User:Ålnik

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki

Hello, world! Ål here.

About

Digitart, illustration, visual facilitation & scribing, graphic design. Looking for experimenting with tools, researching peculiar topics and finding focus before the end of XPUB2. ;)

Ok-card-alnik2.jpg

XPUB1

Special Issue #16: Vernacular language processing

Meanwhile, here are my current experiments on how can we process vernacular languages:


01. Blackout (poetry)

def Blackout poetry (when a page of text is completely blacked out (coloured over with permanent marker so that it is no longer visible) except for a select few words. When only these words are visible, a brand new story is created from the existing text.)

Blackout (poetry) is an intervention in someone else's work to create new meanings, express new ideas, find new directions. It can also be a way to annotate and focus on the big picture. Or not?

Example: Blackout poem from the first page of the "House of dust" journal, see here.

02. Repetition and new meanings

By printing a short sentence a hundred times, repeating itself, we can discover a new meaning. We can start from a different word every time and construct several meanings. Pretty simple, but fun to try. Example: Welcome to the World of Bees

Research

What is vernacular language? Before, now, tomorrow. When was the first time anyone came with the concept of vernacular? How can it be processed? What interventions can be done and why?

In the world of abstract, whilst trying to orientate myself, I am looking for familiar things and starting points. A little side-gig exploration on my own is available here.

Reading list

  1. Orientation in a Big World: On the Necessity of Horizonless Perspectives (Patricia Reed)
  2. Queer Phenomenology - Orientations Objects Others (Sara Ahmed)
  3. Whistleblowing from Below: Finnish Rural Inhabitants’ Letters to the Imperial Power at the Turn of the Twentieth Century (Sami Suodenjoki)

Prototyping

Embracing on a journey to play with programming and create stuff whilst doing that.

Archive