Julia Calver looked over passengers’ shoulders and read lines from their books. She imagined the objects from these passages speeding along the Jubilee line as though it were a wormhole for time travel through outer space.
Patrick Coyle scrambled familiar London Underground announcements and instructions, spelling out improbable stories and making surprising associations.
Cressida Kocienski traced the route of the Jubilee line above ground on foot, photographing the objects she found along the way, which she has described as imaginary instruments for measuring time. For further visit Cressida's blog
Claire Nichols focused on architectural details and signs at London Bridge Underground station. Her drawings transfer these shapes in space into shapes on paper.
Tamarin Norwood watched passengers passing time on their journeys and rewrote their actions as suggestions for other commuters.
Gemma Sharpe made a number of night-time journeys from London Bridge station after the last Tube. Her text takes the form of a correspondence in which she meditates on the images, thoughts, movements and sounds evoked through such journeys.
2 comments:
Unfortunately the pictures don't show at all on my monitor - all those red X's force me to use my imagination!
Turns out they were tiffs - should be ok now!
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