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Özgebörekci (talk | contribs) |
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<small>The project begins with the question: '''How does a walking body produce different lines of duration across different spatial conditions?''' In a small and accessible city like Weimar, time is not only about travel distance, but also about where one chooses to stay, slow down, or pass through.</small> | <small>The project begins with the question: '''How does a walking body produce different lines of duration across different spatial conditions?''' In a small and accessible city like Weimar, time is not only about travel distance, but also about where one chooses to stay, slow down, or pass through.</small> | ||
==== | ==== Background: '''From Malleable Boundaries to The Line Takes Time''' ==== | ||
<small>The idea of <nowiki>''bubble conditions''</nowiki> in '''The Line Takes Time''' comes from the notion of social bubbles that we explored in previous group project, '''Malleable Boundaries'''. [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KWnuCD2nRijbo7d3_KUKE3WFeJoOoQmnBTj_BNDVki4/edit?tab=t.0 Malleable Boundaries_Submission] During that process, I was especially interested in the possible bubble between campus users and local residents in Weimar. '''Malleable Boundaries''' approached invisible social boundaries through proximity, distance, separation, and the relation between bodies. In that project, the bubble was not understood as a physically drawn boundary, but rather as a condition in which people may share the same space while still remaining separated through different agendas, perceptions, and ways of relating to one another. The installation represented this '''bubble analogy''' through the construction of two separate rooms, aiming to create '''a visual and bodily connection between two strangers''' located in different spaces.</small> | <small>The idea of <nowiki>''bubble conditions''</nowiki> in '''The Line Takes Time''' comes from the notion of social bubbles that we explored in previous group project, '''Malleable Boundaries'''. [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KWnuCD2nRijbo7d3_KUKE3WFeJoOoQmnBTj_BNDVki4/edit?tab=t.0 Malleable Boundaries_Submission] During that process, I was especially interested in the possible bubble between campus users and local residents in Weimar. '''Malleable Boundaries''' approached invisible social boundaries through proximity, distance, separation, and the relation between bodies. In that project, the bubble was not understood as a physically drawn boundary, but rather as a condition in which people may share the same space while still remaining separated through different agendas, perceptions, and ways of relating to one another. The installation represented this '''bubble analogy''' through the construction of two separate rooms, aiming to create '''a visual and bodily connection between two strangers''' located in different spaces.</small> | ||
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