On The Line is a Riverside California based program of art, performance, and research that looks at clotheslines to explore our relations among people and with the environment. The Pubic raffle concept is intentionally used to promote engagement with the 2015 California statewide legislation to hang laundry or "Right To Dry." This blog is concerned with the 2016 participation element, while communicating the research and experiences from the public raffles.
Saturday, May 21, 2016
Started Collecting Names
Collecting names for the public raffle. Drawing will be at the end of the programming at Casa Blanca site.
Continued Set-Up Casa Blanca Library Site
Tensegrity has just arrived for On the Line programming! Tensegrity is a principle by which elements subjected to continuous tension can compose a structure that is self-standing. The elements of the structure are held together by a continuous action similar to the subtle forces that join people in society. So, the structure not only evokes or symbolizes social connection with its clothesline-inspired shape, it enacts them.
Tensegrity by Nathanael Dorent (architect), Mike Grandaw (construction), and
Manja Van de Worp (nous engineering)
Tensegrity by Nathanael Dorent (architect), Mike Grandaw (construction), and
Manja Van de Worp (nous engineering)
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Laundry Stories
During the Arlanza "On the Line" event raffle, I engaged in conversations with people who entered their name. The topic of laundry is something that could be seemingly insignificant, but the stories I gathered show us how meaningful laundry can truly be.
One of the stories that stood out to me was that of Young Oh. He was raised in South Korea and remembers seeing his mother hunch over to wash clothing regularly. The constant strain on his mother's back caused her to need surgery. Oh expressed how grateful he is for his mother's effort and care. It made him want to pursue a career as a doctor and cure people who were sick like his mother once was. Oh's family found that in order to make their mother's life easier it was necessary for them to purchase laundry machines. He then explained that laundry machines are a luxury to him and his family. Young Oh's story made me realize that what may seem as something common in one part of the world, may be a very luxurious item in another. Most importantly, however, I learned of the undeniable sacrifice that mothers are willing to put for the care of their loved ones.
Another story that comes to mind is that of Azeem Rahman. He told me that in England, where his family is from, there is almost always rain. Hanging clothes on clotheslines can be a very frustrating chore because the clothing may never get dry. Relative to the weather we have in California where it is mostly sunny daily, England can rarely enjoy "nature's dryer"; the sun.
In addition to these two stories, a couple of people expressed that doing laundry is very soothing. It is as if with every new change of freshly washed clothing there is the start of something new. Another said that he dislikes the disappearances of his clothing in the dryer. Having one sock without its pair can be frustrating. Ultimately, we all have at least one laundry story that has, in one way or another, shaped our perspectives on aspects of our daily lives.
In addition to these two stories, a couple of people expressed that doing laundry is very soothing. It is as if with every new change of freshly washed clothing there is the start of something new. Another said that he dislikes the disappearances of his clothing in the dryer. Having one sock without its pair can be frustrating. Ultimately, we all have at least one laundry story that has, in one way or another, shaped our perspectives on aspects of our daily lives.
Azeem Rahman (Far Right): winner of Arlanza raffle
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