Lead Adventure Forum
Other Stuff => General Wargames and Hobby Discussion => Topic started by: nic-e on 18 April 2016, 11:26:06 PM
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Evening all!
I've been lucky enough to have got my work into two separate shows this month, and it occurred to me that since both of them use gaming as a point of reference, i figured some of you might be interested :)
(For some clarity, I have a strong interest in romanticism and the idea of the sublime terrifying landscape, giving scale and grounding to human existence.
After my tutor asked what i was doing with the toy soldiers on my desk between making work we got into a conversation about the possible links between gaming and the idea of scale and indomitably in landscape.
Essentially what i'm working with in the works here is the idea of gaming viewed in context, not isolated from the external world, and acting as a metaphor for the true scale of human activity and constructions in the face of the vastness of existence.) (Yes I know it sounds awful, imagine how it feels thinking it!)
ANYWAY, it;s a sin to write about art without pictures, so i hope this might give someone some ideas, either for scenery construction or just a fun way to game in future.
(http://i1350.photobucket.com/albums/p771/Nic-e2/DSC_1476_zpstut403nd.jpg)
This second work is in a show this coming weekend, and consists of 40 game pieces made from soil which i will be playing with and slowly destroying throughout the day, using a simple rule system I wrote up to try and simulate long form change like geological movement or the rise and fall of civilizations.
http://parksixteen.wix.com/home#nic-evans/rqpk3
(http://i1350.photobucket.com/albums/p771/Nic-e2/13022173_10204398612604897_273437047_n_zpsinxhvekh.jpg)
Anyway, i hope i haven't bored you all and i hope more that what I've written isn't the most pretentious thing you'll read this month.
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I think it has been the most pretentious thing I've read in the last few weeks ;), but it has been refreshing (if art doesn't make you think then it isn't art).
PS You'll need to fix the url (using "[url]" tags), as the "!" breaks the auto-urling.
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I think it has been the most pretentious thing I've read in the last few weeks ;), but it has been refreshing (if art doesn't make you think then it isn't art).
PS You'll need to fix the url (using "[url]" tags), as the "!" breaks the auto-urling.
Url fixed.
Well i suppose i can at least take that as an achievement :D!