Monthly
Statement:
June 2006
During the early part of June I was still traveling in Europe
and was able to gather dust bunnies at two significant sites
in Italy.
The first dust bunny was carefully collected from the ledges
of various columns within the Pantheon in Rome. Old, old dust.
The Pantheon is an incredible space with a mesmerizing oculus
and is said to be the most well preserved building from antiquity
in Italy. Apparently, the proportions of the dome and interior
are so exact it is said that a perfect sphere would fit inside
the space perfectly and I believe it has been continuously
used as a place of worship since the 2nd century. The dust
I gathered was found in corners where the base of columns
met the walls and I was surprised by it’s fluffy consistency
as well as its general abundance throughout the space. I also
managed to pick up a little piece of mortar as my hands swept
along the ledges. This dust is old, old, old and surely contains
bits of human faith and modern tourism, pieces of lint cast
off robes and khaki shorts, sandaled feet shuffling and eclipsing
the spot lit marble floor, specks hovering below the white
noise of tour groups.
The second dust bunny was gathered in the nooks and crannies
of St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City. The line to
enter moved very quickly and I soon found myself drifting
amongst a variety of tour groups all of which had made a hard
right to view Michelangelo’s Pieta. Once I made it through
the crowd, little dust clumps began to randomly reveal themselves.
I was slower to gather a sizable clump as St. Peter’s
seemed “dusted” in places I’ve learned to
look. Most of the dust I found came from the bronze or marble
ledges of the tombs of various Popes from history. Navigating
people with headphones and cameras was a constant activity
that I began to loathe. There is a lot of hair in the jagged
shaped dust assembled from St. Peter’ and it includes
a little white feather which shares a startling close resemblance
to the iconic bird depictions feathered around the basilica.
The last time a white feather turned up in a dust bunny I
gathered came from the San Xavier Mission in the first month
of the Accumulation Project.
I’ve also included a “cloud” image from
the Pantheon book.
Process:
I plan to acquire dust in two ways. Initially, I will ask
for permission to sweep a chosen site and document the process.
If permission is not granted or if I find myself in a place
that seems to be an interesting opportunity for gathering
dust, I will then obtain my accumulate in a covert fashion.
This means I will inconspicuously search for dust clumps on
the spot and document the site, rather than the process.
I
will be gathering dust from two different places a month as
my contribution to the Accumulation Project. From each bag
of dust I obtain I’ll manipulate the dust bunny into
different shapes and make a series of photograms on cyanotype
paper. As the dust bunny assumes this new pictorial form,
it takes of the appearance of a cloud in a deep blue sky and
subtly forms a connection between a nuisance remainder of
human existence and the ephemeral behavior of the weather
overhead. Each series of “clouds” will be placed
into a book that I’ve assembled specifically for that
place.
Contact: sekondsight@yahoo.com
|