Saturday 20 September 2008

PAPER MACHINES: THE ROOFLESS GARDEN




Our proposition:

ABSTRACT:
This is a bilateral project. Namely it consists of two parts: a design and a narrative part, or a visual and a verbal part. One of the aims of this project is the development of an experimental relationship between the two parts.
The first part involves the design of a structure-device for experiencing the site: ‘200-metres-southwards-the-Green-Line’. This is about the archaeological site that has been accidentally discovered at the block No165 near the Old Municipal Market in the Old City of Nicosia. The aim of the device will be an experimental engagement of the user with the historical object and- in a more profound level- with the history, the mnemonic landscape of Cyprus.
So, on the one hand, the project is a site-specific intervention. While, on the other, the project is also ‘story-specific’, as it narrates the story of Panikos (the similarity with the English word Panic is intentionally accidental), a time-mechanic who is the commissioned tuner of the mnemonic-device. The story describes his personal, tense route and his adventures in a city of functional devices (mechanical or institutional). The story concludes with a final apocalypse and awareness that the city is not worth-imagining as a rigid-functional machine, but as a bunch of wrecked devices with an eccentric and aimless character. And with bearing this in mind, just like in the Heath Robinson’s or Rowland Emett’s wittily ‘meaningless’ devices, our hero can finally relax as well.

THE MAIN ARGUMENT AND THE CONTRIBUTION TO THE THEME:
Although the project responds mainly to the ‘Contemplation of the Historic Object’ category it may be also attached to other categories of the brief, such as the ‘coffee house and the public open space’ and the ‘souvenir shop’. Nevertheless, the term ‘contemplation’ as a condition of experiencing the historic artefact, will be challenged by the term ‘inventiveness’ and ‘experimentation’ which instead imply a more participatory engagement of the user. The use as ‘contemplation’ of the object from a physical or mental distance may then be replaced by the use as inhabitation of the object, and as engagement of the user with a playful and relaxing mood. The term ‘paper’ in the title indicates a more ephemeral aspect of the term ‘machine’. The term ‘roofless’ implies in an ironic way the condition of openness of the archaeological site and its aspect as an undocumented, unregistered site of potentialities. While the term ‘garden’ hints the ‘garden of pleasures’ as a condition for the unfolding of the users’ desires.

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