We
wrote about Monika Hoinkis' project Living With Things on
our slowBlog, but it's worth repeating here.
Hoinkis
proposes a series of seven everyday objects, modified in
their functionality, that explore how intimate moments can be
created between a human and an object. Her clever re-workings
of these objects renders them as dependent on the user as
s/he is on them: A desk lamp without hinges that begs to be cradled
in a cupped hand. An umbrella that stays up only with help, draping
over one's head and shoulders. A radio that functions solely
in close proximity to a warm body. A
metronome that, rather than dictating a beat to follow, instead
keeps time to the rhythm of the person who shares the
room with it. And more.
Living
With Things was created to
enhance everyday life in poetic rather than rational ways, creating
moments that make one stop and consider. Hoinkis says "It
won't change the world, but may alter our perception of it, and
perhaps open up new ways of looking at things we often take for
granted."
To
be sure, the
project is valuable for the awareness it raises about
how we relate to the things around us. But it is equally intriguing
when applied as a metaphor to all kinds of healthy interdependencies,
not least the human ones which we sometimes call community.
Living
With Things >
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