Monday, July 7, 2025

Final Project: Typologies of Walking/Not (Digital Paths)










This project began as a plan to document desire paths created by people repeatedly walking through spaces not designed for them. I was interested in how these physical imprints show quiet resistance to planning, and how they reveal preference that cuts across official intention. I started looking in Tucson’s vacant lots, around strip malls, and through residential zones for these signs of movement. But during that process, I became drawn to another kind of trace, the ones left behind not in dirt, but in data. While using Google Street View to scout locations, I started noticing moments where the system broke down or where something didn't align. They felt just as much evidence of people stepping outside the expected path. What followed was the process of collecting these fragments and assembling them into a typology. The project became less about walking itself and more about how movement or silence appears in places that are meant to be neutral and controlled. Each image shows some form of drift or disobedience, whether caused by human behavior, machine failure, or a collision between the two. In their own way, they all break the surface of the system. It’s about paying attention to what slips through what the map doesn’t fully control, what the camera doesn’t quite capture. It’s about the ways people bend space, avoid rules, or exist at the edges of structure without asking for permission. Whether in the dirt or on the screen, these are all desire paths in their own way, signs that someone passed through and left something behind, even if only barely. 


Friday, July 4, 2025

Writing EXTRA (In place of office hours)

 McKenzie Wark presents the concept of low theory as a mode of critique that refrains from the institutional capture of art and philosophy. In the Introduction of the book, low theory is positioned against the grand, hardened structure of high theory and commodified art, where Wark sees as largely recuperated by academic or market forces. Instead, low theory lives and breathes in practices and ideas developed outside of academia and the art world. It is exemplified in the work of the Situationist International, through their engagement with everyday life and refusal of specialization. According to Wark, this type of theory is performative and directly related to critique-in-action rather than limited to the creation of static information. Wark's revival of low theory, in my opinion, is not only legitimate but important, especially for contemporary artists and intellectuals operating in interrelated or oppositional areas. Low theory provides an approach of rediscovering the radical edge of critique at a time when opposition has often been aestheticized and reduced through commodification. This is achieved by rejecting legitimacy through conventional means and integrating itself into experienced, dangerous, and frequently marginal acts. For me, the power of low theory lies not just in its ideas, but in the way it moves sideways, experimentally, and often invisibly. 

This notion of low theory resonates deeply with my project, one about flowers encased in ice, which explores impermanence, transformation, and quiet resistance through natural materials. Like the Situationists, who developed their ideas by drifting through urban spaces and observing the breakdown of everyday structures, my frozen flower sculptures embrace decay and change as essential elements of the work. These pieces were not made to last  they were meant to melt, collapse, and disappear. Their temporality resists traditional expectations of preservation, polish, and permanence in art. Rather than presenting a fixed image or message, the project holds a process watching beauty dissolve, shift, and vanish over time. In this way, my critique of control, consumerism, and environmental fragility emerges not through overt commentary, but through the experience of the work itself. The flowers in ice challenge the idea that meaning must be durable or monumental but display a vulnerability, loss, and transformation can be sites of deep reflection. The act of watching them melt becomes a quiet situation of its own that refuses spectacle, embraces impermanence, and invites a slower, more attentive way of seeing. In doing so, the project reflects a belief that art can exist outside of institutional authority and instead live through its process and presence. 

