trashing

Woodland Pattern's Prompts #7: Utopian Compromise by Paul Druecke

Trashing is a utopian bounty of color and texture. Dusty salmon is my favorite color for rubbish, the perfect accent for earth-crusted, translucent plastic as well as all manner of practical utensils or decadent habits. It has been an honor and treat to contribute to Woodland Pattern’s series of Prompts. Woodland Pattern offers so much vital programming, brick and mortar and now virtual, it may be the closest we get to ideal.

Day 16, 4.16.20 Utopian Patterns #2

America Pastime Day 21, 4.22.20 by Paul Druecke

Earth Day Alchemy: Public Relations
pages of a discarded book still have story

Trashing | Journal notes:
Sensitive displays of other people’s trash documented with an iPhone camera. The compositional ease of bringing together randomly distinct histories, baggie after baggie after baggie each with the lower right corner twisted off. Impossible storylines converge. Shiny inner foil of salty snack bags gently dulled by the elements. The implacable sense, and senselessness, of other people’s trash become pragmatic then precious. A Cheetos bag freshly torn by hands or wind. Bright, cheerful colors that enhance flavor embody a sense of self-determination.

Toward the end of Christopher Alexander’s Timeless Way of building, he writes, “. . . we assume that when we repair something, we are essentially trying to get it back to its original state. This kind of repair is patching, conservative, static. But in this new use of the word repair, we assume, instead, that every entity is changing constantly: and that at every moment we use the defects of the present state as the starting point for the definition of the new state.”