Solo 5

Apolonia Bokszycka

  • 26.05 Tutorials

    By

    Apolonia Bokszycka

    Material(s)

    An old linden tree in the Zawieprzyce Park, archival photo by Stanisław Pastusiak via lubelskie.regiopedia.pl

    Linden (lipa / Linde)

    This one is extremely important in Polish culture specifically (but also in Alpine folk traditions).

    The linden tree was associated with:

    • femininity,
    • protection,
    • love,
    • domestic spirits,
    • community gathering.

    Villages often centered around a linden tree. People believed it:

    • protected against storms,
    • softened conflict,
    • repelled malevolent spirits.

    In Slavic folklore, it often has a gentler, maternal aura compared to oak.
    Linden wood was also used for:

    • religious sculptures,
    • icons,
    • ritual carving.

    A lot of old Polish Madonnas were carved from linden.

    One of the oldest recorded linden trees in Poland, next to a church in Czarny Potok. Source: mojamalopolska.pl

    Carving

    • There are only very basic tools in our workshop, I would probably need to buy some more.
    • Time-consuming

    Matthias suggested to focus on preparing a model:

    • either buying ready-made st parts and applying them on a chair
    • or doing casting of the ready-made parts.

    However,

    • I feel like the project would lack craft if I followed the suggestion and
    • another aspect is the loss of meaning, when materiality is omitted from consideration, which would then affect interaction with the object.

    Folk patterns from Podhale region in Poland

    Kashubian folk patterns

    References

    www.lwf.bayern.de

    www.lamusdworski.wordpress.com

  • 24.04 Tutorials

    By

    Apolonia Bokszycka

    Throne design

    • Unique, singular chair
    • Raised above floor level
    • Ceremonial purpose

    Maybe in order to humiliate the person intended to sit on it, a series of identical thrones should me made? An anti-thesis to the definition of a throne.

    Who am I designing for?

    Technolords are out of reach. I cannot interact with them – maybe it would be more interesting to design for people enabling the technolords or just general public – in order to remind them about their political power?

    Fragment of an essay “Silicon Valley’s Worldview Is Not Just an Ideology; It’s a Personality Disorder” by Maria Farell
    Idea: Providing general public with instructions how to make a throne themselves.

    Framework

    This semester I would like to learn working with metal.

    The NY Chair 1 by Malcolm Ransom, 6.35mm aluminium
    Another way of humiliation would be to create a throne from an everyday object.

    Next step: visiting Altmetall