Net Drying Huts in Hastings
Denge Sound Mirrors in Stereo
Some views of the three experimental sound mirrors at Denge near Dungeness. When I first visited you could walk out to them (in the middle of a gravel pit). There is no longer any mining there and a swing bridge keeps the island with the mirrors on secure. They were built as a way of listening out for and locating hostile aeroplanes. but they were made redundant by the emerging radar technologies. There are a few more dotted along the coast. The largest mirror (to the left in the bottom view) is 200 feet across.
Stair Model in Stereo
Beinecke Library in Stereo
The Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at Yale University in New Haven was opened in 1963. It was designed by Gordon Bunshaft of SOM. The marble wall panes are one and a quarter inches thick. The views show daylight coming through the marble.
Cockatoo Island
The Mourners
Old Study
A very old drawing i just found from when i started working with Polaroid Transfers. The original image is from a book on mannequins. This is from around the time I started the first body projects and was wondering if all the pieces would be inside or outside the body. The airbrushing is quite crude, with very little reflected colour in the shadows. This one is made from 669 Polaroid – for the body projects I used type 59. It is a pity the material is not still made or that the Impossible Project have not revived the peel apart films.
Repeatability – Instrument Seven
I hope the new instruments will be up and running before too long, but these are the last three throws of paint I made, almost two years ago. In each of them there is a similar amount of paint and the paint catapult is left on the same settings. You can see how repeatable the aim is, and although the character of the flight of paint varies it is also more consistent than the earlier throws. In switching from projecting light to paint one of the reasons was to make the shadow (splatter) a less controlled event but also I anticipated that my catapult would not be as accurate and repeatable as it turned out. During my work with the sequence of paint-throwing instruments I learnt more about how to control them, so I have been building a more sophisticated version that I hope will lose control a bit more for the next series, although inevitably the process will repeat itself.























































