city’s edges, 
 
TO SEE the city as a game, 
 
TO SEE hidden playgrounds, 
 
TO SEE new paths, 
 
TO SEE the extraordinary in the ordinary, 
 
TO SEE the absence, 
 
TO SEE with the greatest precision, 
 
TO SEE what’s written in the street. 
 
When we start to look at them differentky, nothing will stop us from reimagining these spaces anew and other possible ways of navigating them.
 
 
 
In cities, there are far more unexpected connections than one might think. But sometimes, noticing them takes time. Waiting for the unexpected to happen might seem boring to some people. When we set out to find it but fail to see it, it can frustrate us. However, waiting in this context is important. Waiting is a part of reading the city. By waiting, we allow ourselves to get bored—and that boredom can lead to unexpected, creative ideas. Waiting is a resistance against efficiency at all costs. Reading the city isn’t always equally exciting. Reading the city requires time and attention. It involves getting lost, observing in the rain, or taking the long way home. Not everything has to be productive, smooth, or predictable—and that’s what makes reading the city so fascinating.
 
 
 
René Boer’s concept of the “Smooth City” ties into this idea. He describes the growing tendency in urban environments where experiences become increasingly seamless. We have services that deliver groceries to our doors, dating apps, and smart solutions that provide us with comfort, but they also create a frictionless environment. While everyone deserves a safe and clean environment, such conditions gradually eliminate opportunities for serendipity, potential, encounters, and all those unexpected events that cannot be planned in advance. This raises an important question: what kind of cities do we really want? Do we prefer a predictable, frictionless environment, or do we want to embrace random chances? Personally, I long for a city where I can be myself, where I enjoy conversations with strangers, where I discover new paths, where not everything is reduced to the same ideal, polished appearance—a city created by people and therefore full of potential.
 
 
This magazine may seem a bit messy, but this messiness in unpredictability can bring unexpected connections. And this is what the act of making this magazine public and publishing it outdoors call for. It seeks to decode the language of the city and by actively existing in public space, it becomes a tool for that, knowing that this act is an unfinished process. The image of the city is ever changing, its never complete. 
 
 
 
To focus this exploration, I decided to narrow my scope: choose a fragment and frame it for closer examination. Inspired by Alison Knowles’s project The House of Dust, in which she used code to generate short poems that she later translated into physical houses, I developed a script, listing various locations, people one might encounter there, and observations. It then randomly combines entries from each category, generating statements that I treated as prompts for further focused observation.
 
Thus, the first issue of Fragments Magazine is dedicated:

 
FOR PEOPLE who always carry a notebook

 
TO SEE the choices in how we move

 
IN open spaces
 
 
I think that limitation and a certain imposed boundary can be very creative. Through the script, which selected and combined three entries from a wealth of street observations, a relationship between them emerges. And in a way, this automatically opens up new possibilities. This was initiated by the computer, but what happens next depends entirely on my interpretation.
 
==Tools for reading the city - Part 2==
 
As much as I am captivated by the moving image, cities are not only visual. Like Lawrence Halprin wrote: “Architecture alone does not make a great street anymore than a fine stage set makes great theatre. The two depend, finally, on what happens and what interactions occur; what they generate in the human experience” (‘Creative Processes in the Human Environment’). In this context I'm interested in how even the simplest tools, which impose certain limitations, can open us up to unexpected opportunities.
 
 
 
I’m curious about translating what film works with into a system for exploring physical space. Film deals with scripts, continuity, speed, time, rhythm, and frames. They use cutting and rearranging pieces. I’m curious to use these elements as tools for decoding the language of the city. I want to allow an interplay between what is perceived and what can arise and come into view.
 
