A day at Primadonna festival in Stowmarket was illuminating as ever - I spent most of my time at the World As It Should Be stage. Jane Dyball chaired a great discussion with Selina Flavius of Black Girl Finance and Bank of England’s Jack Meaning, co-author of Can’t We Just Print More Money? Lots to think about and I learnt about Pigouvian tax. Jenni Nuttall, academic and author of Mother Tongue was fascinating – the book, all about words, their control and meaning is already on the bookshelf. Sawad Hussain and Dr Sofia Rehman created a conversation that talked about how language retracts and expands, allowing movement through time. The quiz about our digital relationships was excellent – some surprising new knowledge. Elaine Kasket’s Reboot: Reclaiming Your Life in a Tech-Obsessed World used a great platform to share her knowledge – another book that will be on the shelves when it’s out. Other highlights include Preeti Dhillon, The Shoulders We Stand On which details non-white collective movements that have attempted change. The conversation led to how government repeatedly used community liaison positions to slow the momentum of change through division. A highlight of any festival or talk is Winnie M Li. I have heard her speak before about sexual violence and her life as an activist. She is such an amazing woman, her knowledge and strength give content and argument to the voices and thoughts I have, especially around understanding our world built with a particular set of rules which in turn mean that we can only work within those parameters. What we measure is what we value, consider the concept of teaching to the test. Thinking outside this paradigm is a challenge, especially if those rules are created by men unlikely to give those powers away and who use the very systems, they have created to enforce them. All in all, a great day which leaves one energised to get back in the fight!
Monday, 31 July 2023
itsallaboutrethinkingthesystemwelivewithin
A day at Primadonna festival in Stowmarket was illuminating as ever - I spent most of my time at the World As It Should Be stage. Jane Dyball chaired a great discussion with Selina Flavius of Black Girl Finance and Bank of England’s Jack Meaning, co-author of Can’t We Just Print More Money? Lots to think about and I learnt about Pigouvian tax. Jenni Nuttall, academic and author of Mother Tongue was fascinating – the book, all about words, their control and meaning is already on the bookshelf. Sawad Hussain and Dr Sofia Rehman created a conversation that talked about how language retracts and expands, allowing movement through time. The quiz about our digital relationships was excellent – some surprising new knowledge. Elaine Kasket’s Reboot: Reclaiming Your Life in a Tech-Obsessed World used a great platform to share her knowledge – another book that will be on the shelves when it’s out. Other highlights include Preeti Dhillon, The Shoulders We Stand On which details non-white collective movements that have attempted change. The conversation led to how government repeatedly used community liaison positions to slow the momentum of change through division. A highlight of any festival or talk is Winnie M Li. I have heard her speak before about sexual violence and her life as an activist. She is such an amazing woman, her knowledge and strength give content and argument to the voices and thoughts I have, especially around understanding our world built with a particular set of rules which in turn mean that we can only work within those parameters. What we measure is what we value, consider the concept of teaching to the test. Thinking outside this paradigm is a challenge, especially if those rules are created by men unlikely to give those powers away and who use the very systems, they have created to enforce them. All in all, a great day which leaves one energised to get back in the fight!
Sunday, 30 July 2023
takingapartandputtingbacktogether
I thought that taking apart my 3D printer and cleaning it would be a daunting task, but the whole process including replacing the nozzle was not so bad – I’m up and running and a couple of successful test prints later means that I’m back to exploring what is possible at the edge of the machine’s constraints. Onto screens - Ed Sheeran’s 4-part documentary Sum of it All was moving and beautiful. First Daughter was quite sweet and not quite as obvious as it could have been. Happiness for Beginners was just sweet. Dragged across Concrete was oddly dull.
Monday, 24 July 2023
handmademachines
Continuing to work on 3D prints, pushing the printing to the edge of its parameters. By exploring the potential of the process, the unexpected happens. The outcomes are unlike those on the screen but are no less interesting. The latest works are at the far end of the settings - 0 fill, 0 support and its parameters are set at 1. Who knows what will happen as the work starts to gain some form of fragility in line with the human hand and in some way celebrates the unknown. This year’s Latitude was fun – highlights include the glorious Pulp, the hypnotic Tinariwen, dancing to the always fantastic disco shed and singing along to Beatles Dub Club – hilarious. Onto screens - Asteroid City was glorious and yet strangely tiring with the excessive details in the costumes, sets and the clever script – both the words themselves and the general story – a must see. Songwriter, the 2018 documentary about Ed Sheeran is stunningly beautiful – mesmerizing when songs are created from almost nothing it’s a little like magic. Next up the 2023 documentary Sum of it All. Just getting into Champion – lots to think about all accompanied by a great soundtrack.
Labels:
3D,
3D printing,
film recommendations,
latitude,
music recommendation
Monday, 17 July 2023
stuffallpiledupbutfordifferentreasons
Working on a new approach to creating 3D prints. Looking at the structural opportunities available when exploring fill without creating surfaces. I was struck by the intriguing imagery created when working with the software that you use to create the structures, ready to be printed. I use a combination of SketchUp, 3D printer and PrusaSlicer, this is then worked on in Photoshop. Using PrusaSlicer, as an image generator rather than just the software to make 3D prints. The images created explore the liminal space of the 3D experience – the image, the object, and the image of the object. It’s both there and not there. An afternoon of breathing in – 3 shows in London full of stuff all piled up but for different reasons – Keifer at White cube – piles of so much stuff piled very high and culled from a gigantic archive seemingly without much editing, Ibon Aranberri at Raven Row – piles of stuff, carefully organised after being shown in a different configuration elsewhere. RESOLVE Collective at the Curve Barbican – piles of stuff, piled up after the artist’s felt disparaged by the systems the work sat within. 3 piles of stuff all piled up but for different reasons. Onto screens - Master gardener – theatrical slightly all-over the place. Beau is afraid – a terrifying insight into a terrified mind. Was about to give up on Barry around the beginning of season 2 when the blood and brutality was getting all too much but so glad to of worked through that as season 4 was gloriously excellent – the tonal shift from dark humour to almost cartoon was genius and the culmination in episode 8 was so clever, the writing had me unsure of everything as the story spun off into several realities, often at once.
Labels:
3D,
3D printing,
exhibition recommendation,
film recommendations,
image,
software
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