Chair Transformation Collaboration Project
Hi, all. Claudie and I (Deirdre) have been testing folding and cutting as a way of approaching a collaborative project among those interested from this group. We hope you will join us. I started a profile page for the project, Chair Transformation Collaboration, because I could not get the pictures to load here. It will also give a place to post the images and diagrams as they develop. So far, we have found that there is plenty of room for error and change, which is a good thing.
Chair Transformation Collaboration: Join Us.
We invite you to participate in a chair collaboration,
transforming a chair into different states of being
through folding and cutting, and through passing in
and out of two and three dimensions as the chairs pass
through email from artist to artist.
The process...
Artist A:
Step 1: Design paper chair constructed by folding and
cutting.
Step 2: Make a diagram of the folds and cuts. Write
folding and cutting instructions.
Step 3: Take photos: front, back, side views.
Step 4: Forward diagram and written instructions to
Artist B by email.
Artist B:
Step 1: Print diagram and instructions.
Step 2: Reconstruct chair from diagram and
instructions.
Step 3: Take photos: front, back, side views.
Step 4: Transform reconstructed chair with new folds
and cuts.
Step 5: Take photos: front, back, side views.
Step 6: Make a diagram of the new folds and cuts.
Write additional folding and cutting instructions.
Step 7: Forward the diagrams and instructions to
Artist C by email.
Artist C:
Step 1: Print diagrams and instructions.
Step 2: Reconstruct chair from diagrams and
instructions.
Step 3: Take photos: front, back, side views.
Step 4: Transform reconstructed chair with new folds
and cuts.
Step 5: Take photos: front, back, side views.
Step 6: Make a diagram of the new folds and cuts.
Write additional folding and cutting instructions.
Step 7: Forward the diagrams and instructions to
Artist D by email.
And so forth, back to the original Artist or until the
instructions and diagrams become too difficult to
follow.
The chairs will change in expected ways through
intentional transformation and in unexpected ways
through the process of translation and human error.
The chairs will eventually reach points in which they
will be too complicated to translate and reconstruct:
the chairs will have reached natural ending places.
These points likely will differ chair to chair.
The photos and diagrams can be exhibited on line, and
the perhaps, an exhibition of the chairs themselves
can be arranged down the line.
Tags: chair, collaboration, digital, paper, sculpture, transformation
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