 
 
This fascination with framing started this summer, with a pair of binoculars I bought at a market for three euros. Totally absorbed, I spent hours on Yana's balcony, observing the rooftops of Sofia—textures, antennas, and edges. Gradually, fragments of the city revealed themselves to me. Serendipity played a role in these observations, and I couldn’t have been happier, as I noticed things that usually go unnoticed. The binoculars became my tool for reading the city and found a permanent place in my routine. With a newfound interest, I scanned buildings, gliding along their lines. They made me notice houses that look like they are hugging the one in the middle. Passersbys entered and exited my frame, suddenly, the city became full of surprises. I became obsessed. Through them, I observed Sofia, Warsaw, Frankfurt-Oder and Słubice, Rotterdam, and Groningen. It fascinated me how even the simplest tool, with its inherent limitations, could be an opening for so many surprises. What I mean is all th ethings I have seen before but ignored. I find it intresting how narrowing the field of vision, allows for looking at the city piece by piece and brings a specific fragment to the front.
 
 
Inspired by that, I decided to build a camera obscura large enough to step inside and place it in public space. I was curious to see how our perception changes when we view an image upside down. Would we notice something extraordinary in what we see daily? Unfortunately, the costs of constructing such a device overwhelmed me. Instead, I realized this idea within the confines of my room. Using cardboard and the properties of light, I transformed my room, already positioned on the street, into a camera. I darkened the entire space, leaving a pinhole to create an inverted image. On my table, I saw a fragment of the bridge where train tracks once ran. At that moment, I knew I was inside the camera. The projection was smaller and blurrier than I expected, yet I observed the bridge fragment with a level of attention I’d never given it before. For two years, that view had been the first thing I saw when opening my door. It wasn’t until I saw it upside down that I truly paid attention.
 
 
The camera obscura flips the image, and much like binoculars, it allows me to see it with a renewed sense of interest. I read the city upside down. It reminds me of my summer Sunday tradition that I used to have when I was living in a room with access to the garden. I would go out into the garden, lie down on a bench and look at my Dutch house upside down. It brought me such joy that when my friends came over and we had dinner in the garden, we’d do it together. We’d lie on the two benches of the picnic table, simply observing, passing a cigarette under the tabletop.
 
 
I continued observing my surroundings. For days, I sat in a square, observing at specific times. I watched my street through the frame of my window. I observed the street corner framing it from a café. I built a device — a tube – for reading the city. I watched the city through a paper frame, a camera, and a film camera lens. I became an expert observer.
 
 
 
The most important function of these framing tools is that they open possibilities without determining what exactly will emerge. Through constraints and limits, unexpected connections arise. I continued this by juxtaposing different combinations. Based on the aforementioned script inspired by ''The House of Dust'' by Alison Knowles, I prepared a script that selected entries from various categories and combined them to create prompts for participants in my workshop to build their own paper tools that invite looking at our surrounding differently. Tools we have built included:
 
 
A TOOL
 
FOR people who love surprises
 
TOO SEE the hidden textures
 
IN unfamiliar streets
 
 
A TOOL
 
FOR people who speak with their hands
 
TOO SEE the city as a game
 
IN the shadowed corners
 
 
A TOOL
 
FOR people who bike everywhere
 
TOO SEE the stories in gestures
 
IN shared space
 
 
A TOOL
 
FOR people always in a hurry
 
TO SEE the passing time
 
IN an open park at night
 
 
A TOOL
 
FOR for people who adore symmetry
 
TO SEE the stories
 
IN a place full of people
 
 
Participants using the properties of paper prepared simple tools that, guided steps to take. While still open to interpretation, they enabled specific activities to occur in space. For instance, I drew by lot a prompt:
 
''A TOOL''
 
''FOR people who always carry a notebook''
 
''TO SEE the choices in how we move'' 
 
''IN open spaces.'' 
 
I created a sheet with step-by-step folding instructions. Once folded, it could serve as a bookmark in a notebook. When unfolded into a fan shape, it revealed instructions for moving, such as: ''find corridors between people'' or ''notice how space is opening and closing.'' Each segment displayed a different suggestion for navigating the space. 
 
