Monthly
Statement:
February
2006
Total Bag Count: 1,664
Monthly Total: 189
106 black – 68 white – 15 color
This month I've been thinking a lot about the states that
I find my bags in and how that might provide leads about what
to do with them. Bags come my way in two general forms; wadded
up clumps and ethereal floaters. For the past month I've been
kicking around ideas about how to replicate these states found
in nature in a way that works using thousands of bags. I've
also been considering what the proper venue for the bags is.
Should they go back to where they came from, or live a new
life indoors?
I'm more taken with "urban tumbleweed" when it is
blowing around or stuck in trees. However, there is also something
deeply satisfying about watching a big ball of one thing grow
and grow. Since I already started in the first show with a
clump, I began this month investigating how to improve my
binding technique to make for a bigger, badder, not to be
messed with, bag monster. The first show's ball was weak and
always at risk of falling apart. By tying the bags directly
together and knotting them in on themselves the structure
is very strong and dense. It can actually do the damage of
a medicine ball if you throw it hard enough. I pulled January's
bags out from under the bed and made a mock-up using half
the month's yield (see picture). So what can the ball mean?
This whole process reminds my of the Greek myth of Sisyphus;
the guy condemned for all eternity to roll a giant ball up
a hill only to have it roll back down again. I've reached
that moment of awareness where you understand that what you
are doing is pretty useless but you can only keep going, and
by continuing you prove some sort of existential point that
is in some way supposed to be vindicating. Thinking like this,
I could make this project a public performance piece. I could
take bag-ball out on the weekend, roll it down to Fort Green
Park, with its steep slopes, and roll it up and down, up and
down.
Or, I could try to make it a semi-permanent landscape intervention.
Most of the bags I collect I get on my walk to work down Myrtle
Ave. to Downtown Brooklyn. What a better place to install
bag-ball than MetroTech Plaza, the end of this well-scoured
road? See picture for proposed public art installation. That
place could really use some livening up.
Then there is the approach of leaving well-enough alone. I
set up some fans in the living room to try and make a wind
tunnel room. I thought about this months ago but was warned
that someone would undoubtedly choke and die in a room with
thousands of bags blowing around. Honestly I don't think its
all that serious. I was quite pleased with the results. Neither
I, my housemates, nor my little dog wanted it to end. I hope
by next month to have come to some resolution.
Process:
I am accumulating all plastic shopping bags left on the street
that I encounter each time I go outside. A record is being
kept of how many bags are accumulated each day for the course
of the project year. For each plastic bag I accumulate I will
create one reusable canvas bag.
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