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===It is not alone. (context)===
===It is not alone. (context)===
=Second Draft=
===Where does it come from? (past)===
===What is it now? (present)===
'''''1. Trace'''''
Trace is an A4 book with white hard cover and simple screw binding. When opened, one can notice that papers vary from watercolour, sketching, toned paper to canvas and semi-transparent pages. Many of them are blank, forming the breathing space between full-page images that the viewer runs into while leafing through the book. Trace displays as a photobook, showing a photographic series of marks and traces which resemble details from paintings and drawings – brushstrokes, drips, stains and blots. Photographs disclose a typology of painterly marks in public space, where they are often overlooked as mere proofs of use and ravages of time.
The word Trace has multiple meanings: firstly, it means to copy a pattern through a piece of transparent paper or to draw a shape by showing its outlines. Secondly, it means to find something that was lost at the same time indicating a mark or sign that something has happened or existed. The latter is embedded in the photographs and the method of taking them, while the first is embodied in the work’s interaction with the viewer. 
Chance principle was the crucial way of working here and is closely related to my painting practice. I transformed myself into a hairsplitting observer, looking through the analog camera on a hunt for marginal marks of use. Instead of actively leaving traces as a painter, I became alert to be able to run into interesting, painterly fragments. I wished to make a photobook which would at the same time be a sketchbook, allowing the viewer to add his own marks, drawings and notes in it. However, the object itself turned out to be perceived as precious and vulnerable, and definitely not lead to viewer’s intervention. But one of the teachers suggested that the means of presentation might induce similar effect. Therefore, I decided to keep the form as is (instead of thinking about alternative, more sketchbook-like binding), and concentrate on the ways of presenting the work. The book will be exhibited in a small gallery space in Ljubljana. The middle of the table will be covered with charcoal powder, with the book and cotton gloves lying. Clean white covers would be stained immediately, and anyone who would want to leaf through the book, would inevitably leave marks.
This decision made me think more about what happens with the work when it reaches the audience and is somehow out of my hands. I became more aware of the importance of this viewer-artwork interaction and I recognize it in my previous works as well. --> reading writing Duchamp Creative act

Revision as of 15:06, 10 April 2019

Notes

Calendar page of Methods (10.4. 2019)

Text On Method Guidelines

WHAT IS A METHOD? method as a habit, how you do things, how you approach way of working methodology is an analysis of that about how I am working and what am I working on

what methods did you use and how did they work for you? what kind of researcher are you, what suits you how did you do it? your methods + content material practice of research decisions (a la mistakes) (which result in) change in direction recognition of a core research strand (recognition of what is important to your research) affordance (more than just the function) how the new skills you acquire tie in other skills and what such skills afford

what to use for the text on methods?

  • wiki pages of projects
  • tutorial logs
  • essays
  • interview

what - content

how - methods (techniques etc.)

why - decisions, choices

First draft

Where does it come from? (past)

  • photograms, collages, mixed media paintings

What is it now? (present)

1. Trace

  • what: photobook, blank pages, tactile,
  • how: finding, chance principle, marginal fragments in public space... obstacles&decisions in the making - change of direction (david's tutorial!)
  • why: to relate photography to my previous practice, to open up my ways of thinking, working, looking

READING&WRITING

  • what was the input (my readings)
  • how was it processed (my methods)
  • what are the products (my writings)
  • how does it feed Trace and Drawing camera

2. Drawing Camera

  • what: a) camera b) photographs produced by it
  • how: creating a wooden camera (customising the template), experimentation with materials (plastic foil, drawing tools)
  • why: to break down the complexity of the camera, to make a tool that is not commercially produced and is in this sense unique, to merge 2 principles of working(photographic and drawing methods)

3. TVACUUM

  • what: 2D animation
  • how:
  • why: to learn about digital tools for animation

READING&WRITING

  • what was the input (my readings)
  • how was it processed (my methods)
  • what are the products (my writings)
  • how does it feed TVACUUM

Where is it going? (future)

MAKING: photograms, collage

READING&WRITING - What is: image; drawing; sign; animation

It is not alone. (context)

Second Draft

Where does it come from? (past)

What is it now? (present)

1. Trace Trace is an A4 book with white hard cover and simple screw binding. When opened, one can notice that papers vary from watercolour, sketching, toned paper to canvas and semi-transparent pages. Many of them are blank, forming the breathing space between full-page images that the viewer runs into while leafing through the book. Trace displays as a photobook, showing a photographic series of marks and traces which resemble details from paintings and drawings – brushstrokes, drips, stains and blots. Photographs disclose a typology of painterly marks in public space, where they are often overlooked as mere proofs of use and ravages of time. The word Trace has multiple meanings: firstly, it means to copy a pattern through a piece of transparent paper or to draw a shape by showing its outlines. Secondly, it means to find something that was lost at the same time indicating a mark or sign that something has happened or existed. The latter is embedded in the photographs and the method of taking them, while the first is embodied in the work’s interaction with the viewer. Chance principle was the crucial way of working here and is closely related to my painting practice. I transformed myself into a hairsplitting observer, looking through the analog camera on a hunt for marginal marks of use. Instead of actively leaving traces as a painter, I became alert to be able to run into interesting, painterly fragments. I wished to make a photobook which would at the same time be a sketchbook, allowing the viewer to add his own marks, drawings and notes in it. However, the object itself turned out to be perceived as precious and vulnerable, and definitely not lead to viewer’s intervention. But one of the teachers suggested that the means of presentation might induce similar effect. Therefore, I decided to keep the form as is (instead of thinking about alternative, more sketchbook-like binding), and concentrate on the ways of presenting the work. The book will be exhibited in a small gallery space in Ljubljana. The middle of the table will be covered with charcoal powder, with the book and cotton gloves lying. Clean white covers would be stained immediately, and anyone who would want to leaf through the book, would inevitably leave marks. This decision made me think more about what happens with the work when it reaches the audience and is somehow out of my hands. I became more aware of the importance of this viewer-artwork interaction and I recognize it in my previous works as well. --> reading writing Duchamp Creative act