Having had another chat with Megan, we were discussing how my hallway installation could be added to in terms of creating a more cohesive piece; something that reflects its realism rather than an art student's crappy attempt at building a makeshift hallway. The talk included minute details that I have really even considered, things like an air freshener, the use of household objects/items such as a bowl of pauperie, or glass coasters. It's all in the small details I guess.
Another important element I was already looking at was the use of a lamp/light in my installation. It was brought up however that the overhead daylight bulbs in the studios would be on for the entirety of the exhibitions. Megan suggested the use of a board to cover above where my installation would be, however I didn't feel safe with that idea- I don't want the responsibility on my head if the board were to fall on anyone. Hence my next suggestion, using material like netting to cover the 'ceiling' on my installation, to darken the space and therefore the light from the hallway lamp would have a heavier impact and also create an ambience.
This afternoon saw a trip into B&Q after College, to look at flooring, skirting board and wallpaper for my installation.
Having measured my floor space to approx 6m2, I initially looked at carpet tiles- NB: I need a flooring that is thin; there is a fire door in my area and therefore as the door would be opening and closing, I need something with a tread of <5mm (the space left under the door) - the tiles worked out at just over £60 for 6m2.. Now whilst I want a quality fit and aesthetic, I'm a student and realistically I really don't have that sort of money to spend. The next idea was vinyl, again expensive. My total floor area is 1.5m x 3m, and the vinyl flooring came in rolls of 2m x 2m, at £25 each. Firstly it would come to a total of £50, but I would also have a rather unsightly join in the middle of my flooring. Not nice. The third option, Fablon. This is a product that is basically sticky back plastic with the look of a vinyl wooden floor. Now at £9.99 per roll, that's pretty nifty. Apart from when the roll comes in 1.5m x 0.9m, which then means I have to buy 4 at the grand total of just under £40.. Not so nifty. I'm not a tight wad, but at the same time I refuse to pay £40+ just for a floor that's only going to be stuck down for 3 weeks then binned. But alas, a miracle was cast upon us! Mumma Wright came across a dark brown carpet (the type you'd see in a classroom, but hey I can't afford to be choosy) that was about 4mm thick, and the best part? £3 per square metre!!!! £3 x 6m2 = £18, thank you veeeery much and I'll take that nicely. The wallpaper choosing was a million times easier. Now I'm not saying that I should be an interior designer... But I should. I was going for a generic 'hallway' type wallpaper, but also had the key point in mind that a brightly coloured/ patterned design would just flush my hanging photographs away, their intention and intensity would be lost into the background of a wallpaper style.
I've been looking further into what my installation could, would and should look like in terms of aesthetics, space and physical ability to work. A couple of super quick doodles show how I'm beginning to think about practicality and how the domestic environment would actually look.
If you can just make out, the above sketch shows the utilisation of a shelf, but on thinking about it- you don't really see shelves in hallways, therefore the below sketch has changed to use a table. The introduction of this household item would allow similar- if not larger- space for storage and is constantly adding to a homely aesthetic; it creates a more natural space to enter into.
Yet more reading, reading reading reading! Apparently it's good for you. I've currently loaned The Genius of Photography- How photography has changed our lives by Gerry Badger, and just been constantly reading through different sections (it's a big book). I came across the idea of 'Photonovel' yesterday afternoon and whilst in detail it's not so much the same, the overall gist seemed fairly familiar and I could make links with my current work. Photonovel: "The 'photonovel' was developed by Dutch photographers in the 1950s. Using photography as a diaristic medium, this type of photo book often employed a stream-of-consciousness style. And it defined a more personal, spontaneous kind of documentary photography, private rather than public in intention, focusing upon a photographer's own life, rather than others." Whilst this concept sounds completely alien, I do feel that it sort of works backwards in terms of my own work.. (stay with me) In the sense that although I didn't take the photographs, in particular the ones I'm going to be using for my final major project are like a photonovel for me. They behold a private view of my childhood years, and with the intentions of my publicised work wanting to be kept private, I feel it actually fits in pretty well.
I have recently been reading about Ilya Kabakov's theory of the 'Total Installation' and it has been very interesting and insightful in terms of the way I choose to go about the creation, set up and publication of my works. I wanted to do some background reading within the discipline of installation art, as it is an area I have never explored within my own work before. "One is simultaneously both a 'victim' and a viewer, who on the one hand surveys and evaluates the installation, and on the other, follows those associations, recollections which arise in him; he is ovecome by the intense atmosphere of the total illusion." The expectations and social habits that the viewer takes with him into the space of the installation that will remain with him as he enters, to be either applied or negated once he has taken in the new environment. "With a total installation, there is no divide between the artist and the audience. In a way, you create a painting and you allow the viewer inside the painting, which has become three-dimensional instead of one-dimensional." [1]
Audiences are typically saturated by the stories that the Kabakovs tell through their monumental works. They become the characters in the art that is taking place all around them. For example, in The Toilet, above, (originally erected for Documenta IX in 1992) viewers stand at the corner of a house in which they hear intermittent singing coming out of a toilet. Niccolo Sprovieri, who has known the Kabakovs for two decades and showcased their work at his gallery in London 14 years ago, reflects on this powerful work: "You are by the toilet in the corner of a room. You hear the voice of someone, sometimes singing, sometimes laughing. The idea is that everyone has shared rooms in this house and there is only one room in which you can be alone, a place where you can express yourself without fear of being judged."
After my analogue photography workshop with Megan Wellington, I've been thinking more about moving image- we were able to edit a Super 8 film reel and the aesthetic was something that has increasingly interested me. I would relate these ideas with my own work by using home videos of myself, again with the reference of the readymade and the links to memory (more specifically of my childhood, this again creates a cohesion and unity of work).
I have since been thinking about this further, and in terms of the way I am thinking about the overall look of my installation, I don't think a television would quite fit into it. Therefore... dun dun duuun! I've been thinking a lot about sound! It's not something I have ever considered before, I have never done my own sound piece, and in honesty I've never hugely looked into sound artists or given much heed towards the discipline. My idea at this stage is to still use the home videos of little me, but rather than have my audience seeing it, they would be hearing it instead. I feel that this relates back to Freud's concept of the uncanny; something that is familiar but also incredibly alien to us. I would use the sound but hidden within the installation- an unknown source. hearing but not seeing, hearing but not believing? ...Interesting.