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Finale Proposal

1. Abstract 
This project documents desire paths, unofficial foot trails forged by repeated human movement—in and around Tucson, Arizona. By mapping and photographing such paths at dawn or dusk, I will examine how people resist or circumvent official infrastructure. These trails will be categorized into a visual typology such as shortcuts, avoidance routes, and ghost paths will be complemented with a map and a written artist statement. The work explores walking as a subtle form of resistance and refusal, engaging with themes from The Beach Beneath the Street and tactical media practices that foreground unnoticed forms of spatial agency.
2.Artist Statement
This project grows from my earlier “Walk 2” blog post, in which I documented desire paths within my neighborhood. These unofficial trails intrigued me for what they revealed: people carving their own way through a landscape built for something else. This final project expands on that first encounter, shifting from informal observation to intentional documentation across multiple Tucson sites.
My practice often revolves around spatial mood, routine, and the subtle traces left by human movement, so this project reflects my ongoing interests, even though I generally avoid overt performance. Desire paths are unintentional gestures that are iterative, accumulative, and born from bodily habit or frustration with imposed design. I’m drawing inspiration from The Beach Beneath the Street and its discussion of psychogeography and Situationist dérive. These unsanctioned paths represent a bottom-up détournement of urban design. They’re quiet but meaningful through it’s traces of silent negotiation with the built environment.
This project also builds on the work of artists like Francis Alÿs and NeuroTransmitter, who reframe mundane motion as resistant and poetic. My aim is to reveal living geographies shaped by countless anonymous walkers emphasizing that even small gestures can carve new meaning into public space.
3. Previous work
1.     “Walk 2” Desire Path Blog Post – documented informal shortcuts in my neighborhood
 


2.     Outskirts in dreams – images of Tucson’s liminal zones captured in a way to feel minimal 




3.     Spanish Trail Suites – documented photos of the ignored decaying Spanish Trail Suites 



4.  Detailed Proposal
 
For the final project, I will intentionally document desire paths across Tucson to explore how people create meaning through movement. These paths are found in varied contexts: residential zones, public parks, shopping center edges, and areas adjacent to vacant lots or construction sites. I will visit each location at dawn or sundown, taking still photographs, my own body will not appear. Instead, the focus will be on the path’s form, materiality, and immediate context (pavement, dirt, grass, edging, barriers, fences). The photos aim to reveal how these paths diverge from or intersect official walkways; close-ups will highlight textures and traces of repeated use.
The photos will be arranged into a typology grid. Categories include:
       Shortcut: Paths that significantly reduce distance
       Avoidance: Trails that bypass fences or barriers
       Ghost Path: Now-blocked trails that remain visible
 
I will create a map, marking each site with notes on its name, type, and time of visit.
 
The final presentation includes:
       Photographic typology grid
       Annotated site map
       Written artist statement exploring how desire paths embody spatial resistance and psychogeography.
 
This project ties directly to key course themes: walking/not walking, spatial control, and resistance. Desire paths represent silent refusals of people choosing their own routes, subtly disrupting official plans. The “Ghost Paths” especially resonate with the city’s temporal dimension: points of erasure and memory. As The Beach Beneath the Street suggests, psychogeography involves emotional and counter-normative encounters with space. Desire paths are the city’s unplanned subtitles that allow small eruptions of agency within a controlled design. I will also reference tactical media strategies, where small gestures (like leaving a hand-written sign or small installation) expose or challenge dominant systems. Though there’s no explicit intervention, the act of documenting becomes an archival intervention—making visible what often goes unseen. This is a low-key but politically resonant take on performance, less about the presence of a visible self but more about the testimony of collective movement. By presenting these paths, I animate traces of negotiation, memory, and refusal embedded in Tucson’s everyday landscape.

5. Visual Research & Sketches
 
Concepts/Ideas
       Photo A: Existing desire path in a nearby lot
       Photo B: Liminal zone bordering a park, with clear foot trail
       Sketch C: Rough typology grid layout
       Sketch D: Hand-drawn map concept with path annotations
6.  Equipment, Timeline & Budget
Equipment
       Digital camera or smartphone
       Notebook or phone for field notes
       Access to Google Maps and editing software
 
Timeline
       Days 1–2: Scout and finalize sites
       Days 3–4: Photograph sites at dawn/sundown
       Day 5: Select and organize images; draft typology grid and map
       Day 6: Write artist statement; finalize layout
       Day 7: Assemble content and submit
 
Budget
       Travel: Walkable and drivable within Tucson
       Materials: None except for the use of existing personal equipment such as FUJIFILM XT-4, ND filters, and selection of lenses


Final Project: Typologies of Walking/Not (Digital Paths)

This project began as a plan to document desire paths created by people repeatedly walking through spaces not designed for them. I was inte...