HANNAH SECKENDORF

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Research | Strategy | Design | Navigating the design challenges of emerging mediums and emergent ideas.





Rebecca Solnit
“When you give yourself to places, they give you yourself back.”

“Certainly for artists of all stripes, the unknown, the idea or the form or the tale that has not yet arrived, is what must be found. It is the job of artists to open doors and invite in prophesies, the unknown, the unfamiliar; it’s where their work comes from, although its arrival signals the beginning of the long disciplined process of making it their own. Scientists too, as J. Robert Oppenheimer once remarked, “live always at the ‘edge of mystery’ — the boundary of the unknown.” But they transform the unknown into the known, haul it in like fishermen; artists get you out into that dark sea.” 

“Previous technologies have expanded communication. But the last round may be contracting it. The eloquence of letters has turned into the nuanced sparseness of texts; the intimacy of phone conversations has turned into the missed signals of mobile phone chat. I think of that lost world, the way we lived before these new networking technologies, as having two poles: solitude and communion. The new chatter puts us somewhere in between, assuaging fears of being alone without risking real connection. It is a shallow between two deeper zones, a safe spot between the dangers of contact with ourselves, with others.” 
Themes
Collaborative Creative Processes, Affordances of Digital Technology, Online Community, Placefulness
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