CCDN 231 Lecture One 2011

Page 1

things

http://www.francisalys.com/public.html http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZedESyQEnMA


things


things (listen)


things (prius)


things (volvo)


things (fiesta)


A fire hydrant, a taxi cab, a rush of steam pouring up from the pavement – they were deeply familiar to me, as I felt I knew them by heart. But that did not take into account the mutability of things, the way they changed according to the force and the angle of light, the way their aspect could be altered by what was happening around them: a person walking by, a sudden gust of wind, an odd reflection. Everything was constantly in a state of flux, and though two bricks in a wall might strongly resemble each other, they could never be construed as identical. More to the point, the same brick was never really the same. It was wearing out, imperceptibly crumbling under the effects of the atmosphere, the cold, the heat, the courses of storms that attacked it, and eventually, if one could watch it over the centuries, it would no longer be there. All inanimate things were disintegrating, all living things were dying. My head would start to throb whenever I thought of this, imagining the furious and hectic motions of molecules, the unceasing explosions of matter, the collisions, the chaos boiling under the surface of all things.

•Paul Auster. Moon Palace


chaos


man confronted by the THIRD technological revolution.


all 8 tutors groups meet in studio (vs 303) A1-A4 @ 10:30 - 12:20 WED 11:30 - 13:20 THURS B1-B4 @ 12:40 - 14:20 WED 13:40 - 15:20 THURS MAXE OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday 2:30-4pm or by appt.


western consumer culture continues to project a dualistic attitude towards the human body. On the one hand we have an obsessively aestheticised and eroticised cult of the body, but on the other, intelligence and creative capacity are equally celebrated as totally separate, or even exclusive individual qualities. In either case, the body and the mind are understood as unrelated entities that do not constitute an integrated unity. This separation is reflected in a strict division of human activities and work in physical and intellectual categories. The body is regarded as the medium of identity and self-presentation, as well as an instrument of social and sexual appeal. However, its significance is understood merely in its physical and physiological essence, but undervalued and neglected in its role as the very ground of embodied existence and knowledge as well as a full understanding of the human condition.

The Thinking Hand. Juhani Pallasmaa. p11


the body


ph

ys

ica

the body

l


how many BONES do we have ?


the skeleton of an adult human is comprised of

206 bones and two systems,

the axial skeleton (the trunk of our body) and the appendicular skeleton (our limbs).

while the adult skeleton contains 206 bones, the skeleton of an infant contains

350 (the bones fuse together as you grow). And more than half of your 206 bones are found in your hands and feet.


how many MUSCLES do we have ?



3 types of muscles: 1. Smooth muscle - controlled by the autonomic nervous system; may either be generally inactive and then respond to neural stimulation or hormones or may be rhythmic 2. Cardiac muscle - found in the heart, acts like rhythmic smooth muscle, modulated by neural activity and hormones 3. Skeletal muscle - move us around and responsible for most of our behavior; most attached to bones at each end via tendons

There are approximately

640

, skeletal muscles within the typical human, and almost

every muscle constitutes one part of a pair of identical bilateral muscles, found on both sides, resulting in approximately 320 pairs of muscles.


how many potentials acts or actions between bones + muscles exist ?

the body

An 8 week old foetus rests in an adult’s palm. Dr. M. Aszal Ansary. 1

1. Ewing, W. (1994). The Body. San Francisco: Chronicle Books.


experimental design ideas


handin dates A1 A2 A3 A4 A5

Extension B Extension S Extension M Extension T Final Thesis

July 27 aug 11 sept 22 oct 10 oct 25

9am 15% 8am 20% 8am 25% 9am 25% noon*

15%


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check course blog each friday

http://ccdn231.blogspot.com/ for announcements + for new reading(s) for the following week.


ph

ys

ica

the body

l


michelangelo

da vinci



the david


the david



The body is man’s first and most natural instrument. Or more accurately, not to speak of instruments, man’s first and foremost technical object, and at the same time technical means, is the body.


tapio wirrkala eye, hand and thought


naomi filmer


The body is not a container that we live in, it is an aspect of the self which we live through.


skin


tapio wirrkala eye, hand and thought


tapio wirrkala eye, hand and thought



what to do for

wed?


everyday+evidence 18.07.11


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