I became intrested in scoring, that share simmilar function. By visually communicating processes happening over time, they allow for the process to constantly evolve. Scores constitute a system of symbols. Elements like time, space, rhythm, and their combinations are presented graphically, visualising a process and influencing it.  Scores can be more controlling or more suggestive, but they are always tied to a process and involve certain constraints and limits. For example, the score accompanying Charles Amirkhanian's performance did not dictate exactly how it should be interpreted. It consisted of drawings that could be freely interpreted by musicians, fueling the performance. This approach was not limited to professional musicians; anyone could participate as long as they interpreted the images in their own chosen way. This example demonstrates how playing with chance and control, rather than imposing something, can energize participants' performance. In this case, the score became an opening for chance.
 
How does this translate to different fields? Going back to the focus of this magazine ( TO SEE the choices in how we move) How can movement be visualized and influenced in a graphical form? There is a difference between graphical representation and the action that results from it. But one informs the other.
 
 
A zoetrope moves individual frames, animating them into smooth motion. But when I look at it as a flat image, it becomes a graphic representation of that movement over time. It reminds me of musical notation. What if I were to record movement using symbols, similar to a musical staff? Instead of a composition, I could record a walk...  


==Chapter 1==
[[File:Earlycinematools.jpg|thumb|center]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-14 at 17.32.31.png|thumb|center]]
[[File:Musicnotes.png|thumb|center]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-14 at 17.11.45.png|thumb|center]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-14 at 17.11.58.png|thumb|center]]
[[File:Screenshot 2024-12-14 at 18.50.54.png|thumb|center]]The zoetrope, by animating frames arranged in a circle, plays with continuity and repetition. Similarly, I could write notes on a staff that loops into a circle, suggesting that this segment should be played repeatedly, over and over. By playing with this looping, we could create a notation for a walking choreography where you continually turn only to the right, or only take narrow streets. Frames, continuity, repetition.


Reading the city isn’t just about observing it from a distance. The more I observed, the more I realized how complex and multi-layered cities are, interwoven with countless stories. Reading a city means being genuinely curious about its people and surroundings. It means engaging with the world and continually evolving your perception of it. It involves being open to unexpected opportunities that arise IN unfamiliar streets, IN shadowed corners, IN familiar spaces, IN chaotic streets, IN the spaces in-between, IN spaces of certainty, IN neighborhood park, IN museum courtyards, IN crowded markets, IN city squares, IN quiet side streets, IN leisure spaces, IN shared spaces, IN spaces full of people, IN parking spaces, and open spaces. There are PEOPLE always in a hurry, PEOPLE who sing to themselves, PEOPLE who take detours, PEOPLE who carry notebooks, PEOPLE lost in their thoughts, PEOPLE who bike everywhere, PEOPLE who dream vividly, PEOPLE who miss their hometowns, PEOPLE who never stop questioning, PEOPLE walking alone, PEOPLE who adore symmetry, PEOPLE who enjoy getting lost, PEOPLE who love surprises, PEOPLE who stay up late, PEOPLE who speak with their hands, PEOPLE who feel out of place, PEOPLE walking slowly, and PEOPLE speaking many languages, shaping the spaces we inhabit. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted, moving through them daily withou t much thought. But maybe we can learn to see them differently: TO SEE the long way home, TO SEE the stories in gestures, TO SEE the endless possibilities, TO SEE the rhythm of the city, TO SEE the connections, TO SEE the hidden textures, TO SEE the passing time, TO SEE the absurdity, TO SEE the hidden shortcuts, TO SEE the unexpected, TO SEE the structures, TO SEE the stories, TO SEE the choices in how we move, TO SEE the city’s edges, TO SEE the city as a game, TO SEE hidden playgrounds, TO SEE new paths, TO SEE the extraordinary in the ordinary, TO SEE the absence, TO SEE with the greatest precision, TO SEE what’s written in the street. When we learn to see, nothing will stop us from reimagining these spaces anew—other uses, other functions, other possible ways of navigating them. I believe the first step is to pay attention.
Once again, I find something surprising and exciting in the imposed constraints.

Latest revision as of 19:54, 14 December 2024



Steve's notes

[What a GREAT START! there is a really rich mix here: your diaristic style works very well, the visual material you draw on is germane, and the references are there, without being didactic. My suggested edits are in bold and my comments are green. On Thursday let's discuss how you can bring in material from proposal, public moments, fake assessment, into the thesis (to describe project &c).]

