Interpretation is an art which combines many arts, whether the materials presented are scientific, historical, or architectural. Any art is in some degree teachable
Freeman Tilden
Author: nathaliejolivert
Oath of the Ancestors at le Manoir Alexandra
Dos Creux I S
Jeux d’Enfants
Dos Creux I S
You turn one bone to its Back to find a VoId and this skinny stick eventually curves into an S
You will spin into your years and you will do the same to your kids as you teach them how to play with bones. Spin them around in full circle, holding both arms and eventually just the hand for a graceful pirouette into the dizziness of later years
Inspiration to a Narrative
For my class on Museum Interpretation, we were assigned some readings in Neil MacGregor’s “History of the World in 100 objects”. We had to read the story of “Object 59”, which covered the acquisition of a Buddha Stone Head from the Borobudur Temple in Indonesia by the British Museum. The Borobudur Temple is a UNESCO Heritage Site visited by many tourists.
Object 59: Borobudur Buddha Head- Stone head of the Buddha, from Java, Indonesia AD 780-840)
Excerpt:
We are tracing the great arcs of trade that linked Asia, Europe and AFrica aroudn a thousand years ago,. Throuagh this stone head of the Buddha we can plot an extensive network of connections across the China Sea and the Indian Ocean by which goods and ideas, languages and religions, were exchanged among the peoples of souht-east Asia. It comes from Borobudur, on the Indonesian island of Java,just a fe degrees south g of the equator. Borodbudur is one of the greatest Buddhist monuments in teh worlld and one of the great cultural achievements of humanity- a huge, square, terraced pyramid, representing the Buddhist view of the cosmos in stone, decorated with well over a thousand relief carvings and peopled with hundreds of statues of the Buddha. As pilgrims climb it, they are treading a physical path that mirrors a spiritual journey, symbolicaaly transporting the walker from this world to a higher plane of being. Here, on the rich and strategically important island of Java, at the monument of Borobudur, is the supreme example of how the network of maritime trade allowed Buddhism to spread beyond the boundaries of its birth and become a world religion.
[…]
As you climb through the different levels, you take a material road into a spiritual enlightenment.
Pictures from UNESCO
Sketches May 1
Sketches April 30
Black Velvet Magic
Talking to one of the teachers here at RISD, I was referred to what is called ‘black velvet’ in magic, during which a bright light is projected to the eyes of the audience and obscures their view from the stage. At that moment someone dressed in black can come to the stage without being noticed. I thought that was an interesting analogy of how I could conceal and reveal things in my project as I am dealing alot with concepts of light/shadow what is hidden versus what is exposed.






















