Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Can You See It?


What is your definition of a boundary? A wall? An door? A roof? Is it always something you can't pass through? Andrea Zittel, an American sculptor, installation artist, and Social Practice artist, blurs the boundaries between the the physical and the mental. Her project The Homestead Unit is a room that resembles a small cabinet. However there is more to it than its face value. This was built to be a private space creating a boundary; although an unconventional one. Zittel created this living space as James Trainor stated in his article "Don't Fence Me In", bureaucratically invisible. Although invisible boundaries cannot be seen, they are still boundaries, a limitation nonetheless.
The Homestead Unit is not a typical outdoor cabinet or indoor bedroom. Zittel fabricated it with the purpose for it to be transportable. These units were created to be easily disassembled, packed into a pick up truck moved and put back together at a different site in four hours. It sounds very much like a tent you would take with you on a camping trip. She has created many other mobile homes such as the Yard Yacht: Work Station (2001) and the Wagon Station(2003-ongoing), which are more aerodynamic than the Homestead Unit but just like the Homestead Unit, has the bare minimum space. As De Certeau believes, space is a practice of place. In the case of the portable living space Zittel creates, she in a sense has created a space, a very limited one, within a set of boundaries, the given place. De Certeau futher states that there are a few things needs for space to exist. Only when you take into consideration of a few factors can you create space. He states such things as vectorsof direction, velocties, and time variables which lead to the creation of space. So how does this relate to Andrea Zittel's Homestead Unit? She has created a space defined by a factors that can be defined as boundaries yet, it is also not a closed space. In this case, the majority of the front and left facade of the structure is contructed of glass walls. Walls define the boundaries of a building but is it the same sort of boundary when the boundary itself is invisible?
Foucault talks about the prejudices  of created for humans by humans throug the manipulation of the body and in turn the manipulation of space. He believes " The individual body becomes and element that may be placed, moved, articulated on others." Further stating that the actions of an individual can be controlled through disciplinary actions. This discipline he talks about is the model way to act, think, and feel for the individual. They are ideals that have become accepted as true. But what are these set disciplines? Zittel breaks the discipline of a living space. The Homestead Unit was built with many unique aspects. First,it was built to be able to disassembled moved and reassembled with ease. Second, it was built just under the dimensions that would require building permits. Third, half its walls consist of mostly glass panels. She has broken the accepted fact that homes need to be set in place. Space is created within the mind. Therefore it can be set anywhere as long as you think it. She has changed the perceived reality of needing a lot of space to live comfortably. And lastly she has broken through the barrier of what a boundaru is with the openess she creates through the use of glass walls. With just one cabinet space she created, Zittel challenges all the ideals of a living space we accept without a second thought. Like Foucault believes a discipline is created over a period of time and everything we believe at present day is the result of years of manipulation of the individual which resulted in the manipulation of space
Walls create a reference point for the surrounding to relate to. Just like De Certeau said, "A space exists when one takes into consideration of vectors of direction, velocties, and time variables." (Spatial Stories 117). Zittel's Homestead Unit can be thought of as the point everything else refers back to. Architecture is generally a larger scale of art and serves this purpose of space nicely. This can relate back to another of De Certeau's ideals; tours and maps. A tour can be broken down to be a description and a map is the definition. A tour is a personal one on one description of a space while a map becomes the broad bare minimum needed to define a space.
Looking back at Foucault, it is clear he believes the individual is created from the mass. An "individual" can only exist through the creation of a massive group. Like how the individual is the micro of the mass, space is the subcategory of place. Place is the same as the mass, meaning all place can be understood as one thing; a commonality For both instances, the micro is only observable with the aid of the macro. In Foucault's view, the individual can only be fabricated if there is a larger group; the mass. Invisible spaces are very similar to the individual within the mass. You can only have an invisible space or a so called implied space if there is larger form to be referenced to. Zittel says "What makes us feel liberated is not total freedom, but rather living in a set of limitations that we have created and prescribed for ourselves."  She has created that with a sense of freedom from her mobile homes. The Homestead Unit made with the goal of mobility leads to the creation of the individual space within the massive place anywhere it is placed. Not everyone sees things the same way. Space is finite object, but invisible spaces (implied spaces) are formed from a certain view of a certain perspective. Like beauty, space is in the eye of the beholder.

