About Ai Vee Goh

Films. Photography. Micro Machines. Ice Tea. Honesty.

Facets Analogy

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What is a thing? A thing is the sum of all these facets:

  • Things have facets
  • These facets are “called” by other facets
  • We see some facets of things only
  • Therefore we only “see” parts of things
  • Things are all of these facets (then, now, to be)
  • These facets does not equal the thing, just how things see the thing
  • Facets constitute (are) relations
  • Relations are “make” network
  • Non-fiction (not documentary, that’s already too far involved in very specific matters of concern) is about ways ti address the world creatively to make knowledge claims about the world.
  • If things have facets then stories are one small set of possible facets (as is meaning).
  • How can we make certain non-fiction that addresses the world that is able to think with facets.

“What is a thing? A thing is a sum of facets.” – Adrian

  • Documentary are small facets.

Week 5 Notes

Adrain was away today and left us with a bunch of instructions to follow in the studio, we were to have a self-guided class.

‘What I would like to have happen in the studio is:
General discussion (can be in groups, or as a class) that is an explaining to yourselves what you understand ontography, ‘materialism’ and the various ideas in the readings (Bogost, Frankham, Latour) to be, questions you have (any and all questions, this is an open gathering of all questions) about what it is, their purpose, point, what to do with them. The emphasis here is on discussing and defining amongst yourselves to find all the gaps (which become questions). 
These questions are to be documented (just write them out as a list in a GoogleDoc that you share with me or on a blog post). This should take at most an hour.
Then everyone is to take one of these questions (they can be different questions, it does not matter if several people want to use the same question) and use that as an interview question (what we call a prompt) and interview everybody else in the room to get their answer. Do not include the question/prompt in the interview. The interview will be video or audio. This should be done quickly (pair up, I interview you, then you interview me, then next person, repeat).
This is quick sketch media making. Edit all the material together into a single audio or video piece. Upload to vimeo.com or soundclound. Embed in your blog.  This is an exercise in a) knowledge mapping, b) problem discovery, c) vernacular media practice, d) sketching, e) listing, f) using what we call a pattern language, g) how to make a microdoc.’

 

  • There were a total of nine students in the studio: nice and intimate
  • Sitting in the circle as a class, we discussed the task set upon us.
  • Each person were asked whether or not they have any questions about what an ontograph,
  • Monique noted that ‘the things only exist because we see it that way’.
  • Using the Alien Phenomenology reading task as a reference point to complete our tasks, we went around and spoked about the three quotes that: what we enjoy, what troubled us and what intrigued us.
  • Brainstorming the concepts and the questions that will be use as a prompt for the final product of the studio to upload to a website video or audio service provided such as SoundCloud or Vimeo, various ideas were explored.
  • We went around in a circle using an iPhone to capture each person’s answer’s to the question. The question that we all chose to answer was “How do all things ‘equally exist’ but yet, ‘do not exist equally’, which was based on the quote, ‘All things exist equally, but some things exists equally.’
  • My answer for the question was,
    • In George Orwell’s novel, Animal Farm, one of the seven commandments that the pigs come up with is that ‘all animals are equal’, but what they actually meant was that ‘all animals are equal but some are more equal than others.”
  •  An audio recording lasting around 7 minutes was recorded on Andrea’s phone, she will be uploading the audio file to the studio’s Facebook group.

Studio #5 – Notetaking Role

In the studio today, all students were required to be present and present their ontograph that was due in week 4. Each poster were randomly hung onto the wall and each student took turns to present depending on the order of how the poster was hung.

Everyone had a maximum of 5 minutes to discuss their ontograph, there were five questions that were could use as guide to address the ontograph, those questions were:

  1. What is it about?
  2. What is it doing?
  3. What do you think it shows?
  4. What has your thing now become?
  5. Is it different to what it was before? How?

After each presentation from the student, Adrian gave a clear and brief feedback in regards to the ontograph and the presentation, providing his own perspective of the ontograph.

Unfortunately due to either time constraints or forgetfulness, Ren did not present his ontograph to the class, he may possibly present his ontograph in week 6.

Adrian noted that he will be unavailable in the Friday studio in week 5, he will be away at a symposium in Canberra. During the studio on Friday, the class will be producing a media product of an interview and must post it online to Vimeo.

