

Ruth Ewan, ‘We Could Have Been Anything That We Wanted To Be’, Folkestone Triennial (2011)
On 5 October 1793 the recently formed Republic of France abandoned the Gregorian calendar in favour of an entirely new model, the French Republican Calendar, which became the official calendar of France for 13 years. Each day of the Republican Calendar was made up of 10 hours. Each hour was divided into 100 minutes and each minute into 100 seconds. Inspired by this historical model, Ewan created new clocks and altered existing ones around the town of Folkestone, Kent to tell decimal time.
By dd
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged 10 hours, city, clock, deceit, france, history, kent, public space, republican calendar, rhythm, ruth ewan, street view, system, tell, time, uk
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Bethan Huws, ‘Certain’ (2008)
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged bethan huws, black, certain, closing, closure, curtain, fun, installation, romance, security, text, unknown, wall, white
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Annaïk Lou Pitteloud, ‘Theory Of Practice III’ (2011)
Ballpoint pen on paper. Simultaneously written with the left hand towards right and with the right hand towards left.
By mh
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Posted in Composition
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Also tagged annaïk lou pitteloud, ballpoint, DIY, fuckem, hand, illegible, juxtaposition, left, practice, right, text, theory, trash, unknown
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‘The chocolate bar’ (2003) by Bethan Huws
By mh
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Posted in Abstraction
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Also tagged berlin, bethan huws, candy, chocolate bar, DIY, eat, joke, language, planet, romance, speech, text, unknown, wall
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