34
edits
Özgebörekci (talk | contribs) |
Özgebörekci (talk | contribs) (→Method) |
||
| Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
<small>In this context, '''The Line Takes Time''' asks whether certain areas in Weimar - such as the campus, cultural spaces, transitional zones, or social gathering points - produce their own '''temporal rhythms and boundaries'''. Do people, for example a student, simply pass through these areas, or do they spend time there and form a relation with them? Rather than producing an analytical city map, the project investigates these questions by translating walking and duration into a line-based notation.</small> | <small>In this context, '''The Line Takes Time''' asks whether certain areas in Weimar - such as the campus, cultural spaces, transitional zones, or social gathering points - produce their own '''temporal rhythms and boundaries'''. Do people, for example a student, simply pass through these areas, or do they spend time there and form a relation with them? Rather than producing an analytical city map, the project investigates these questions by translating walking and duration into a line-based notation.</small> | ||
==== Method ==== | ==== Method & Technology ==== | ||
<small>The project uses '''walking | <small>The project uses '''walking as a method of artistic research'''. Walks across different areas, passages, and thresholds (?) in Weimar will be recorded as traces of movement, speed, rhythm, and time spent. The aim is not to use the trace as a conventional map, but to translate it into a line-based notation '''by investigating spatio-temporal dimension of the line'''.</small> | ||
<small>'''''The line notation is still in development'''''. At this stage, I am interested in how pauses, slowing down, and dwell time can gain a geometric weight within the line.</small> | |||
<small>Technically, the project may use GPS-based walking data together with TouchDesigner as a visual environment for translating movement and duration into video plotting or animated line drawings.</small> | |||
<small>The walking data may be collected through '''[one or more participants]''', most likely students, who record a walk for a defined period of time. '''[The number of participants]''' is still open. It is also still being considered whether the walks will follow '''[a given route]''' or emerge from each '''[participant’s own movement through the city]'''.</small> | |||
<small>The final form of the output is also still in progress. Possible outcomes include '''individual walking plots, collective walking plots, video plotting, or animated line drawings.''' At this stage, the project remains open to testing how single and multiple walks can be translated into different line-based forms.</small> | |||
<small>'''Line Notation'''</small> | <small>'''Line Notation'''</small> | ||
edits