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rongo rongo
Daemon
Level 8: 4714 points
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Last Logged In: January 28th, 2025
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retired
45 + 55 points

Early Eno Revival by rongo rongo

June 19th, 2007 5:45 AM

INSTRUCTIONS: Publicly manifest one of the original Oblique Strategies 1975 edition, in order to express your chosen group's area(s) of concern.

This task has built in value through scarcity: Players must not repeat strategies manifested by other players' proofs. This task will be retired upon exhaustion of all Strategies from the original first edition.

Repetition is a form of change. I had a lot of trouble remembering this line. I kept thinking "Repetition is a means of change." This is over a week late for P00n's event, mostly because it just took longer to prepare than I'd thought it would.

I started by drawing a repeating line of roses along 39 meters of cash register receipt paper. I wanted to show that by doing the same thing many times, an entirely different result would be produced. After taking a look at the finished strip of paper, I decided that it didn't seem multi-dimensional enough. (OK, so for some reason, I thought that a one dimensional line of drawing might have a little more depth.)

Inspired by YellowBear's DIY audiobook, I copied the first two sections of T.S. Eliot's poem, "The Wasteland", onto the strip of paper among the roses. I won't pretend to get all of the allusions and references in this poem, but I like it a lot anyways. One part that sticks in my mind is the syllable, "Da," that the thunder speaks. The syllable is repeated three times, but each time it stands for a different concept---charity, compassion, and (self)-control. (My alternative, more cynical interpretation of the phrase is that you can end up controlling others if you first give to them and sympathize with them.) The poem also ends with a repetition, "shantih, shantih, shantih." This repetition is a sort of ritual ending, and Eliot translates it as "the peace which passeth understanding."

I deployed the strip of repetition onto a railing along a bridge near the Alewife subway stop. As I was installing it, the rumbling of passing trucks made the entire bridge shake, reminding me of thunder. I watched people walking along the bridge for a while. Mostly, they didn't even glance at the installation, but a few stopped and read some of it. I checked back 12 and 24 hours later, and most of the strip is still up, although a 1 ft section is missing. The paper has already yellowed from being out in the sun, but I'm happy to have injected some poetry onto an otherwise boring bridge.

I check back at 36 and 48 hours and repaired some wind damage. On the third day, we had a brief storm that washed off most of the marker, so I cleaned up all the pieces. Life, art, all ephemeral!

+ larger

ribbon.jpg
drawing tools.jpg
starting.jpg
looking forward.jpg
red rock.jpg
railroad tracks.jpg
looking back.jpg
ending.jpg
jogger.jpg
walking.jpg
passerby.jpg
after the rain.jpg
washed out.jpg
no littering.jpg

11 vote(s)



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5 comment(s)

(no subject)
posted by YellowBear on June 19th, 2007 11:32 PM

Beautiful. I can't believe those people walking by didn't stop to take notice. I think if i saw this in my neighborhood i might just go back and forth over and over, standing in front of it for hours

better late than never
posted by Ohrlyeh Totenkinder on June 20th, 2007 12:55 AM

lovely

stopping to look +1
posted by rongo rongo on June 20th, 2007 5:13 AM

I did notice that if I was standing on the bridge and obviously looking at the poem, other people would also stop and look. Maybe looking at stuff, like yawning, is just contagious.

i loves t.s., too....
posted by Fonne Tayne on December 3rd, 2007 1:07 AM

sadly, i missed this whole process (somehow...) in the moment. lovely work.

votes for thunder! and for old-school aesthetes!


...upon consideration, i also thoroughly enjoy the fact that someone has at long last found a decent use for the awful, ultimate-capitalist-commodity that is receipt paper. i tried to write a personal note on such paper earlier today and the look of it left me such a sour taste that i crumpled it and resolved to send a proper card instead.

(no subject)
posted by rongo rongo on December 3rd, 2007 6:24 AM

Receipt paper is also good for making oddly shaped posters and advertisements to span an entire bulletin board area.