Intro - draft

In [title] I reflect on how we perceive our direct surroundings. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted. But maybe we can learn to look at them diffrently to see those spaces as something that we make rather than discover. Through the following chapters, I delve into the tools that shape our vision, the methods that encourage spontaneous encounters inspired by the Situationists, and the role of attentiveness. Drawing insights from documentaries and early cinema I aim to uncover ways of paying attention to our surroundings.

Chapter 1 - draft

Reading the city isn’t just about observing it from a distance. The more I observed, the more I realized how complex and multi-layered cities are, interwoven with countless stories. Reading a city means being genuinely curious about its people and surroundings. It means engaging with the world and continually evolving your perception of it.

[S notes:<< you are describing a methodology for reading a city]

It involves being open to unexpected opportunities that arise IN unfamiliar streets, IN shadowed corners, IN familiar spaces, IN chaotic streets, IN the spaces in-between, IN spaces of certainty, IN neighborhood park, IN museum courtyards, IN crowded markets, IN city squares, IN quiet side streets, IN leisure spaces, IN shared spaces, IN spaces full of people, IN parking spaces, and open spaces. There are PEOPLE always in a hurry, PEOPLE who sing to themselves, PEOPLE who take detours, PEOPLE who carry notebooks, PEOPLE lost in their thoughts, PEOPLE who bike everywhere, PEOPLE who dream vividly, PEOPLE who miss their hometowns, PEOPLE who never stop questioning, PEOPLE walking alone, PEOPLE who adore symmetry, PEOPLE who enjoy getting lost, PEOPLE who love surprises, PEOPLE who stay up late, PEOPLE who speak with their hands, PEOPLE who feel out of place, PEOPLE walking slowly, and PEOPLE speaking many languages, shaping the spaces we inhabit. Perhaps we take these spaces for granted, moving through them daily withou t much thought. But maybe we can learn to see them differently: TO SEE the long way home, TO SEE the stories in gestures, TO SEE the endless possibilities, TO SEE the rhythm of the city, TO SEE the connections, TO SEE the hidden textures, TO SEE the passing time, TO SEE the absurdity, TO SEE the hidden shortcuts, TO SEE the unexpected, TO SEE the structures, TO SEE the stories, TO SEE the choices in how we move, TO SEE the city’s edges, TO SEE the city as a game, TO SEE hidden playgrounds, TO SEE new paths, TO SEE the extraordinary in the ordinary, TO SEE the absence, TO SEE with the greatest precision, TO SEE what’s written in the street. When we learn to see, nothing will stop us from reimagining these spaces anew—other uses, other functions, other possible ways of navigating them. I believe the first step is to pay attention.


It started this summer, with a pair of binoculars I bought at a market for three euros. Totally absorbed, I spent hours on Yana's balcony, observing the rooftops of Sofia — textures, antennas, and edges. Gradually, fragments of the city revealed themselves. Serendipity played a role in these observations, and I couldn’t have been happier, as I noticed things that usually go unnoticed. The binoculars became my tool for "reading" the city and found a permanent place in my routine. [How so, it would be interesting to describe the experience of seeing anew through this new "lens". Please describe a particular moment. What is happening? The reader can then share the immediacy of that experience] I became obsessed. Through them, I observed Sofia, Warsaw, Frankfurt-Oder and Słubice, Rotterdam, and Groningen. It fascinated me how even the simplest tool, with its inherent limitations, could open us to unexpected opportunities. How narrowing the field of vision, allows for looking at the city piece by piece and brings a specific fragment to the front.

Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 23.42.15.png

I built a camera obscura, large enough to step inside and place it in public space. I was curious to see how our perception changes when we view an image upside down. Would we notice something extraordinary in what we see every day? Unfortunately, the costs of constructing such a device overwhelmed me. Instead, I realized this idea within the confines of my room. Using cardboard and the properties of light, I transformed my room, already positioned on the street, into a camera. I darkened the entire space, leaving a pinhole to create an inverted image. On my table, I saw a fragment of the bridge where train tracks once ran. At that moment, I knew I was inside the camera. The projection was smaller and blurrier than I expected, yet I observed the bridge fragment with a level of attention I’d never given it before. For two years, that view had been the first thing I saw when opening my door. It wasn’t until I saw it upside down that I truly paid attention. [where did you make this?]

