Sunday, 25 September 2011
Contemporary curiosities
The pop art and punk of postmodernism have morphed into a new (albeit retro-progressive) age of crafting and collecting.
But what started out as a genuine curiosity for naturally beautiful, or unusual, things and their provenance has become something of a preoccupation with packaging rather than content. Have you noticed how so many things appear inside domes these days – or encased in resin?
And what constitutes a curiosity anyway? Just because something’s unusually large, or very tiny does that mean it’s especially unique or valuable?
Postmodernist media-led consumerism segued into the electronic age of the internet – so will the new age of rummaging for ‘found’ objects, and recycling, pave the way for another reinvention of communications networks and social structures?
ShopCurious spotted some curiously crafty postmodernist-influenced creations at the London Design Festival - Tine De Ruysser’s bank note jewellery and wall art amongst them. But, beyond postmodernism, is there room for a whole new exchange mechanism - something like a bartering based economy? Will money itself eventually become something of a curiosity?
Latest trends aside, we seem to be moving into uncharted territory. I have a feeling that our lives are about to become a lot more curious…
Do you?
Curiouser and curiouser said Alice...
ReplyDeleteadore glass domes, Susan!
ReplyDeletelove the way people use them to decorate their homes or store displays lately! Would be nice to have a few myself...
Hope your weekend was fab!
xo
susan, you might be interested in the art of my friend alastair mackie - he's been using domes for years
ReplyDeletelatest dome work pic here
Had no idea there's a dome
ReplyDeletetrend going on.
Erm, not sure I want to
encase things.
Just sayin'.
Thanks for the photo worm... Am curious to know what's inside Alastair's dome. Looks like a hologram??
ReplyDeleteits a stuffed goshawk Susan - he silvered the inside of the dome so that you can only just see it from certain angles. Other domes of his (made from mouse skulls taken from regurgitated owl pellets):
ReplyDeletehere
All very curious, worm! No humans in glass jars then?
ReplyDeletePerhaps Jan is right to be concerned...