“Walking in the City” De Certeau Questions

1.    What doe de Certeau mean when he says, when a person sees Manhattan from the 110h floor of the world trade center, “his elevation transforms him into a voyeur. It puts him at a distance. It transforms the bewitching world [. . .] into a text. [. . .] It allows him to read it; to be a solar eye” (92).
            De Derteau says when a person is viewing everything from a place that high, he or she is not effected by certain norms. Because of how a person is isolated at this height, it is possible to see what they usually would not perceive at ground level.
2.    De Certeau states that “urban life increasingly permits the re-emergence of the element that the urbanistic project excluded” (95) and “spatial practices in fact secretly structure the determining social conditions of social life” (96). Explain these statements and discuss how they relate to the title of this section-- “From Concepts to Practices.”
            Urban life has changed the way people live, making their daily lives a lot more convenient. Because communication with others is so easily accessible in urban areas, information, ideas, and opinions travel around rather quickly. This allows the ease of change and with the ease of sharing, the intangible can transform into reality.
3.    What is “the Chorus of idle footsteps” and why can’t “they be counted” (97)? Refer to the notion of “tactile apprehension and kinesthetic appropriation” in your answer (97).
            The Chorus of idle footsteps refers to the people walking past each other in the city without a second thought of how these people are. Tactile apprehension is the sense that something unpleasant may happen and that’s how people are when they interact with strangers of see people for the first time. As there are accepted norms, there are accepted actions. That’s what kinesthetic appropriation is and people behave a certain way when placed in a new environment.

4.    De Certeau maintains that walking creates “one of these ‘real systems whose existence in fact makes up the city” (97).  What does this mean and how does it relate to his assertion that, “The act of walking is to the urban system what the speech act is to language” (97)? What is he trying to establish by saying this?
            The walking is a metaphor for how the people themselves set and create a system. The city is the space that allows the people to act out their ideas and thoughts.  He believes that anyone can spread their thoughts to the mass in a city/urban environment.
5.    Why can’t walking be “reduced to [a] graphic trail” such as you would see on a map or urban plan, according to de Certeau (99)?
            According to De Certeau, walking is not just a simple forward movement. There are many aspects that come into play such as “alethic" modalities of the necessary, the impossible, the possible, or the contingent), an epistemological value ("epistemic" modalities of the certain, the excluded. the plausible, or the questionable) or finally an ethical or legal value ("de­ontic" modalities of the obligatory, the forbidden, the permitted, or the optional).”
6.    What does de Certeau mean by “the long poem of Walking”  (101).
            Walking is like the thought process. There are a lot of trial and erros changes and flips. This can be seen as somewhat poetic.
7.    De Certeau defines two “pedestrian figures” through which “rhetoric of walking” (100) is created: synecdoche and asyndeton. He notes that synecdoche “expands a spatial element in order to make it play the role of a ‘more’” (101). On the other hand, asyndeton, “by elision, creates a ‘less” opens gaps in the spatial continuum, and retains only selected parts” (101).  Explore and explain these terms and relate them to de Certeau’s larger argument.
8.    De Certeau argues that the proper nouns which mark a city (naming streets, buildings, monuments) once were “arranged in constellations that heirarchize and semantically order the surface of the city . . .” (104) . However, even though these words eventually lose their original value, “their ability to signify outlives its first definition” (104) and they function to articulate “a second, poetic geography  on top of the geography of the lteral . . . meaning” (105). Explain what he means by these statements
9.    Explain de Certeau’s statement that “places are fragmentary and inward-turning histories, pasts that others are not allowed to read, accumulated times that can be unfolded but like stories held in reserve, [. . .] encysted in the pain or pleasure of the body: ‘I feel good here’” (108). How does this fit into the larger argument about the “habitability” of the city?
10. Explain the following quote, which occurs in the final paragraph of the essay: “the childhood experience that determines spatial practices later develops its effects, proliferates, floods private and public spaces, undoes their readable surfaces, and creates within the planned city a “metaphorical” or mobile city” (110). How does this statement fit into the argument as a whole?


Wednesday, March 5, 2014

proposal

Benny Deng
ZIttel, De Certeau, Focault

Can You See It?

I-              Zittel (Homestead Unit)
a.     Disassembly
b.     Creates inside and outside
II-            De Certeau (Spatial Stories)
a.     Space is a Place, Place is a Space
b.     Tours and maps
                                               i.     Specificity or generality
                                              ii.     Primary vs secondary source
III-          Focault (Docile Bodies)
a.     the individual is created from the mass
b.     Control of activity
c.      Discipline- recognized normality
How is space/place perceived?
Boundaries can be created through anything, but how do they effect the way we behave?



Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Invisible Space

The Homestead Unit is just a room; a unit of space, divided space, closed off space, private space. That’s what it does. It creates a boundary between things. But boundaries can sometimes be invisible to the eye. Invisible boundaries although unseen, are still boundaries, limitations nonetheless. The personal space or personal bubble some call is an invisible boundary. It is the space around a person he or she needs to feel comfortable.  This volume of space cannot be seen or even touched. Its boundaries can grow or shrink yet whatever changes to it is still hidden to us. The personal space or personal bubble is a boundary; an invisible one conjured by the mind.
In the case of The Homestead Unit, there are walls, a door, and a ceiling. All of it is tangible yet there is still a sense of openness. The occupant is enclosed but what’s the difference?


Wall may be walls, but what happens when they are transparent? The majority of the front and left façade of The Homestead Unit is made up of glass walls. Looking back at De Certeau’s “Spatial Stories”, place is seen as the partition of space. That is what gives it structure. Only when there is something to refer back to is place possible. The openness one might feel from being in The Homestead Unite is created from most of the so-called walls being mostly transparent. Or rather is it the sense of place not being created from the boundaries set by The Homestead Unit? Glass is transparent aside from the glare it might give off from reflecting light. But something that cannot be easily spotted could just be counted as invisible. It’s different from being camouflaged though. The sense that the walls of The Homestead Unit may not be there is different from them blending into the background. Something invisible can also be seen as nonexistent. After all you have to see it to believe it right?


                          A tour is a description and a map is the details. A space is like that of a tour. Space is vast and invisible but only observable through the correlation of other objects within the space. Imagine you were walking through a blizzard up on Mt. Everest. The intensity of the storm obscures your vision and in turn changes your perception of space. Your depth perception could even be affected. The point is, even space can vary from person to person because perception is not a constant. These units of enclosure she creates changes the perception of space by giving the observer a set place to reference the surrounding to. This task of creating reference points for space is much easier with architecture rather than some of her other projects like clothing and carpentry; architecture is generally on a bigger scale. Although we live on a rather small planet, space is still vast and is immeasurable just with the vision of your eyes. But people have a hard time understanding the concept of how small they really are.  Just take a stroll in the Great Plains, a large stretch of flat land where the ground and sky meet undisturbed by man-made. From that you can sort of grasp the immense amount of space there is.

             The Homestead Unit also has the ability to be placed almost anywhere; it was probably designed that way. As you can see from the pictures, in one it is placed in the comfort of the indoors and in the other it is placed in the harsh environment of the dry land. It can be counted as the reference point of space. In the gigantic openness of such outdoor regions, The Homestead Unit makes judgment of space just a little bit more true to reality.



Wednesday, February 19, 2014

A-Z HOMESTEAD UNITS

The Homestead Unit is just a room; a unit of space, divided space, closed off space, private space. That’s what it does. It creates a boundary between things. What is different about it is its openness. Although there are four walls, a ceiling and a door, most of the walls and door consist of large windows. Although it’s closed off, there is still a sense of openness.  Relating back to Foucault’s Spatial Stories, space is a practice of place, the Homestead Unit creates a space in a place by setting defined boundaries. Like he says, “A space exists when one takes into consideration vectors of direction, velocities, and time variables.” Only when there have been set boundaries, can there be a space in a place. However that depends on your definition of space and place. Is it not the other way around where place is a space that has been given an identity?


Here you can see that The Homestead Unit is designed to be a portable space, which can be setup in any place. It’s made with a metal-ridged ceiling, which could be seen as a being created with the mindset of durability; being able to withstand harsh weather like this.


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Docile Bodies

 My studio space could be said to be more than just work space. Generally the students at Pratt spend the majority of their days in the studio. But space is surrounded by three walls leaving entrance from only one side. Already you can tell it has been grounded by many barriers. But these limiting factors are what makes it so special. With a wall in front of my desk, a wall behind, a window to the right, and a 45degree angled ceiling it's a pretty comfortable place. These walls a normal studio space doesn't have creates a very unique place. Theres a special feeling of intimacy.



 Being all the way in the back section 9's space, not many other students come here during the day. It's after class hours when others start to swarm near the comfy little corner. Intimacy often creates other feelings, which lead to a disconnect from reality. Time, a way of judging reality. How things change over time, a period of space for an observer to view. There are many ways to regulate time and there are many ways to regulate a space through discipline. Foucault believes discipline affects a person not through the calculation of time, but through the experience the individual has. This corner of the studio creates a form intimacy which thus effects the individuals view of time through such experience of occupying this studio space.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Docile Bodies

1) How has the "air of a soldier" changed after there became a systemized way of training people?

