Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Singleton Thesis/Manifesto

Singleton

Thesis/Manifesto

A personal history with a landmark initiates an identity for the selected space. With the newfound identity, expectations are aroused to be collected on revision. The demands of prospects set forth reminiscence, forming a relationship between self and land.

Informational architecture through graphic design centers around form and location, mapping awareness between oneself and material.

(interaction)

The geographic position fixed with a memory entangles territory with belonging.

(belonging)

The sentiment concluded from a space provokes an intimate recollection for potential return.

(configured sense towards space)

The birthing of a landmark’s identity is distressed through time.

(the division between memory and present conditions of space)

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