Chris Burden: Locus+.This July 28, the Newcastle/Gateshead quayside quay·side n. The area adjacent to a quay or wharf or a system of quays, especially in a port city. quayside quay n → Kai m hosted the Tall Ships Races, an annual celebration of nineteenth-century maritime technology. A flotilla of over one hundred ships, their decks filled with activity, left Newcastle to a backdrop of waving flags, music, and more onlookers than the city ever expected. As the ships departed and the crowds moved from the banks of the river to return the city to normalcy nor·mal·cy n. Normality. Noun 1. normalcy - being within certain limits that define the range of normal functioning normality , a single, small boat sailed up the river, past the BALTIC arts center and through the Millennium Bridge Several bridges are known as the Millennium Bridge:
See also Chastity, Humility. Bell, Laura reserved, demure character. [Br. Lit.: Pendennis] Bianca gentle, unassuming sister of Kate. [Br. Lit. over spectacle. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Powered by a single sail, Chris Burden's Ghost Ship In modern English, the term ghost ship has come to denote at least one of three separate (though occasionally overlapping) definitions, all of which involving, in one respect or other, unexplained circumstances. , 2005, had arrived from Fair Isle Fair Isle, island, c.3 sq mi (7.8 sq km), off N Scotland, southernmost of the Shetland Islands. It is known for its knitted hosiery of bright, many-colored design and for its bird sanctuary. , Scotland, on its maiden voyage Noun 1. maiden voyage - the first voyage of its kind; "in 1912 the ocean liner Titanic sank on its maiden voyage" ocean trip, voyage - an act of traveling by water , having traveled well over four hundred miles in five days. A small island in the Shetlands, Fair Isle has been a shipping landmark for thousands of years. Ghost Ship was hand-built following a traditional Shetland design known as a sixareen, developed for fishing in the difficult local waters and built intuitively, by eye, with the notion that if it looks right, it is right. Likewise a sixareen is navigated intuitively, based on the skipper's knowledge of stars, sun, wind, and sea swell. With Ghost Ship, Burden has brought this long seafaring history into conversation with new technology: Beneath deck-level transparent sheeting the hull holds a laptop and a GPS to navigate the boat unmanned, as well as a system of hydraulic cylinders Hydraulic cylinders (also called linear hydraulic motors) are mechanical actuators that are used to give a linear force through a linear stroke. Operation Hydraulic cylinders get their power from pressurized hydraulic fluid, which is typically oil. to trim the sails. All of these technical details are important, yet they reveal very little of the actual artwork itself. As an engineering experiment the research will head off in other directions, but these are effects rather than affects. Ghost Ship is a proposition, evoking speculation and imagination. Burden's practice pushes at the limits of perceived possibilities, offering a series of proposals to be realized. Thus, for instance, B-Car, 1975, was an important departure from his early body-works, initiating an extended exploration into the boundaries of technology in the realm of the social. Using the latest advancements in engineering and technology, B-Car proposed to realize the potential of existing technological achievements of the time, and, like Ghost Ship, the work was built through intuition. The act of creation, rather than the actual driving of the car or the sailing of the boat, is the driving force behind these actions. His work acts out simple questions on the model of, "What happens if you ...?"--making the risk of failure an active space of opportunity. Burden cites the success here as simply existing in the invitation from the commissioning agency Locus+ to attempt to make it happen--in other words, to extend the edges of the known. The event of each piece poses an open question: Can it happen again? Knowing the answer is not the point, nor is the importance of firsthand first·hand adj. Received from the original source: firsthand information. first witnessing. Burden's is a practice suffused suf·fuse tr.v. suf·fused, suf·fus·ing, suf·fus·es To spread through or over, as with liquid, color, or light: "The sky above the roof is suffused with deep colors" with possibilities where questions are posed in a consideration of how structures and limits shape the world. |
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