Screenshot 2024-12-02 at 23.43.12.png

I continued observing my surroundings. For days, I sat in a square, observing at specific times. I watched my street through the frame of my window. I observed the street corner framing it from a café. I built a device — a tube – for reading the city. I watched the city through a paper frame, a camera, and a film camera lens. I became an expert observer.


But do we really need tools for this? [The other question is: what do you gain from using such tools? Why is it satisfying for you to frame? What happens when you crop? What happens when you frame?] Isn’t curiosity and simply being in a space, observing what surrounds us, enough? Devoting time and attention seems sufficient, yet so much escapes us and remains unnoticed. We cannot take in the entire city at a glance; we need separation and pauses to interpret what we see. Otherwise, everything becomes a continuous stream of unprocessable information. What matters to me is how this observation can contribute to our active participation in a space. It is in this context that I want my magazine to become a frame for urban observations and situations. And thats also what I mean by a tool.

cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -
cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -
cropped image from footage of Scheveningen -
cropped image from footage of Scheveningen - https://archive.org/details/de-oldify-scheveningen-in-the-roaring-twenties-2-audio-c.-1922-1920x-1080-prob-3

I decided to narrow my focus, choose a fragment, and frame it for closer examination. Inspired by Alison Knowles's 1967 poem The House of Dust, [<describe that text in a sentence or so] I developed a script to list various locations, people one might encounter there, and observations. The script randomly combined entries from each category, generating statements that I treated as prompts for further focused observation. [Note: With the script, you are creating another technology for looking (like the camera obscura, binoculars and tube). It seems to be different to mapping a space. It is about apprehension of a space, more than about its relation to other spaces. Are these devise about providing an encounter with a particular space? It is interesting how the aesthetic that is developing mirrors early film and photography. What do you think the relation is, for you? (there are no wrong answers here).]

Thus, the first issue of Fragments Magazine is dedicated:

FOR PEOPLE who always carry a notebook

TO SEE the choices in how we move

IN open spaces


(I searched for photographs in archives and video materials from early cinema because I wanted to work with these fragments. I wanted to use cropped images to illustrate the choices in how we move, and I got lost in a sea of colorful frames from Scheveningen in the Twenties.)

Suggested texts [1] [2]

  1. The Production of Space, Henri Lefebvre
  2. Silent City Films (early 20th Century): https://library.fiveable.me/city-in-film/unit-2/silent-era-city-films-urban-modernity/study-guide/uxbdekHKTNFoe9U4




Outline

Chapter 1

What does it mean to read the city? - Part 1

Tools for reading the city - Part 2

  • The Production of Space, Henri Lefebvre
  • Smooth City, René Boer
  • Creative Processes in the Human Environment


Chapter 2

Methods for spontaneous encounters - Situationists approach and the art of chance

  • The term "society of the spectacle”, introduced by French theorist Guy Debord in his book The Society of the Spectacle, describes a society influenced and dominated by images, advertising, and media, where appearances are more important than authentic experience. Following this thought I would like to dive into "Report on the Construction of Situations" by Guy Debord (1957). In this manifesto, Debord explains the concept of "constructed situations" encouraging interventions in urban spaces that provoke new ways of seeing and interacting with the city.
  • This chapter is a space for critical reflection on how I can activate the magazine in public spaces.


Chapter 3

Scripts or unintentional adventures? - What documentaries taught me?

  • In this context, the book Why I Make Documentaries by director Soda Kazuhiro is especially important to me. In it, he discusses observational filmmaking, speaking about rejecting the idea of preparing a script before shooting and instead creating a story based on discoveries that happen during the process. He also talks about the unexpected discoveries, encounters, and unintentional adventures that the observational filmmaking approach brings. I agree with not strictly adhering to a script, as it’s so easy to cut out even the most interesting scenes simply because they don’t fit a narrowly defined topic. On the other hand, I believe that a script that remains open to interpretation can actually enhance imagination and open up new ways of exploring public space. I believe that scripts and unpredictable encounters can complement each other, and I’m curious how I could explore this further.
  • There was this film that I saw during the French film festival - where two characters decided to walk always in a straight line —- so they had to walk on top of the car cause it happen to be on the way.