Documentation Week 4

I’ve swapped my documentary task with Emily today in class as she is unwell.

Here are the notes that I took in class:

  • Adrian noted that he was grumpy because there were students that contacted him about ‘missing/lost’ assessments. Adrian noted that every single student must know that there are to be responsible for their work and how they store their work. And make sure they have an extra copy or two.
  • We have a class on Friday – in that class, all students will run the class, discussing about the things that we’ve done, this is what we’ve concentrated on, bits that we don’t understand, etc. Basically, Adrian wants a list of questions that we asked each other in the conversation on our Friday class in Week 5.
  • After we come back from our Easter break, we will be examining how we make lists, how we produce lists as well as making non-fiction media products throughout the semester.
  • ‘Traditional stories are just dumb!’ – Adrian exclaimed in regards to the normal stories that are traditional, e.g. romantic comedy love stories.
  • ‘Stories are deeply causal’ – Adrian
  • Adrian is interested in we would like to do next.
  • We went around in a circle and talked about where we are up to in terms of where we are at with our ontographs that are due today.
  • ‘Treat a website like an article’ – Adrian: collect all the information that you can see that are available on the website.
  • We had time to work on our ontographs in the studio – just to finish up and refine things before we handed it in.

Alien Phenomenology Questions

From the Documentary Ontography blog, Adrian asked us to work on these tasks:

‘From the Alien Phenomenology reading (Chapter One) please bring three quotes that:

  • you enjoy
  • trouble you
  • intrigue you’

 

Here are my quotes:

What I enjoyed reading:

  • ‘Quentin Mellassoux has coined the term correlationism to described this view, one that holds that being exists only as a correlate between mind and world. If things exist, they do so only for us.’
  • ‘The second ontological system operation of our time, social relativism, descends from the humanistic and social scientifuc traditions.’
  • ‘Can machines think?’

 

What troubled me:

  • ‘From the perspective of cultural theory instead of philosophy, the OOO strain of speculative realism might bear some resemblance to more familiar arguments against anthropocentrism (such as post-humanism).’
  • ‘Posthumanism, we might conclude, is not posthuman enough.’
  • ‘Bryant has suggested that flat ontology can unite the two worlds, synthesizing the human and the nonhuman into a common collective. An ontology is flat if it makes no distinction between the types of things that exist but treats all equally, the spirit behind the name Bryant gives his OOO theory, the ‘democracy of objects’. In a flat ontology, the bubbling skin of  the culinary history of the enchilada it is destined to top.’

 

What intrigued me:

  •  ‘To proceed as a philosopher today demands the rejection of correlationism. To be a speculative realist, one must abandon the belief that human access sits at the center of being, organising and regulating it like an ontological watchmaker.’
  • ‘If ontology is the philosophical study of existence, then from Harman we can derive an object-orientated ontology (or OOO for short call it ‘triple O’ for style’s sake). OOO puts things at the center of being. We humans are elements, but not the sole elements, of philosophical interest. OOO contends that nothing has special status, but that everything exists equally.’
  • ‘Computers often do entail human experience and perception. The human operator views words and images rendered on a display, applies physical forces to a mouse, seats memory chips into motherboard sockets.’

Work In Process – For Media Thing Project Poster

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These are some of the images from my brainstorming session this past Saturday night. With Adrian’s get go, I was able to change the idea of my media thing. I had previously wanted to do my media thing project on the Apple’s iPhone’s application, focusing on one of those photo editing apps. I’ve realised that I couldn’t find anything on ‘what is an app?’, maybe I wasn’t looking hard enough or that I couldn’t be bothered or I wasn’t looking in the right places. I believe it’s a combination of both. I’ve decided to work on the fMRI scan for my project instead. Funny eh. I’m more interested in the fMRI scan than I am with iPhone apps. I’ve been researching more about the fMRI scan these couple of days, and have been jolting down notes.

Hopefully, I’ll be able to write down a summary of my notes in the poster by tomorrow. Well… I sort of have to… It’s due so soon!

