Sunday, 21 September 2014

Doodle


 doodle, absent-minded scrawl or scribble, usually executed in some unexpected place, such as the margin of a book or manuscript or a blotting pad when the doodler is preoccupied with some other activity, such as attending a meeting or lecture. The word is supposed to have gained currency because of its use in the film Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), though the practice of course is much older, doodles being found in medieval manuscripts, as well as in the notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci and on the margins of manuscripts written by Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
The increasing preoccupation in the 20th century with manifestations of the unconscious and the desire to interpret them both as art forms and as clues to the nature of personality have led to considerable interest in doodles. The Surrealist method of automatic drawing was used by Max Ernst, Salvador Dalí, and André Masson, and Jackson Pollock, an Abstract Expressionist, did a series of drawings that were used as an element in his psychoanalysis.
__http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/169234/doodle

Our small prototype models have brought to our attention that we don't need a 'competition' as such surrounding the installation. Consequently it can remain to be a space in which market goers can relax and seep into a somewhat childhood nostalgia, exploring each interlocking piece while combining them to create their absent minded three dimensional vision.      

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