Chapter 4

Cutting, fragmenting, rearaging - as a way of rewriting our spaces

  • Dziga Vertov – Man with a Movie Camera (1929) - This documentary film captures a day in the life of a Soviet city through the eyes of a "movie camera man.” There is no one plot, the film maker is experimenting with montage techniques. Vertov’s approach presents the city as a dynamic, interconnected system.
  • Drawing from these examples I will reflect on my practice, which incorporates image-making. I still record and photograph a lot, but then I use this footage to translate it into a collage. fragmenting and rearranging as reimaging. A lot of this happens in my notebook

Intro

With this paper, I dedicate time to moving through various places and observing them with curious eyes. It brings together fragments from my notebook, making the writing a dialogue with walking, collecting, and rearranging fragments. This text is an opening to the unexpected, to accidental discoveries and observations. I aim to uncover alternative ways of seeing and relating to our cities. I seek ways to open to different experiences, searching for unpredictability and surprises in the city, exciting connections, and interactions with others in shared spaces.

Chapter 1. What does it mean to read the city? - Part 1

Reading the city isn’t just about observing it from a distance. Reading a city means being genuinely curious about its people and surroundings. It means engaging with the world and continually evolving your perception of it. The language of the city lies in the situations and unexpected opportunities that arise. We read it with our eyes, ears, and feet

IN unfamiliar streets,

IN shadowed corners,

IN familiar spaces,

IN chaotic streets,

IN the spaces in-between,

IN spaces of certainty,

IN neighborhood parks,

IN museum courtyards,

IN crowded markets,

IN city squares,

IN quiet side streets,

IN leisure spaces,

IN shared spaces,

IN spaces full of people,

IN parking spaces, and open spaces.

There are

PEOPLE always in a hurry,

PEOPLE who sing to themselves,

PEOPLE who take detours,

PEOPLE who carry notebooks,

PEOPLE lost in their thoughts,

PEOPLE who bike everywhere,

PEOPLE who dream vividly,

PEOPLE who miss their hometowns,

PEOPLE who never stop questioning,

PEOPLE walking alone,

PEOPLE who adore symmetry,

PEOPLE who enjoy getting lost,

PEOPLE who love surprises,

PEOPLE who stay up late,

PEOPLE who speak with their hands,

PEOPLE who feel out of place,

PEOPLE walking slowly,

PEOPLE speaking many languages,

shaping the spaces we inhabit.

We often take these spaces for granted, moving through them daily without much thought. But what if we could learn to look at them differently:

TO SEE the long way home,

TO SEE the stories in gestures,

TO SEE the endless possibilities,

TO SEE the rhythm of the city,

TO SEE the connections,

TO SEE the hidden textures,

TO SEE the passing time,

TO SEE the absurdity,

TO SEE the hidden shortcuts,

TO SEE the unexpected,

TO SEE the structures,

TO SEE the stories,

TO SEE the choices in how we move,

TO SEE the city’s edges,

TO SEE the city as a game,

TO SEE hidden playgrounds,

TO SEE new paths,

TO SEE the extraordinary in the ordinary,

TO SEE the absence,

TO SEE with the greatest precision,

TO SEE what’s written in the street.

When we start to look at them differentky, nothing will stop us from reimagining these spaces anew and other possible ways of navigating them.


In cities, there are far more unexpected connections than one might think. But sometimes, noticing them takes time. Waiting for the unexpected to happen might seem boring to some people. When we set out to find it but fail to see it, it can frustrate us. However, waiting in this context is important. Waiting is a part of reading the city. By waiting, we allow ourselves to get bored—and that boredom can lead to unexpected, creative ideas. Waiting is a resistance against efficiency at all costs. Reading the city isn’t always equally exciting. Reading the city requires time and attention. It involves getting lost, observing in the rain, or taking the long way home. Not everything has to be productive, smooth, or predictable—and that’s what makes reading the city so fascinating.