2) The body became a tool for control and power. But how has "discipline", which has become a controlling factor become an accepted norm?

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Journal entry #1

Design class so far has always been held in a very abstract learning process. First we start out with a few guid lines. Then we draw a few lines. Then some more. And more after that. Eventually we create some rules, fix up the lines we drew, change them up a bit to add some flavor, add more lines to create density. The end product, a pattern that can be reproduced over and over with just some rules. This time around, I decided to ditch the traditional orthogonal lines. This time around, I picked up the french curve. And it all started out fine using an orthogonal grid to create consistent curves of different proportions, until I put everything on its edge. I changed it up turned the grid diagonal, which created still four sided shapes as a reference for creating later curves. BUT they were all the same lengths and angles anymore. This is were i got stuck and how i ended up with this:
a blank diagonal grid for the pin up. This is when my professor Robert Bracket pushed me over that damn annoying architect's block. Who cares if each shape wasn't the same. Just count them and start from there. Instead of measuring, just count those shapes.

Spatial Readings and Tintern Abby

It’s surprising how much space you need. It would surprise you how even the most absurd things would need some space. The easiest example of this is in your own head. Everyone thinks, no matter how unintelligent or how intelligent even, you think. These thoughts need space to occur. Incomprehensible right? No matter who you are, you need room for your thoughts, your ideas and your opinions. All this takes place in your brain; your brain is the place. However, you can only find all this in your mind.  Your mind is different form your brain just like how space and place are not the same, but still relate and sometimes are even within each other. As Michel de Certeau says in his writing, “Spatial Stories”, “Space is a practice of place.” But is it really?
            “To go to work or come home, one takes a “metaphor”- a bus or train. Stories could also take this noble name: every day, they traverse and organize places; they select and link them together; they make sentences and itineraries out of them. They are spatial trajectories.” As Michel de Certeau described in the text, transportation was the way of linking one place to another like work or home. Your everyday life turned into a story, and “every story is a travel story- a spatial practice. Such metaphor gave daily events structure, a step by step or 1-2-3 of your events because you took into consideration of space.
            Now this all makes sense, but is space really a practice of place? A place could be within a space, or rather it is. I believe in a different definition of these terms, space and place. Space is more of a general term for every volume out there. On the other hand, place is more unique more special. Place is a space given an identity, given form. Places are special.
            Places are more, well thought out and given the privilege of occupying a certain space. In the long title of “Tintern Abbey”, the Hermit sits alone. The poem opens up with the lines “FIVE years have past; five summers, with the length of five long winters!” A time frame was given from just the words five years. Time is intangible and can only be seen through its power on its surroundings, exactly like space. As we progress further down the stanza, we find out how much the hermit loves this place he has not been to in FIVE long years. This place, the bank of the Wye is of the physical world. He finds love and comfort in this place. But these feelings take place in the space of these banks.  The feelings and love for this place are the intangible sensations created by his mind. The mind is the space that translates all these “things” into place. From this, how can space be a practice of place when place is transformed space? In conclusion, place is the physical the limited; it’s space being forced into reality.  And space, it’s the intangible and unrestricted.
            The author of “Spatial Stories”, believes space only exists when one takes into consideration vectors of direction, velocities, and time variables. But is this not a better definition of place; something that has been grounded by these guidelines.  that’s not what space is. Space is indefinite. But even so, does anything really exist? Or does it all just take space in your mind?

Monday, February 3, 2014


Key Words for Fred Sandback Installation
-controlling
-limits
-biased
-divided
-rules
-cut
- wastage


Key Words for Playing with Strings
        Experience
-controlled
-detached
-centered
-curved
-boomerang
-limited working space
-conservative
-tension
-low to high
-point
      Occupying
-bridge
-middle
-ceiling
-thin
-invisible
-vine
-transparent
-cave
-entrance
-sky

The world
Two Fingers
Processed                                      Established
Connection

    Fred Sandback showed how easily space can be altered. Even with the slightest addition of an acrylic string the space can have a different feel. Such subtleties demonstrate the fragility of space. Through the process of creating space, designing space, everything changes the outcome. Just like Fred Sanback showed even strings can create a wall. 

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The Practice of Everyday Life Questions

Tours and maps

Questions
1. Space is a practiced place, but is a place not a more specific space?
2.  Does a "map" also depict motion like a "tour"?
3. If earlier maps were based off of ones own "measurements", this would mean the map would vary from person to person. How is this not different from a tour which is more of a personal description one gives to others to create a visualization?