First outline

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
Revision as of 10:13, 5 October 2017 by Moistuart (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<big><big>BOREDOM</big> </big> Introduction: When I’m sitting in a cinema and find the film is unexpected obscure, I sense boredom. When I have plenty of time yet not sure w...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

BOREDOM Introduction: When I’m sitting in a cinema and find the film is unexpected obscure, I sense boredom. When I have plenty of time yet not sure what to do but staying in my room, I sense boredom. When I’m travelling on the train with a no battery phone, I sense boredom. When I started to write this paper, I sense boredom. Is boredom merely a boring/negative emotion? What can boredom bring to me? What am I discovering through boredom? Interestingly, boredom is more positive rather than negative to many artists and researchers. As Walter Benjamin wrote in <The Arcades Project>: Boredom is the threshold to great deeds. This paper mainly focuses on boredom from perspectives of psychology, philosophy, contemporary art, myself. Furthermore, related questions to myself.

Psychology & philosophy: From Early research about boredom to boredom in modernity

Boredom in art works: Ragnar Kjartansson’s <Me and My Mother>,2000-2015. Rafael Rozendaal. John Cage < Silence>, 1961. Fischli & Weiss, etc.

Qian’s boredom: What does boredom mean to me? What’s my boredom experiences? Is it a problem? Poetic and ambiguous boredom.

From boredom to my final project: Loop, repeating, soft, more to come… What are the constitutions of boredom? What elements can I extract from boredom and how I manage to transfer this invisible abstract emotion to my visual work.

Conclusion: Boredom is a warm grey fabric lined on the inside with the most lustrous and colorful of silks. In this fabric we wrap ourselves when we dream.

Bibliography: The MIT Press & Whitechapel Gallery, [2017], <Boredom, Documents of Contemporary Art>, Edited by Tom McDonough. Peter Fischli & David Weiss, [2016], <HOW TO WORK BETTER>. Otto Fenicbel, [], <On The Psychology of Boredom>. Michael E. Gardiner, Julian Jason Haladyn, [2016], <Boredom Studies Reader> More to come…