René Boer’s concept of the “Smooth City” ties into this idea. He describes the growing tendency in urban environments where experiences become increasingly seamless. We have services that deliver groceries to our doors, dating apps, and smart solutions that provide us with comfort, but they also create a frictionless environment. While everyone deserves a safe and clean environment, such conditions gradually eliminate opportunities for serendipity, potential, encounters, and all those unexpected events that cannot be planned in advance. This raises an important question: what kind of cities do we really want? Do we prefer a predictable, frictionless environment, or do we want to embrace random chances? Personally, I long for a city where I can be myself, where I enjoy conversations with strangers, where I discover new paths, where not everything is reduced to the same ideal, polished appearance—a city created by people and therefore full of potential.


This magazine may seem a bit messy, but this messiness in unpredictability can bring unexpected connections. And this is what the act of making this magazine public and publishing it outdoors call for. It seeks to decode the language of the city and by actively existing in public space, it becomes a tool for that, knowing that this act is an unfinished process. The image of the city is ever changing, its never complete.


To focus this exploration, I decided to narrow my scope: choose a fragment and frame it for closer examination. Inspired by Alison Knowles’s project The House of Dust, in which she used code to generate short poems that she later translated into physical houses, I developed a script, listing various locations, people one might encounter there, and observations. It then randomly combines entries from each category, generating statements that I treated as prompts for further focused observation.

Thus, the first issue of Fragments Magazine is dedicated:


FOR PEOPLE who always carry a notebook


TO SEE the choices in how we move


IN open spaces


I think that limitation and a certain imposed boundary can be very creative. Through the script, which selected and combined three entries from a wealth of street observations, a relationship between them emerges. And in a way, this automatically opens up new possibilities. This was initiated by the computer, but what happens next depends entirely on my interpretation.

Tools for reading the city - Part 2

As much as I am captivated by the moving image, cities are not only visual. Like Lawrence Halprin wrote: “Architecture alone does not make a great street anymore than a fine stage set makes great theatre. The two depend, finally, on what happens and what interactions occur; what they generate in the human experience” (‘Creative Processes in the Human Environment’). In this context I'm interested in how even the simplest tools, which impose certain limitations, can open us up to unexpected opportunities.


I’m curious about translating what film works with into a system for exploring physical space. Film deals with scripts, continuity, speed, time, rhythm, and frames. They use cutting and rearranging pieces. I’m curious to use these elements as tools for decoding the language of the city. I want to allow an interplay between what is perceived and what can arise and come into view.


This fascination with framing started this summer, with a pair of binoculars I bought at a market for three euros. Totally absorbed, I spent hours on Yana's balcony, observing the rooftops of Sofia—textures, antennas, and edges. Gradually, fragments of the city revealed themselves to me. Serendipity played a role in these observations, and I couldn’t have been happier, as I noticed things that usually go unnoticed. The binoculars became my tool for reading the city and found a permanent place in my routine. With a newfound interest, I scanned buildings, gliding along their lines. They made me notice houses that look like they are hugging the one in the middle. Passersbys entered and exited my frame, suddenly, the city became full of surprises. I became obsessed. Through them, I observed Sofia, Warsaw, Frankfurt-Oder and Słubice, Rotterdam, and Groningen. It fascinated me how even the simplest tool, with its inherent limitations, could be an opening for so many surprises. What I mean is all th ethings I have seen before but ignored. I find it intresting how narrowing the field of vision, allows for looking at the city piece by piece and brings a specific fragment to the front.


Inspired by that, I decided to build a camera obscura large enough to step inside and place it in public space. I was curious to see how our perception changes when we view an image upside down. Would we notice something extraordinary in what we see daily? Unfortunately, the costs of constructing such a device overwhelmed me. Instead, I realized this idea within the confines of my room. Using cardboard and the properties of light, I transformed my room, already positioned on the street, into a camera. I darkened the entire space, leaving a pinhole to create an inverted image. On my table, I saw a fragment of the bridge where train tracks once ran. At that moment, I knew I was inside the camera. The projection was smaller and blurrier than I expected, yet I observed the bridge fragment with a level of attention I’d never given it before. For two years, that view had been the first thing I saw when opening my door. It wasn’t until I saw it upside down that I truly paid attention.


