Friday, November 13, 2015

Sand, Ruins & Kintsugi



I approached this sand paining from a different perspective. Rather than thinking of the depicted space as a bird's eye view pattern, I focused on topography as a tactile experience. I asked myself what would the landscape feel like if I could run my hands across it. Thinking of its surface as a skin or cloth over an underlying structure, I had to consider the experience of each curve and form individually. As I did this, each area took on unique characteristics that resulted in a less unified but more dynamic composition. 

When creating the ruins for this work, I thought about the practice of Kintsugi. Gold is used to repair broken pottery creating an unpredictable, decorative pattern. The philosophy behind this practice contends that when an object is damaged and repaired; it is not thought of as a destructive process but rather an important part of the object's history. So instead of creating a series of mound structures and building around them, I thought of the ruins as a rolling plain of fractured parts that required a network of seams to mend the landscape back together in a different way.






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