I let the wilderness of images overwhelm me. Sporadic associations, implicit patterns, and unwilled theories arise spontaneously, all without names. I struggle to see everything and know nothing. As always, my trust lies with the great power of the unconscious to reveal the latent truth of the world to me without the perversion of undue preconception.
I cannot name that which I do not know, and surely, vice versa.
The urge to order is too great to resist. The spell of naivety dissolves. As quickly as I’m struck by the distinct similarity of certain groups of images I’m compelled to find ways to fracture these groups along different algorithms. I anticipate obvious patterns and immediately jump toward disrupting them. The simple truth of the associations between figure skaters and photographers, institution interiors and highway overpasses, will need to be tempered by means to render them distinct.
I immediately extrapolate all kinds of mechanisms for disruption. What alternative systems of classification can be brought to bear upon these images that would separate articles ostensibly so alike at first glance? What kind of countervailing operation could offer a new way of seeing beyond commonsense impulses to easy generalization? Should I just give in and embrace Occam’s razor, placing those images which seem so obviously similar into the same group? Both impulses should be accommodated by any good solution.
Strategies for navigating the archive should discover a balance between embracing and challenging the prevailing commonsense.
Hey Graham, how did your film shoot with your grandma go? Where are you going to get your stock processed? The more I think about Super-8, the more I want to switch my entire thesis to the medium… I am actually going to pitch something to this effect to Don tomorrow. How’s the 100 Images going? I have scrapped the compilation film after a rather dreary encounter with Final Cut Pro today, and am thinking of doing a library intervention, kinda like we discussed in class. Hopefully one which doesn’t cause too many problems.