The camera obscura flips the image, and much like binoculars, it allows me to see it with a renewed sense of interest. I read the city upside down. It reminds me of my summer Sunday tradition that I used to have when I was living in a room with access to the garden. I would go out into the garden, lie down on a bench and look at my Dutch house upside down. It brought me such joy that when my friends came over and we had dinner in the garden, we’d do it together. We’d lie on the two benches of the picnic table, simply observing, passing a cigarette under the tabletop.


I continued observing my surroundings. For days, I sat in a square, observing at specific times. I watched my street through the frame of my window. I observed the street corner framing it from a café. I built a device — a tube – for reading the city. I watched the city through a paper frame, a camera, and a film camera lens. I became an expert observer.


The most important function of these framing tools is that they open possibilities without determining what exactly will emerge. Through constraints and limits, unexpected connections arise. I continued this by juxtaposing different combinations. Based on the aforementioned script inspired by The House of Dust by Alison Knowles, I prepared a script that selected entries from various categories and combined them to create prompts for participants in my workshop to build their own paper tools that invite looking at our surrounding differently. Tools we have built included:


A TOOL

FOR people who love surprises

TOO SEE the hidden textures

IN unfamiliar streets


A TOOL

FOR people who speak with their hands

TOO SEE the city as a game

IN the shadowed corners


A TOOL

FOR people who bike everywhere

TOO SEE the stories in gestures

IN shared space


A TOOL

FOR people always in a hurry

TO SEE the passing time

IN an open park at night


A TOOL

FOR for people who adore symmetry

TO SEE the stories

IN a place full of people


Participants using the properties of paper prepared simple tools that, guided steps to take. While still open to interpretation, they enabled specific activities to occur in space. For instance, I drew by lot a prompt:

A TOOL

FOR people who always carry a notebook

TO SEE the choices in how we move

IN open spaces.

I created a sheet with step-by-step folding instructions. Once folded, it could serve as a bookmark in a notebook. When unfolded into a fan shape, it revealed instructions for moving, such as: find corridors between people or notice how space is opening and closing. Each segment displayed a different suggestion for navigating the space.

I became intrested in scoring, that share simmilar function. By visually communicating processes happening over time, they allow for the process to constantly evolve. Scores constitute a system of symbols. Elements like time, space, rhythm, and their combinations are presented graphically, visualising a process and influencing it.  Scores can be more controlling or more suggestive, but they are always tied to a process and involve certain constraints and limits. For example, the score accompanying Charles Amirkhanian's performance did not dictate exactly how it should be interpreted. It consisted of drawings that could be freely interpreted by musicians, fueling the performance. This approach was not limited to professional musicians; anyone could participate as long as they interpreted the images in their own chosen way. This example demonstrates how playing with chance and control, rather than imposing something, can energize participants' performance. In this case, the score became an opening for chance.

How does this translate to different fields? Going back to the focus of this magazine ( TO SEE the choices in how we move) How can movement be visualized and influenced in a graphical form? There is a difference between graphical representation and the action that results from it. But one informs the other.


A zoetrope moves individual frames, animating them into smooth motion. But when I look at it as a flat image, it becomes a graphic representation of that movement over time. It reminds me of musical notation. What if I were to record movement using symbols, similar to a musical staff? Instead of a composition, I could record a walk...

Earlycinematools.jpg
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The zoetrope, by animating frames arranged in a circle, plays with continuity and repetition. Similarly, I could write notes on a staff that loops into a circle, suggesting that this segment should be played repeatedly, over and over. By playing with this looping, we could create a notation for a walking choreography where you continually turn only to the right, or only take narrow streets. Frames, continuity, repetition.

Once again, I find something surprising and exciting in the imposed constraints.