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Archive for the ‘Field Guide’ Category

Print Workshop

 

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Textile Workshop

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3D/Wood Workshop

Replicating an object on a smaller scale, beginning with initial drawings with measurements to work from.

FINISHED MODEL

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Ideas – 57 sides

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could develop this idea with mirrors, using lighting to highlight the reflective surface.

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Metal Workshop

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 Victoria Jenkins produces a series of still lives, constructing fictional archives.

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There is a visual suggestion of a landscape achieved with the way Lynch positions the sculptures using a tabletop and wall backdrop. The division of the table and the wall becomes pictorially that which runs through land and sky. This horizontal line cuts through Lynch’s photographs emphasising the relation to landscape.

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Getting more ideas:

50 Chairs - Innovations in Design and Materials - Mel ByarsModern Chairs - Charlotte & Peter Fiell

A Century of Chair Design - Frank Russell, Phillippe Garner, John Read

Modern Chairs - Charlotte & Peter Fiell

 

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Creating Something which ultimately stays the same but changes as it moves.

‘Every person sees things in his or her own way and as perception becomes a person’s reality this can lead to misunderstandings. Differences in perception result in different people seeing different things and attaching different meanings to the same stimuli.’

– Taken from ‘Perception to Reality’ – Rahim Poonjani

 

This concept of human behaviour, the unpredictable way thoughts are processed was the focal point to progress from.

The Field Guide given to all students to work from meant there was a likelihood that students would end up choosing the same proposals, but was very unlikely any two students would produce the same work. Leading me to create a set of simple instructions – the permanent factor of my work.

The instructions partnered with a paper bag were sent out. Asking to utilise the bag in their daily routine – allowing people to contemplate the story behind the bags.

I then set up a blog http://lcramb.wordpress.com/

Displaying the work as a blog it allows for wider viewing, allowing responders to view their bags knowing what it was being used for. Being available to be constantly updated.

The blog also allowed me to document the whole process, and the struggle it can be depending on people.

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Frank Warren handed out 3,000 printed postcards, compiling the returned secrets into a book.

 

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