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Showing posts with label public space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public space. Show all posts
BC SYSTEM - New Works Forever
BC SYSTEM - Public Work Solutions
(+44 (0) 7971 182 209)
New public work commissioned by Situations
‘We are a London based operation that offers a comprehensive range of services that respond with timely and considered actions. YOU supply the structure and we provide the production solution. At BC System we pride ourselves on our quality and rapid turn around times.
We believe our management style will leave you feeling confident that your investment is being managed by a team of professionals. Our company takes the time to explain matters and genuinely listens to the needs and concerns of owners.
By phone, by air, we can expedite and unpack. This means that. If we could become logistics, we would (for you). Call us.
In the end we make sure everything clicks together. A point of exchange, a situation, another creative solution.’
Labels:
BC System,
Lucas Clayton,
Poster,
Public Art,
public space,
Situations
Surface Strategy
Surface Strategy, 2013
(100 biro's diluted in alcohol, leather dye, car break fluid oil, paint stripper and anti-graffiti solution on Di-bond)
89 x 122 cm
Labels:
Aluminum,
anti-graffiti,
painting,
public space
Terminus
Surface Strategy, 2013
(100 biro's diluted in alcohol, leather dye, car break fluid oil, paint stripper and anti-graffiti solution on Di-bond)
89 x 122 cm
With cast 'papercrete' coke cans
Labels:
Architecture,
Collaboration,
Conversation,
Neal Rock,
public space,
RCA,
show
Building, Thinking - Dwelling
Dimensions Variable - Found wooden crates, screws
In Heidiggers essay 'Building Dwelling and Thinking' he stipulated that to dwell is to cultivate a relationship with your surrounding.
Large communal concourse type areas that often have no seating have become a
dumping ground for communal waste. I am interested in looking at how these spaces
can be re-activated, by using the detritus that is left in them. In a recent work I found two
discarded wooden pallets in a housing estate (which has recently had its benches
removed to discourage loitering). I made the crates into four chairs and a table before
returning them to the same spot where I found them. I think that it is interesting to use
materials and areas that have fallen out of the system of the city and to re-evaluate them to give them a value and position back into society.
Although I don’t specifically claim for these works to transform their context I think it is interesting to develop ideas of value and of ‘place’ to these nondescript, disrespected areas. My aim is to provide a construct whereby an organic relationship to the space can be prompted.
Labels:
intervention,
public space,
sculpture
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