Panorama, 2021
I usually don’t carry such artworks, but here is a contexture that feels so canon and right, I couldn’t pass.
Actually it is assembled from three different parts, you may see the seams.
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
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seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Philippines
seen from United States

seen from United States
Panorama, 2021
I usually don’t carry such artworks, but here is a contexture that feels so canon and right, I couldn’t pass.
Actually it is assembled from three different parts, you may see the seams.
#contexture
Contexture designed Resilient House in Ashgrove, Queensland -- via ArchDaily
Notes from Dana Iova-Koga mentoring sessions.
Contexture. Exercises in using the domestic environment to create movement.
c.April 2020
: Superman on arm of the couch : Going upstairs on all fours like a dog. : Holding both doorknobs, using them as a partner to move with : Hanging upside down on a couch : climbing on kitchen counter like : a cat : squatting more, reaching more, : hanging over a picnic table and tractioning the spine : part cat, part bear. and excited by the prompt to refresh relationship to this space I’m spending so much time in : using the pelvic list to go down the stairs : Giving your weight to the trees : crawling under table with 2 - 3 - 4 contacts : Deep squatting with back against a wall : Hanging bar in back yard, Lifting rocks, tree for hanging, balance beam walking, stairs : trying to tickle a hummingbird : tug of war with the dog : picking up pine cones : pelvic list on stairs, walking up and down stairs in many different ways on all fours : Various squating at the toilet :) :archcontexture : crawlup door jam into handstand : It was a great reminder to see our homes like children again!
Evaluation unit 12- Hafsa Zaman
When I read and understood the brief, I was a little disheartened initially. I am not very good at abstract work, and I didn't really know what kind of culture I truly identify with. I think that comes from being biracial and growing up in different areas across the world, experiencing racism and just really being, almost afraid even, to accept who I am. As I researched more and watched other students do their own, I realized that there was actually a lot of symbols and patterns I could use to show who I am and that culture goes further than religion or race.
To help me with my lack of experience with this kind of work, I made use of the internet as well as those around me to gather information. For secondary research, I documented some artists that were recommended to us, such as Hassan Hajjaj as well as some I found on my own via Behance or it's nice that. Looking into other artists' designs helped me with the colours, shapes, and overall authenticity of my patterns. For primary research, I interviewed my family to get their opinions on their own identification and discussed what I've learnt from them and them from me. This was all useful in generating inspiration and ideas for my final pieces.
One of my biggest problems when making the patterns was the lack of programs. We were on a blended learning program during this project; one week on and one week off. Since the project itself was quite short, I had a very limited time to utilize the college computer. At home, my device is too old to handle anything from Adobe. I had to use a free drawing software, which I use for most of my drawings, Medibang Paint Pro. It isn't vector based, nor does it have any kind of grid/snap to grid system. I did what I could in college, on Illustrator, and everything else at home. Thankfully, I found a very useful online GIF converter which saved me from worrying about not having After Effects or Photoshop which I would have otherwise used for the animation, which is another issue. I was not able to nicely animate the patterns because exporting them one pixel at a time was very frustrating so I couldn't help but give up. I settled on just merging the patterns into themselves using the GIF convertor as well as another GIF with the word "contexture" made with my patterns moving about. I had a couple issues with the longer animation too. Creating it took a very long time, I had to export 56 images in a very specific order, with everything on a different layer and I made a couple tiny but impactful mistakes, like missing a tiny symbol or forgetting which frame I was on and numbering it wrong, resulting in me re-exporting all the images at least 3 times. I made it harder for myself by trying to animate individual aspects in there too. I don't really mind repetitive tasks though so I was okay.
The final patterns and animations turned out well I think. In the end I made 14 patterns, 5 GIFs and a 38 second long video. I particularly like the contexture text GIF on a purple background, I think the complementary mix of colours work really well. My longer animation was good too, I actually really enjoyed layering everything on top of each other and really just painting a picture of myself and identity. It was fun trying to dig for pictures of my family and I; finding lot's of forgotten memories and embarrassing photos and videos. I think It does describe me quite well. It'd honestly be something very useful/informational to show someone new as a really weirdly specific introduction. It has my family, my baby photo and year of birth as well as things I enjoy, bits showing where I'm from and strange Gaelic sayings that are thrown around my house. Can't get too much more personal without getting strange.
I handed the patterns and animations in on time, but I would have liked to try adding music in the background. Actually it's kind of good that I didn't, I would have spent too much time stressing about it only to still regret whatever I used. I do think music is a big part of my identity though. I could have put some horrible traditional Irish music, but that's not my thing. Maybe I could have just Rick Rolled everyone who watches it, that would have been funny. Other than that, there's not much else I would change, unless I had access to After Effects, in which case I'd have made a higher quality video. For what I had, I think I did pretty good.
Glad to show my work 'Handroid City' at the @centrepompidou (until December 28th) in "Cosmopolis #2.0". The video installation exploring the smartphone-powered Digital Revolution in the Global South was filmed in Benin, Nigeria, Tanzania, Brazil and China. It was produced with the help of Hivos Digital Earth program, the Goethe Institut (VillaSul residency program in Salvador de Bahia, Brazil) and greatly facilitated by 33space, Sallyprojects and Ulephone in Shenzhen, China. #HandroidCity #CentrePompidou #Contexture #DigitalRevolution #ContemporaryArt #DigitalArt #Transafrican #team229 #Cotonou #Benin #Lagos #Nigeria #DarEsSalaam #Tanzania #SalvadorDeBahia #Brazil #Shenzhen #China #DigitalSpirit #DigitalEarth #DigitalEarthnetwork #DigitalDistrict #emodemedeiros (à Paris, France) https://www.instagram.com/p/B4NZYyeIk_e/?igshid=1rtvg7jlfwi3u