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Thursday, October 31, 2013

ccdn 231 project 2 | hand in




Rationale


The sensory/emotional experiment for project two became an elaboration on the topic of using the toilet. The process of working though the first project reinforced the importance of privacy that is a natural part of any enquiry into toilet use. It was clear that it would be more beneficial to introduce a means for further investigating the emotion of the act that was more socially acceptable. Reading material designed specifically for use in the toilet seemed an obvious solution. The result was three experiments in reading material that could alter the mood of the user whilst he or she is engaged in the act of using a toilet.

The first experiment was an exercise in translating the meaning of austerity so that the publication produced to evoke this emotion was devoid of any abstraction and became a literal translation of the word. The suggestion is that all that is required to fulfil the task of a toilet is a singular receptacle, irrespective of its age or state. Hence the rusty bucket suggests the concept of going ‘back to reality’, while the recycled paper further emphasises sustainability and social responsible design (Atfield, 2000).  The absence of text, with the exception of the word itself expresses the minimalism of austerity.

The physical as well as the mental state of comfort is bound up in this pictorial representation of the understanding of comfort resulting from project one. The responses from those interviews contained a clear message regarding the priority the participants granted to security and hygiene while using the toilet.  While comfort has in the past been more closely associated with bereavement and spirituality, these priorities are more in tune with the contemporary understanding of the word. (Shove, 2004) The locked door responds directly to the user’s need for privacy and the fur suggests the comfort of cuddly toys while the whole piece is contained in a Ziploc bag with the words confirming its fresh and clean state being all that are required to suggest comfort to the reader.

The most comprehensive experiment relates to glamour. Just as beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so too is glamour, the judgment of which is at least partly subjective. While it was used to describe sorcery previous to the twentieth century it was to become synonymous with the artifice of American cinema between the 1930s and 1950s (Dyhouse, 2011). The magazine makes use of a familiar magazine format to subtly ridicule the contemporary understanding of Hollywood-style glamour through complete redesign of the inside and outside pages of the cover. The front cover promoting the feature articles as well as the three pages of advertising are exclusively about the use of the toilet. The use of celebrity faces and well-known brands accentuates the appeal of the magazine. The reader will feel glamorous by association.

An interesting by-product of each of the experiments is humour, which may be a reflex action to the subject matter. There is a natural tendency within western cultures to allay discomfort with humour, which might explain this occurrence.

Shove,E.(2004) Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: The Social Organisation of Normality. London: Berg
Attfield,  J. (2000) Wild & Things. London: Berg
Dyhouse,C. (2011) Glamour:  Women, History, Feminism. London: Zed Books

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