2 resultados para Itinerary

em Queensland University of Technology - ePrints Archive


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The picturesque aesthetic in the work of Sir John Soane, architect and collector, resonates in the major work of his very personal practice – the development of his house museum, now the Soane Museum in Lincoln’s Inn Fields in London. Soane was actively involved with the debates, practices and proponents of picturesque and classical practices in architecture and landscape and his lectures reveal these influences in the making of The Soane, which was built to contain and present diverse collections of classical and contemporary art and architecture alongside scavenged curiosities. The Soane Museum has been described as a picturesque landscape, where a pictorial style, together with a carefully defined itinerary, has resulted in the ‘apotheosis of the Picturesque interior’. Soane also experimented with making mock ruinscapes within gardens, which led him to construct faux architectures alluding to archaeological practices based upon the ruin and the fragment. These ideas framed the making of interior landscapes expressed through spatial juxtapositions of room and corridor furnished with the collected object that characterise The Soane Museum. This paper is a personal journey through the Museum which describes and then reviews aspects of Soane’s work in the context of contemporary theories on ‘new’ museology. It describes the underpinning picturesque practices that Soane employed to exceed the boundaries between interior and exterior landscapes and the collection. It then applies particular picturesque principles drawn from visiting The Soane to a speculative project for a house/landscape museum for the Oratunga historic property in outback South Australia, where the often, normalising effects of conservation practices are reviewed using minimal architectural intervention through a celebration of ruinous states.

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Strange encounters, mobility, evocative textures, cultural connections, stories, water, land, travel, discontinuity - the overriding sense of the exhibition and workshops was that they were a meditation on, and a reconfiguration of the concept of home and belonging. Home and groundedness are never unproblematic, never simply a refuge from the world beyond, but can be disconcerting and disorienting. In this way I viewed being involved in the exhibition as an experience of being unsettled, of myself reflecting on unhomeliness. For me this was partly because curation is a novel disciplinary detour but also because the artists' voices, their involvement in the workshops and their compelling works made it imperative for us all to intersect our work and ideas, but without a set itinerary. Being a curator or artist in was always a collective, mutual, shared event, but clearly not in a claustrophobic communal sense of agreement and consensus. Rather, the events were slightly anxious, uncertain moments which flowed with some lack of fluency, dislocation and apprehension. The result was an exhibition in which diverse visual vocabularies destabilised and questioned the very grounds of belonging beyond the terms I had imagined when we started out. We were all asked to bring down certain borders, to enter a world of flux. It felt simultaneously enthralling and disconcerting.