Nerd Details

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Today’s studio was full of comfort or at least I think so. It was my turn to host the afternoon tea for the three hour studio today, I bought two packets of cupcakes, a packet of Asian styled jellies and a bag of miniature apples. On top of that, there was a class discussion where Adrian asked every student to participate by sitting around in a semi-circle with Adrian in the middle. It sort of reminded me of sitting around a camp fire. The class discussion was intimate, not too intimate that it made me feel comfortable, but comfortable enough that I’m able to share my thoughts with others without suffering from social anxiety as I sometimes can. I’m usually a mouse and don’t talk in class unless I HAVE to, however, this little exercise made me appreciate the teaching style of Adrian even more.

In the studio, Adrian noted that we are in dire need to consider the details surrounding our media artefact, our thing, our object, our item, our project. How this is possible is to consider all the “nerd details” as Adrian puts in. As in, not just all the major details but the minor ones too. We need to move away to generalising our ‘thing’ and start to move towards being more specific about our ‘thing’.

For my Project #1, I worked on a A3 poster that only lightly touched upon what Apple iPhone Apps can do. To a degree, I only concentrated on that and nothing else. I didn’t focus on what the app actually is and to be frank, I didn’t even think of that, which was utterly silly of me. After presenting and obtaining the feedback from Adrian and my fellow peers, I realised that I needed to work on not only my presentation skills but also the “nerd details” of my thing. All students had two minutes to present their poster, I only presented a faction of that time. What I learnt that day was that I should be more aware and be more organise for the next time I have a class presentation. I knew I had a class presentation on Wednesday this week, however, I didn’t prepare for it. I thought I could just wing it and that’ll be it. I just wanted to get it over and done with. I have to change my attitude and my perspective of this project if I want to succeed in this course, not only for the assessments but in general.

There’s going to be lots to do over the weekend and I haven’t even started on my Project #2, I’ve only looked up some referencing that I think that is usable for the project, nonetheless, I don’t think the references I’ve collected is of any use. I’ve created a little folder on my Mac, for which I am ready to download any articles that I think is suitable to reference for my project.

I will be creating and working on a poster – yes, I am that lame – that said, I’d like to make sort of like a family tree of the iPhone app, how I’m going to do that is beyond me, but I’ll figure out a way somehow, well…. I sort of have to. I plan to investigate upon a photo editing app, an app something similar to Photoshop but not quite, I want to investigate a photo editing app that can apply effects or filters to an image. And with that edited image, can be shared on a vast range of social media networking websites or apps like Instagram or Facebook.

We just got to see how this all goes…..

It’s going to be one hell of a roller-coaster ride.

Emotions are going to run high.

Far out!!!

Poster 1.0

In the studio today, everyone had to present the poster of a “thing” that they worked on during week 2. All students in my class focused on their own individual “thing”. Some “things” that were explored were light boxes, magazines, specific cameras, and screenwriting. I focused my “thing” on Apple iPhone Applications. My presentation was short and sharp, or at least I thought it was. Turns out I was wrong. There was too much generalisations around my poster. I didn’t specialise anything in my poster, that’s certainly something I got to work on in the next poster. There’s so many aspects to iPhone apps than I had originally thought.

What have I learnt so far in Studio 5

Lists. Who knew lists would be so complicated. In attempting to complete my first task during the week, the Project One assessment task, that was to be presented in class today, I realised how tough it was to come up and brainstorm a central idea and/or thing. I decided to use the Apple iPhone applications as an artefact in completing my Project One task. I thought there was going to be many things to write about it, there’s so much history behind the Apple iPhone applications even though it’s only been these couple of decades that the Apple iPhone applications have hit it off and gotten popular over the years. What I didn’t realised was that I had gotten myself in a bit of a pickle, I had so much to write that my brain began to go numb over the thought of coming up with ideas that could range from the moon and sun to back down to Earth. Seriously. How silly of me to pick an artefact thinking it was going to be easy to write about for my assessment task.

I realised that this course, this Documentary Ontography course is not simply about lists, it’s about how you link random words, phrases and sentences together for it to make sense. Sure it can be a bunch of random words on a piece of paper, but how is that going to make sense if there’s no one central idea. Just the other day, Adrian asked the class, ‘what irritates you?’. It was a simple question and we were asked to write down what irritated us in the form of a list. Everyone had different things to say about what irritated them, from sounds, to smell, and the the feeling of something. My list was simple, I just wrote about people and how people can be so irritating. I learnt that even though everyone comes from a different background, we all have different ideas of what irritate us.