Monday, November 30, 2009

Rachel's collection




Hi Pippa!

Here are a few of the photos that I took of my collection -- I figured I would let you choose which one you liked best.

An empty vase that once held birthday flowers was the main impetus for the start of this collection. I wanted a new use for the vessel after the flowers had died, and this desire nicely coincided with my already frequent trips to the beach. So, two springs ago I decided that each time I visited the nearby lake, I would choose a few especially appealing rocks to bring back with me and place inside the clear glass for display. I would often return with entire pockets full of stones and beachglass because it was difficult for me to narrow down my choices -- every rock was so beautiful and unique, how could I not want them all? I would scour the sand slowly, paying close attention to how each rock felt in my hand or changed color in water or sunlight. As time went on and seasons changed, I found myself adding to the collection with leaves, bark, and dismembered flowers that would catch my eye on walks home from work, school, or wherever.

The vase occupies the center of my mosaic coffee table. Its composition continuously changes as I add new elements and as the old ones shift positions or, in the case of the dying flowers and leaves, colors and smells. The contents have become a kind of souvenir of the precise moments in time when they first grabbed my attention. I also enjoy having these small remnants of nature in my home since I often feel like there is not enough nature in the city of Chicago to satisfy me or that I don't have the time to take advantage of it.

I've gotten into the habit of collecting rocks or pieces of plants from various parks and beaches whenever I go on a vacation or a trip, although I don't mix these in with the vase in the photos. I haven't yet figured out a way that I want to display those, but I like to keep them separate from the others so that I can remember their original environment more easily when I look at them.

Please let me know if you need any more details about this. I hope this was helpful! Good luck with your project, and let me know how it turns out!

-Rachel

thought

i wish there was a cache of all amazing documentation like that. - i mean aside from youtube, one that is organized.

i find writing in journals difficult

i always have. i think things in other ways, or collect things and i deas to think. i dont know.

collections around my home












Sunday, November 29, 2009

notes on oriental institute

middle east f1919
"PARTAGE SYSTEM"
coined term "fertile Crescent"

relief: parthenon / state capital building of nebraska

spec exhibits gallery>
excavation vs. purchase
egypt / ancient nubia (1960s)

collecting "A GOOD DEAL"

lawsuit - rightfully (rightful ownership - v.v.interesting legal battle w/ instit. in middle)

ernst hertzfeldt

eclectic collection of ivories (MEGGIDO)

OSSUARY (boz for bones)

objects with value /

normal museum / collectors as financial suppoerters - here researchers


mesapotamea

6-sided clay prism / cunaiform writing

sennacherib prism

meant for gods not people
**

yelda khorsabad court

open mouth rituals

looting of baghdad museum

object ownership

weird notes of equation of the costs and benefits of object ownership:


the value of an object one collects ( )in terms of it's cultural / financial value as well as its emotional value as well as its lifelong cost to one in terms of space (we pay for space it takes up - on our shelf, for instance), and duration of time we have it (spend taking care of it, spend working to afford to acquire it, and to store it in space over the amount of benefit to the body, or cost to the body equals its value.

Record Collection










http://www.wired.com/listening_post/2008/02/worlds-largest/

http://gizmodo.com/5038783/worlds-largest-record-collection-is-worth-50-million-no-one-wants-it-for-3-million

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j7F_4S2lgM

The Archive from Sean Dunne on Vimeo.