{"title":"鲸纹。绘制图解污渍","authors":"Joanna Leah","doi":"10.1386/drtp_00095_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This project adopts the concept of a dance diagram such as Andy Warhol’s Fox Trot (1962) introduced by Rosalind Krauss in her writing on the relationship of material forces in a diagrammatic structure to create a model of notation with actions and objects derived from Edgelands. Coined by Marion Shoard, Edgelands are post-industrial cityscapes, a typology of abandon, dereliction and decay. Shoard notes these sites are characterized by creative cultural practices of photography and graffiti; urban explorers, parkour. My Blubilds project aimed to challenge these cultural practices of parkour and graffiti to provoke new engagement in those sites. To this end, I apply the concept of Rosalind Krauss’s resistant diagram and gravity I adapted from Formless: A User’s Guide (). Gravity is a force of undoing to remake spaces – and I draw with my body and equipment to facilitate gravity within a dance diagram to create a new space. This contrasts the cultural practices such as Graffiti and parkour and breaks with those existing activities to tag, mark and leave a new trace in Edgelands. Blubilds draw a live embodied diagram, based on the movement patterns found in Edgeland sites, since ‘action’ is to draw a line with the body. Tim Ingold’s approach to drawing informs my perspective that lines of movement that draw (in) place engage with the lived narratives of those places. Ingold suggests that the narratives that make place are created by entangled lines created by movement; furthermore, to ‘draw out’ – as in Douglas phrase – suggests that drawing in place ‘draws-out’ new spaces. Blue is emblematic as a nod to Krauss’s ‘rude noise, the blueprint and the acts of Graffiti’, it becomes Blubilds – a dynamic diagrammatic stain.","PeriodicalId":36057,"journal":{"name":"Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice","volume":"6 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Blubilds – drawing diagrammatic stains\",\"authors\":\"Joanna Leah\",\"doi\":\"10.1386/drtp_00095_1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This project adopts the concept of a dance diagram such as Andy Warhol’s Fox Trot (1962) introduced by Rosalind Krauss in her writing on the relationship of material forces in a diagrammatic structure to create a model of notation with actions and objects derived from Edgelands. Coined by Marion Shoard, Edgelands are post-industrial cityscapes, a typology of abandon, dereliction and decay. Shoard notes these sites are characterized by creative cultural practices of photography and graffiti; urban explorers, parkour. My Blubilds project aimed to challenge these cultural practices of parkour and graffiti to provoke new engagement in those sites. To this end, I apply the concept of Rosalind Krauss’s resistant diagram and gravity I adapted from Formless: A User’s Guide (). Gravity is a force of undoing to remake spaces – and I draw with my body and equipment to facilitate gravity within a dance diagram to create a new space. This contrasts the cultural practices such as Graffiti and parkour and breaks with those existing activities to tag, mark and leave a new trace in Edgelands. Blubilds draw a live embodied diagram, based on the movement patterns found in Edgeland sites, since ‘action’ is to draw a line with the body. Tim Ingold’s approach to drawing informs my perspective that lines of movement that draw (in) place engage with the lived narratives of those places. Ingold suggests that the narratives that make place are created by entangled lines created by movement; furthermore, to ‘draw out’ – as in Douglas phrase – suggests that drawing in place ‘draws-out’ new spaces. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这个项目采用了Rosalind Krauss在她关于图解结构中物质力量关系的文章中引入的Andy Warhol的《狐步》(Fox Trot, 1962)的舞蹈图解的概念,创造了一个来自edgellands的动作和物体的符号模型。“边缘地带”这个词是由Marion Shoard创造的,是后工业时代的城市景观,是一种被遗弃、被遗弃和腐朽的类型。Shoard指出,这些网站的特点是摄影和涂鸦的创造性文化实践;城市探险者,跑酷。我的Blubilds项目旨在挑战这些跑酷和涂鸦的文化习俗,以激发这些地点的新参与。为此,我应用了Rosalind Krauss的阻力图和重力的概念,我改编自Formless: A User 's Guide()。重力是一种解构空间的力量——我用我的身体和设备在一个舞蹈图中促进重力来创造一个新的空间。这与涂鸦和跑酷等文化活动形成了对比,并打破了这些现有的活动,在Edgelands上留下了新的痕迹。Blubilds根据在Edgeland遗址发现的运动模式绘制了一个活生生的具体图表,因为“行动”是与身体画一条线。Tim Ingold的绘画方法让我认识到,画(在)地方的运动线条与这些地方的生活叙事有关。因戈尔德认为,构成地点的叙事是由运动产生的纠缠线创造的;此外,用道格拉斯的话来说,“draw out”意味着在适当的地方“draw out”新的空间。蓝色象征着克劳斯的“粗鲁的噪音,蓝图和涂鸦行为”,它变成了Blubilds——一种动态的图解染色。
This project adopts the concept of a dance diagram such as Andy Warhol’s Fox Trot (1962) introduced by Rosalind Krauss in her writing on the relationship of material forces in a diagrammatic structure to create a model of notation with actions and objects derived from Edgelands. Coined by Marion Shoard, Edgelands are post-industrial cityscapes, a typology of abandon, dereliction and decay. Shoard notes these sites are characterized by creative cultural practices of photography and graffiti; urban explorers, parkour. My Blubilds project aimed to challenge these cultural practices of parkour and graffiti to provoke new engagement in those sites. To this end, I apply the concept of Rosalind Krauss’s resistant diagram and gravity I adapted from Formless: A User’s Guide (). Gravity is a force of undoing to remake spaces – and I draw with my body and equipment to facilitate gravity within a dance diagram to create a new space. This contrasts the cultural practices such as Graffiti and parkour and breaks with those existing activities to tag, mark and leave a new trace in Edgelands. Blubilds draw a live embodied diagram, based on the movement patterns found in Edgeland sites, since ‘action’ is to draw a line with the body. Tim Ingold’s approach to drawing informs my perspective that lines of movement that draw (in) place engage with the lived narratives of those places. Ingold suggests that the narratives that make place are created by entangled lines created by movement; furthermore, to ‘draw out’ – as in Douglas phrase – suggests that drawing in place ‘draws-out’ new spaces. Blue is emblematic as a nod to Krauss’s ‘rude noise, the blueprint and the acts of Graffiti’, it becomes Blubilds – a dynamic diagrammatic stain.