Lockdown Friend
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3986/Traditio2024530207Ključne besede:
pandemija, slikanje na daljavo, poetični premisleki, etnografijaPovzetek
During the pandemic, confronted with the “crisolation” (Podjed, 2024) of the first lockdown, I turned like many others to Skype, Zoom, and Teams to connect with distant relatives, friends, and interlocutors (Podjed, 2021; Svašek, 2022). Experimenting with various modes of digital hanging out, I began to paint the computer-mediated interactions (Svašek, 2023a, 2023b). The paintings explored the online relationality of pandemic life and were realized through concentrated bodily attention to the social dynamics of long-distance co-presence. While newly developed, the method of long-distance painting drew on pre-pandemic work by anthropologists who used sketching, painting, and graphic storytelling to reach broader audiences (Collordo-Mansfield, 1993; Afonso, 2004; Ramos, 2004, 2018; Causey, 2017; Dix, Kaur, 2019; Hurdley, 2019; Jain, 2021; Haapio-Kirk, Cearns, n.d.).
About a year after the completion of the paintings, I began adding poetic reflections. Lockdown Friend explores an encounter with one of my friends in the Netherlands in 2020. The picture visualizes the momentary link between our distant homes, connecting the two locations through wavy pen strokes. The accompanying poem expresses the sense of frustration I felt because of our inability to physically meet, and the last stanza refers to the deeply disturbing situation in which the infection and mortality rates rapidly increased across the world. As a united piece, the painting-poem is a focal point for imagination and free association between words and shapes.
Prenosi
Literatura
Afonso, Ana Isabel. 2004. New Graphics of Old Stories: Representation of Local Memories Through Drawings. In Working Images: Visual Research and Representation in Ethnography, eds. A. I. Afonso, L. Kürti, and S. Pink, 72–89. London: Routledge.
Causey, Andrew. 2017. Drawn to See: Drawing as an Ethnographic Method. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.
Collordo-Mansfield, Rudi. 1993. The Value of Sketching in Field Research. Anthropology, U.C.L.A. 20: 89–104.
Dix, Benjamin and Raminder Kaur. 2019. Drawing-Writing Culture: The Truth-Fiction Spectrum of an Ethno-Graphic Novel on the Sri-Lankan Civil War and Migration. Visual Anthropology Review 35 (1): 76–111. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/var.12172.
Haapio-Kirk, Laura and Jennifer Cearns. n.d. Illustrating Anthropology. URL: https://illustratinganthropology.com (accessed 24.1.2023).
Hurdley, Rachel. 2019. Drawing as a Research Method. In Sage Research Methods, eds. P. Atkinson, S. Delamont, A. Cernat, J. W. Sakshaug, and R. A. Williams. London: Sage. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4135/9781526421036838861.
Jain, Lochlann. 2021. Graphic Poesis: Drawing Things to Other. Commoning Ethnography 14 (1): 53–78. DOI: https://doi.org/10.26686/ce.v4i1.5202.
Podjed, Dan. 2021. Renewal of Ethnography in the Time of the COVID-19 Crisis. Sociologija i prostor 59 (219): 267–284. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5673/sip.59.0.10.
Podjed, Dan. 2024. Krizolacija: Znanstveno branje o izoliranih ljudeh [Crisolation: A Science Story of Isolated People]. Ljubljana: Založba ZRC, Cankarjeva založba.
Ramos, Manuel João. 2004. Drawing the Lines: The Limitations of Intercultural Ekphrasis. In Working Images: Visual Research and Representation in Ethnography, eds. S. Pink, L. Kürti, and A. I. Afonso, 147–161. London: Routledge.
Ramos, Manuel João. 2018. Of Hairy Kings and Saintly Slaves: An Ethiopian Travelogue. Canon Pyon: Sean Kingston.
Svašek, Maruška. 2022. Lockdown Routines: Im/mobility, Materiality and Mediated Support at the Time of the Pandemic. In Material Culture and Forced Migration: Materializing the Transient, eds. F. Yi-Neumann, A. Lauser, A. Fuhse, and P. Bräunlein, 229–250. London: University College London.
Svašek, Maruška. 2023a. Ethnography as Creative Improvisation: Exploring Methods in (Post) Pandemic Times. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/725341.
Svašek, Maruška. 2023b. Pandemic Times: Nine Acts. Anthropology and Humanism 48 (2): 333–345. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/anhu.12442.
Prenosi
Objavljeno
Kako citirati
Številka
Rubrike
Licenca
To delo je licencirano pod Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva 4.0 mednarodno licenco.
Avtorji jamčijo, da je delo njihova avtorska stvaritev, da v njem niso kršene avtorske pravice tretjih oseb ali kake druge pravice. V primeru zahtevkov tretjih oseb se avtorji zavezujejo, da bodo varovali interese založnika ter da bodo povrnili morebitno škodo.
Podrobneje v rubriki: Prispevki