Material--first taxonomies
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Version vom 9. Januar 2020, 12:19 Uhr von Karin (Diskussion | Beiträge)
On the classification/array and structuring of material and materiality in an artistic context
creating a system where to find material, organizing and listing differences of material without choosing a setting of single "classifications"
comment 1:
not to be understood as complete lists, more of a practical approach from different angles.
comment 2:
these classifications are not exclusive to each other and can be linked or crosslinked.
comment 3:
classifications as groups of materials, contextualized rather than singled out or hierarchized
comment 4:
classifications as titles and orientations, to be continued...
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Different approaches to classifications
practical | artistic | production related / industrial | functional | semantic | contextualized | ... |
Material families
classified according to raw material and resources, production related / industrial
paper | wood | metal | synthetics | rubber | stone/minerals | composites | organic | smart | ... |
Material features
classified according to properties and functionalities
reacting | conductive | reusable / recyclable | moldable / shapeable | adhesive / resolvent | ... |
digital | immaterial | programmeable | oriented on other sensory reception | phenomenological | ... |
Material contextualisation
classified based on a multidisciplinary approach, distinctions made by highlighting single disciplines
informatics | sound | design | architecture | 3D / animation / VR | theoretical |
Fictional taxonomy, example one: Borges
Jorge Luis Borges "Emporio celestial de conocimientos benévolos",
approx. 1942, a fictitious taxonomy of animals, a "celestial emporium of benevolent knowledge":
(a) belonging to the Emperor
(b) embalmed
(c) trained
(d) piglets
(e) sirens
(f) fabulous
(g) stray dogs
(h) included in this classification
(i) trembling like crazy
(j) innumerables
(k) drawn with a very fine camelhair brush
(l) et cetera
(m) just broke the vase
(n) from a distance look like flies