Saturday, February 27, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This is a blog documenting a project that will span exactly one year, from January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2010. On each of those 365 days, I will photograph or draw (and occasionally paint) one collection. Most of the collections are real and exist in my home or studio; those I will photograph. Some are imagined; those I will draw or (occasionally) paint.
Since I was a young girl, I have been obsessed both with collecting and with arranging, organizing and displaying my collections. This is my attempt to document my collections, both the real and the imagined. Some of my collections are so large that I will need to photograph them separately over several days. I will likely not attempt to photograph collections in which the individual pieces are large in size or awkward in shape (i.e. my art collection or vintage enamel dishware collection). The only rule is that I must photograph or draw a whole or part of a collection each day for 365 days and post the result here on this blog.
The practice of collecting and documenting collections is as old as the hills. I want onlookers here to know that I do not profess to be doing anything new or unique or ingenious. I am embarking on this project because I love my collections, and I want to document them in a way that makes sense to me, and share them with whoever might be interested in looking at them.
This blog is open for comments. I encourage you to share your thoughts about what memories the photographs and drawings of my collections spark for you and what, if any, sense of nostalgia or repulsion they make you feel.
***
For those of you who have stumbled here and don’t already know me, my name is Lisa Congdon. I am an artist and illustrator, and I live in the Mission District of San Francisco with my partner Clay Lauren Walsh and our Chihuahua Wilfredo and two cats, Barry and Margaret. If you are interested, you can see the kind of artwork I make on my website or on the website of my illustration agent, Lilla Rogers. If you would like to see what my home looks like (as it contains many of my collections) you can see a house tour here. You can view my studio (also a repository) here.
***
Enjoy.
Hi, I have your blog in my reader starting with the erasers. You inspired me to do such a project on my blog, in my own way of course. Thanks for that and good luck with a collection a day.
ReplyDelete"electric erasing machine" the mind boggles!
ReplyDeleteyou would need to make a lot of mistakes to justify having a machine to erase them :))
Electric Erasing Machines were used in libraries back in the day when there were card catalogs. They were used to erase information on catalog cards (such as location designations, i.e., if a book moved from the Reference section to Circulating collection). That package takes me back!
ReplyDeletei haven't seen this in such a long time. love them. love your blog!
ReplyDeleteI used electric erasers in the early 90's when I used to draft by hand. And they were indispensable.
ReplyDeleteI was very pleased to find this web-site. I wanted to thanks for your time for this wonderful read!! I definitely enjoying every little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you blog post.
ReplyDeleteClick Here
Docker.com
This is the right blog for anyone who wants to find out about this topic. You realize so much its almost hard to argue with you (not that I actually would want…HaHa). You definitely put a new spin on a topic thats been written about for years. Great stuff, just great!
ReplyDeleteGumroad.com
Information
Your blog here is so wonderful
ReplyDeleteYou're great just great! fabulous
ReplyDeleteExcellent site you’ve got here
ReplyDeleteThis is also a very good article
ReplyDelete