This one’s courtesy of PZ.
July 4, 2009
October 10, 2008
apocatastasis
Apocatastasis. What it means:
1) Restoration, re-establishment, renovation
2) Return to a previous condition
3) (Astronomy) Return to the same apparent position, completion of a period of revolution.
Think about it.
Now that the semester is almost over, I’m just getting around to talking about what I did in the mid-year break. Figures.
Anyway, I pretty much chose not to have a break. Instead, I went into uni almost every day (it helped that it was winter and the printmaking studios were much warmer than my house) and made an edition of 33 artworks for our annual graduate exchange portfolio.
The requirements were to make a piece based on 20×20cm dimensions, taking into consideration that it was to be part of a folio that people would interact with as opposed to something that simply hangs on a wall.
It also had to be a good representation of our work as a whole, as a copy of the portfolio is kept in the RMIT printmaking archive, and another copy was sent to Tyler University in Philadelphia.
I used my leftover recycled paper to make 33 woven möbius strips, each made from the equivalent of a 20×20cm piece of paper. The möbius is my phoenix, a representation of the universe, and the outer packaging is representative of a black hole. Figuring out how to package these to avoid damage and reduce bulkiness was an issue. I ended up putting a few stitches into the centre of each strip with some hand-me-down yellow cotton to assist in the flattening without completely squashing the strip. I dyed a bedsheet black (actually, after two dye attempts it ended up midnight blue, which I actually like better than a really harsh black) and sewed 33 20×20cm square pouches that the möbius emerges from.
I had some trouble with the title. How do you put a title, signature and edition number on something that is 3-d and has a single, heavily printed surface? Or a dark fabric cloth? I decided to make a tag. I realised that I wanted to use the word apocatastasis as the title, so, in line with the printed material on the möbius, I did another solvent transfer on some extra paper of the word as taken from Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean’s wonderful graphic novel, Signal to Noise. I made it into a tag, which I signed and added the edition number to.
This is a really, really amazing portfolio. 28 different works from the staff and graduating students in my course. Which means, m1k3y, I have this and you don’t.
(Although any of you can buy Jazmina’s print if you follow that link.)
And speaking of Jazmina reminds me that I really need to head into her class now…
August 24, 2008
“Little Ewoks. An entire empire brought to its knees by small, furry creatures.”
Remember these?
Well, the green and white Pi circles have now been frogged and turned into these…
I dyed them using the d20 die set method. As you can see in the following picture, Mr C’s 8-sided die determined the colour, the 20-sided die indicated the length in centimetres of the colour and the 10-sided die determined the overlap of colour.
All of this is part of my latest art project, crocheting the Lorenz Manifold. This stems from my interest in space, the universe and Chaos Theory.
As the Oxford Amercian Dictionary on my laptop puts it, chaos theory is
the branch of mathematics that deals with complex systems whose behaviour is highly sensitive to slight changes in conditions, so that small alterations can give rise to strikingly great consequences.
My lecturer at uni did advise me to go all out with my geek this semester, and as such, I’m lovingly referring to this project in my head as Jaffa Cakes and Coat Pockets.
This was my Ravelympics project, but I didn’t have the yarn ready in time for the opening ceremony and ended up starting this a week ago instead. There is no way I’ll be getting Ravelympic gold here, but at 23 rounds of a total 47 in, I’m pretty damn proud of my progress anyway. Before this project, the only crochet I knew was the basic stuff needed for knitting, so I’ve learned how to crochet on the coolest (“cool” in geek terms…) project ever.
I’ll give more details as the project goes on, but my proposal this semester is looking at the links between fabric, stories, creation, science and the universe.
As such, this podcast, which I listened to on the tram coming home from work the other night, almost made me cry with its wonderfulness. Thanks to Alex for turning me onto Radiolab.
Happy National Science Week everyone!
















