Research 4.0: Difference between revisions

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[[File:METHOD_SOL.JPG|1300px]]
[[File:METHOD_SOL.JPG|1300px]]
Description recent work ‘''The Journey to Fuji’''
The symbol of ‘two mountains’, represents the ‘empty placeholder‘ or a symbol of an image. What does that say? What kind of language is it? Where does the symbol comes from? It’s NOT just a sign. It becomes more than that, it starts a conversation.
By researching all the different symbols from mountains I bump in to the symbol of landscape mode on a camera. At medially I so a connection with the Fuji Camera and the Fuji Mountain in Japan. I was never sure if the symbol comes from there, but I came up with a fiction-facts story about the mountain-symbol. In combination with the installation its creates a kind of Japanese- myth experience. I wanted to change the context of the symbol, and the point of view of the ‘two mountains’ so it starts a conversation.
[file:Method_Journey_to_fuji.jpg]]

Revision as of 11:48, 15 April 2015

15 April 2015

Let Lose of the Situationisten and the concept of ‘Free’-‘Open’ work. Do you want people touching your work and making bad things out of it? See it as an inspiration of making your own work, but let go of the participation, and open work.

Focus on the things that you are making, what role do you have?

You as editor

You as an artist

You as the controller

You control..


After the mountain symbol and Guy Debord, trey other things with you graphic of process, what happens?

METHOD SOL.JPG


Description recent work ‘The Journey to Fuji’

The symbol of ‘two mountains’, represents the ‘empty placeholder‘ or a symbol of an image. What does that say? What kind of language is it? Where does the symbol comes from? It’s NOT just a sign. It becomes more than that, it starts a conversation. By researching all the different symbols from mountains I bump in to the symbol of landscape mode on a camera. At medially I so a connection with the Fuji Camera and the Fuji Mountain in Japan. I was never sure if the symbol comes from there, but I came up with a fiction-facts story about the mountain-symbol. In combination with the installation its creates a kind of Japanese- myth experience. I wanted to change the context of the symbol, and the point of view of the ‘two mountains’ so it starts a conversation.

[file:Method_Journey_to_fuji.jpg]]