Before our meeting in the Rocks I'd been doing a bit of thinking about the project (those long car trips from Canberra do have some upsides...)
I don't think our problem is going to be getting stuck for ideas, I think we are more likely to have too many ideas. So I tried categorising some of the ideas we've all had and seeing how they fit into an overall pattern - and the picture I came up with has the word DISTORTION in bold in the middle of the page. Around this, are three other main ideas that all relate to distortion, and all relate to one another (imagine lots of double-headed arrows). They are:
INTERVENTIONS
* Blurring the boundaries between what is real and what is fake in the environment
FABRICATIONS
* Blurring boundaries between what is real and fake in the history of the place and its surrounds
PERSPECTIVES
* Questioning what is real? Whose view is real/fake?
* Exploring the impact of seeing something at different times/from different angles/in different contexts
The line between each of these categories is blurry:
- Some people will see certain interventions, and this might alter their perspective
- All history is to some extent a fabrication - it depends on your perspective
Of course this a simplistic summary of some really major ideas that we have talked about. But I thought it might help us decide on which aspects of these ideas we'd most like to explore.
After talking about the project with her Mum, Dan has become a bit wary about the 'Histories' angle. Thoroughly researching and understanding the multiple histories of Bundanon and its surrounds would definitely take a lot of time and resources. If we did decide to go down this path we would need to really narrow the scope to something very specific so that we don't end up looking stupid, or perpetuating the tradition of overlooked and forgotten stories...
Which brings me to my final point. None of us want to end up producing something which is amateurish or undergraduate-ish. But we are (at least I think we are) proposing to explore a medium which is new to all of us - site-specific artwork. I would hope that we all have enough skill in our individual disciplines, and have developed enough artistic judgement that we would be able to recognise if what we were producing was naive or unprofessional. But I think we really need to therefore decide on what we are aiming to achieve in our two weeks (with contingency plans). If we don't agree on an expected outcome before we go away, methinks this may be a recipe for disaster... What do you all think?
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