Monthly
Statement:
June
2006
Like a tide, the flow of accumulation in the apartment rises
and falls. We work together to empty the space by carrying
things out and by the next time I return there is something
new in its place. Her neighbors periodically weed through
their possessions and leave items someone else may need in
the common area. My collaborator always seems to see potential
in these objects and brings them into her apartment, thinking
she or someone she knows can use it. More often than not these
things end up stacked in piles, waiting to be used one day…
I was shocked when I returned in late June to find the apartment
filled to the brim again. Once again there were paths through
the clutter, just like when we first started de-accumulating
in September. In June, my collaborator left the school where
she was teaching and unsure of what her next situation would
be like, she packed and carried all her supplies back home.
Bags, boxes and stacks, of books, Xeroxed worksheets, markers,
calculators, rulers, games, etc… now filled up all of
the space we had worked on clearing over the past nine-months.
Process:
My interest in the accumulation project began with a close
individual, an obsessive hoarder, who is emerging from a decade
long depression. I am the only other person who has been inside
of the apartment since she moved in. The apartment is completely
filled, waist-high with accumulation. There are stacks and
piles of everything imaginable: unread New York Times
newspapers dating back to 1997, hundreds of Penny Saver
circulars, yogurt lids, and soda bottle caps. Nothing has
been thrown away in years.
There are several pathways to navigate through the clutter
in her apartment, though you have to move very carefully so
as not to start a landslide. One path goes from the front
door to the only empty chair; another goes past the refrigerator
to the kitchen sink; one path leads through the hallway into
the bedroom to the bed; another forks off to the bathroom.
Despite all of the clutter, she is in fact a minimalist at
heart, only utilizing the bare minimum in the apartment. I
believe she is at point in her life when she can finally let
go of all of this accumulation and move on.
Throughout the duration of the accumulation project (one year),
I will visit this person in her apartment to help clear out
all that she has been accumulating for years. I will collect
some of the items we would otherwise discard and save them
as documents of her accumulation. I will select things that
are most striking by the quantity of the objects or by the
nature of the objects themselves and their visual appeal.
As we work together to empty out her space, I will document
the changing landscape of her apartment through photographs.
The process of sifting through the clutter is like an archeological
excavation: the various layers of debris correspond with different
times in her past. For the two “accumulation project”
exhibitions, I will show both the physical documents of the
accumulation as well as the photographs of the process of
de-accumulation in the apartment. This project is a social
sculpture that involves the interaction between the obsessive
collector and myself to create a positive change in her life
and in her space through emptying the clutter she’s
been accumulating for years.
My project explores the extreme case of accumulation in our
disposable, consumerist society. I understand the impulse
to save, reuse and recycle - however the rate of consumption
of objects of planned obsolescence is significantly faster
than the rate of reusing or creative ideas for reuse.
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