Monthly
Statement:
November 2005
During the 1st week of November a copy of the Minute Entry,
the Pima County Superior Courthouse internal newsletter, arrived
in the mail. My October visit to the Courthouse made page
2! The article was listed in the table of contents as “Dust
Bunnies.”
Obtaining dust this month was more of a struggle than I had
planned. My first two attempts failed, one being a lack of
obtaining access to a site and the other by not being able
to locate any dust at a site that would be useful for me.
The first site I did gather dust was from PDQ Records and
Tapes, a physically and impressively large music store in
Tucson. This is one of those legendary music stores that has
what seems to be miles of vinyl and cassette tapes ready for
resurrection by a nostalgic adult, a curious teenager, or
a serious DJ. Gathering dust from PDQ proved to be tragic.
I have to admit, the dust bunny from PDQ is “back-up”
dust I already had before the month of November. I never documented
the site after subversively obtaining the dust at the time
(a couple months back) so I felt this dust could still be
used for the project considering the trouble I was having.
What is tragic about this dust is that upon returning to the
record store to document it I quickly realized that a new
owner had taken control of the place and re-named it “Judy’s
Music Stop.” The building and awning were new colors
and the once maze of an entrance was now spacious and navigable.
As I began to make my way to the sections where I had collected
the dust amongst the gospels, Soviet operas, old country and
racy international LP covers, I realized that entire area
of the store had been sealed off. No entry. The site was gone.
I exited the store in a daze and walked around the building
to discover that Judy is an enterprising multi-tasker and
had transformed that section of the building into “Judy’s
Consign and Design.” I thought a photograph of the new
sign would be appropriate as what once was is no longer and
now this little dust clump is as nostalgic as the sounds of
all those records that have disappeared.
The second site was an “official” cleaning of
my brother-in-law’s house in Minneapolis. We traveled
there for Thanksgiving and naturally the house had been thoroughly
cleaned as expected when one hosts such an event. My brother-in-law’s
30th birthday happens to be two days after turkey day and
I thought obtaining dust from a very, very clean site would
not only be a challenge, but doing so on such a monumental
birthday I thought that I might just cleanse the house of
any remnants of their twenties once and for all. His wife
has past that after my cleaning the house should be all set
for middle age. After much searching, the only dust I could
locate was tangled in and around the electrical cords behind
the TV. I didn’t find much, but to my surprise, this
twenty-something dust smelled of Premium Grain Belt and had
the disorganized look of an unbalanced checkbook.
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
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