Sunday, 12 May 2013

The Great Hall, NGVI


Memory | Material


 Walking into the Great hall at the NGVI, my eyes where immediately drawn to the ceiling of the room. I walked to the end of the room and sat against the wall, taking in all the colors and patterns created by the stained glass. In our second reading this quote by Frances, R, ‘ Home in the world: The art of Do-Ho-Suh’ stood out to me “ The house shelters daydreaming, the house protects the dreamer, the house allows one to dream in peace”.  The reason I choose this quote was I able to relate it to the feeling of being in the great hall, the enormous space, the high walls all leading to this magnificent sight of color, I felt like the space held lots of dreams and memories.

And the second quote I got from the same reading was “Through dreams the various dwelling-places in our lives co-penetrate and retain the treasures of former days. “. The fact that the great hall to me seemed like a place where dreams were had and kept, I felt that the quote put my feelings perfectly.

When sitting down staring at the ceiling, I was also flooded with primary school memories, when we used to make paper lanterns and cut out different shapes and stick colored cellophane over the shapes and light a candle. The cuts in the lanterns would glow different colors in the night. The ceiling reminded me of one big lantern, a place that offers, shelter, light and comfort.

As Jenny Liu writes “ In this world, the idea of home resides solely in memory and metaphor”, I believe that the use of stained glass and patterns has evoked in me the memories of childhood, illustrating that a sense of home does reside in our memories, and can be evoked by “ various dwelling-places”.  

Friday, 10 May 2013

NGV Mixed Tape


Aesthetics | concepts | atmospheres

“ No matter how small he is, he has all the space anyone could ever want, right there in the television box.” – Andy Warhol

 When reaching the 3rd floor of the Ian Potter Centre, I was immediately drawn to the set of seven plain wood boxes with noise coming out of them.  As I got closer I saw that they were in fact seven televisions, and they were in a plain wood box. I stood and filmed the boxes for about one minute, after filming the TV screens I stood and just soaked in the atmosphere around me.

On one hand you have this Huge gallery space where people tip toe around looking at art work and then you have these TV’s playing music clips from the 1980’s, which are chaotic with bright colors glaring straight at you.  I suppose I feel like the artwork created two different atmospheric moments for me. One being when I watched the 80’s music clips felt like I was in my living room watching daggy music clips on video hits and dancing around and then on the other hand everything else around me was silent and I remembered that I was in fact in a gallery and not my living room.  

Aesthetically the TV’s inside the plain wood boxes to me are quite intriguing to look at, I think the use of the wood didn’t take away from the clips being played, in fact I feel it made me focus more on what was happening in the clips. To sum up how the artwork made me feel and how I was able to relate to it I quote Andy Warhol “ Space is all one space and thought is all one though, but my mind divides its spaces into spaces and thoughts into thoughts”



Monday, 22 April 2013

London Underground




Having recently travelled around Europe and experienced the different public transport systems, London Underground was the one that stood out to me the most.  The worlds firsts underground rail system, opening in 1863 now carries over one billion passengers a year.

Also know as the tube, which quite literally it is. The walls curved at the top as well as the trains and the escalators, all create a tunnel vision throughout the whole of the underground. The walls of the undergrounds are tiled with majority white titles and the odd black or brown tile. Every station has different tiling, brown and the black are used to create a pattern throughout multiple platforms.

When entering the underground, you emerge into this space which feels like you are in a sci-fi world, the high beam white lights and the yellow, blue and red interiors, the etiquette of where you stand on the escalator and the platform, passengers lined up in a somewhat orderly fashion, and then there is the chaos where people just want to get on their train and its first in first served.

I stood on the platform after just missing a train; I was one of five standing, it felt like the calm before the storm. I had 2 minutes of complete calmness around me and then the chaos started again, people rushing to grab a seat and get on the train.  Once on the train it was 3 minutes to the next stop with no view of the outside, just a lit up carriage and the pitch-dark walls of the tunnel.  

I take the escalator up to the street, I can see the sky looking down on me, I get to the top and I feel like I’ve entered an entirely new world.