The first project was the 24 hours narrative in which we were assigned to create a visual representation of something we documented within a 24 hour period. My project dealt with everything that was audible during 24 hours to me. Things I heard on the bus, on the radio, in the gym, at a party. Anywhere and everywhere I went. My end product was a grid of 8.5 x 11 inch sheets of paper with text phrases of select things I had heard. The critique of this that I got was that the phrases didn't necessarily stand out the way I wanted as a result of the format and that there was too much color going on. I was stuck on this for a really long time until finally I realized that it was the randomness of each individual phrase, fragmented as I had heard it, which was central to the project. It was the oddity of each that stood out. So just as I randomly came across each phrase with my ears, what better way to pass it along than for someone to come across it with their eyes. So now I have 24 3.5x4" stickers to place around. What I love about this is that because it lives out in the world instead of on a wall people can take it as they will. Some won't even note it probably, but others will see them, read them, and perhaps make their own connections, because we all have associations of our own that are triggered from perhaps the most random collection of phrases.
The second project was my data set poster. My content for the poster (autobiographical in nature) was all of the broadway shows I have seen in the past five years. I wanted to document the tradition, the routine, the memory of each show. Since the poster was so large, I struggled a lot with scale, wanting to draw attention to the playbills, it took me awhile to figure out how to incorporate all of the components into one unified "data set". The breakthrough here came with repetition of iconography. Through repetition I was able to display the key players (the people who I see shows with regularly), the favorite restaurants we visit over and over again, and the other things that over time have accumulated into such different memories, despite a pattern that is so habitual. Really separating the information into two parts I was able to write a little bit about each show and the things that were memorable about it. The poster really became about the people I was with and the things that happened around this routine. In the case of both projects I am happy with the end product now that I have revisited each, but still feel a little bit of a struggle to involve my thesis interests. Each does deal with memory and associations, and I guess on some level personality (type can have personality too!) it is just perhaps a rather loose connection.
The next challenge is a new cliche. I will have to update on that one later...
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