Printing Ochre

Elpitha Tsoutsounakis
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Abstract

The discipline of geology was relatively new at the start of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) in the late 1800s, but through the organisation of an efficient government bureau and the voice of its printed page, it became a dominant perspective in the way generations of citizens relate to and view the natural world, human and nonhuman, life and nonlife. I choose to position my press in direct opposition to the maintenance of these dualisms. I will argue the critical role of print in facilitating USGS domination of terrestrial beings in a practical sense, yet beyond the methods and reach of publication, I believe the products of the USGS mediate our understanding of and relation to these beings. Instead, design practices can be directed towards changing attitudes and understanding between humans and nonhumans. Monika Bakke argues for the importance of artistic endeavours in addressing our collective futurity: Drawing on both life’s mineral origins and its key role in shaping mineral species, artists are turning to technoscience in order to develop, outside expert circles, better understanding of physical, chemical, and biological environments, not just of the geological past but also those to come in the future. ... Yet, their methodologies are specific to art which offers creative ontological and ethical contributions to public debate. (2017, p. 43) I am developing a design research paradigm relating to ochre as an epistemic tool for human and nonhuman intersubjectivity and ontological reconciliation or reunification between life and nonlife. I model my practice after a simplification of the USGS: to survey (observe, describe, collect) and to report (archive, document, record), with some critical variance in method and outcomes.
赭石印刷
19 世纪末,美国地质调查局(USGS)成立之初,地质学还是一门相对较新的学科,但通过一个高效的政府部门的组织及其印刷品的声音,地质学成为了一代又一代公民与自然世界、人类与非人类、生命与非生命相关联和看待自然世界的主导视角。我将论证印刷品在促进美国地质调查局从实际意义上控制陆地生物方面所起的关键作用,然而,除了出版的方法和范围之外,我认为美国地质调查局的产品也在调解我们对这些生物的理解以及我们与这些生物的关系。相反,设计实践可以致力于改变人类和非人类之间的态度和理解。莫妮卡-巴克(Monika Bakke)认为,艺术创作在解决我们的集体未来问题方面具有重要意义:艺术家们从生命的矿物起源及其在塑造矿物物种方面的关键作用出发,转向技术科学,以便在专家圈子之外更好地理解物理、化学和生物环境,不仅是过去的地质环境,还有未来的环境。...然而,他们的方法论是艺术所特有的,为公共辩论提供了创造性的本体论和伦理贡献。(2017年,第43页)我正在开发一种与赭石有关的设计研究范式,将其作为人类和非人类主体间性以及生命与非生命之间本体论和解或统一的认识论工具。我以美国地质调查局(USGS)的简化模式为我的实践建模:调查(观察、描述、收集)和报告(归档、记录、记录),在方法和结果上有一些关键的差异。
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