One Year – Week 27

Project Description

One Year is a project through which I intend to construct a daily photographic record of a single view: the view from my study window at around 8.00a.m. each day when I sit down to work.  One Year will annotate each picture with a note of the weather for that morning and the morning’s main news headline from the BBC News site.  In addition, there will be a note taking a key sentence or two from my daily journal.

21 March 2014March 21st 2014

Sunny

Teams scour ocean for missing plane

Can I be the only person in the world who finds Tom Hooper’s Les Misérables the most tedious film ever?

 

22 March 2014March 22nd 2014

Light rain shower

Australia vows indefinite jet search

He sits on a bench so well-polished that his rump constantly slips and slumps

 

23 March 2014March 23rd 2014

Light rain shower

Hunt widens after jet ‘debris’ clues

November 1840: the birth of time

 

 

24 March 2014March 24th 2014

Sunny

Russian troops ‘overrun Crimea base’

A station hall and the smell of smoke; engine steam that billows and clings

 

25 March 2014March 25th 2014

Light cloud

Bad weather halts missing jet search

Off the bus and straight into the George Robey

 

26 March 2014March 26th 2014

Sunny

Abbott vows to solve plane ‘riddle’

A grand tour, edging through tribal territories

 

27 March 2014March 27th 2014

Light cloud

‘Big Six’ face competition inquiry

Shop front names stake territorial claims

 

 

Artist Statement

… “natural history” has no actual existence other than through the process of human history, the only part which recaptures this historical totality, like the modern telescope whose sight captures, in time, the retreat of nebulae at the periphery of the universe.

Guy Debord – Society of the Spectacle

The purpose of this project is to explore continuity and change.  Over the course of a year, I will build up a daily visual record of the same view.  Despite my best efforts, though, I will not be able to replicate the ‘same’ view each day: it is subject to changes in the environment, such as the weather or the time the sun rises.  But it is also affected by changes caused by me, the observer.  For instance, my feelings that morning may change the way I hold the camera or, inadvertently, the image may show my breath on the glass from getting too close to the window.

Looking out at the view on this, the first morning of One Year, I see a scene comprising sky, trees and rooftops.  I don’t see much evidence of human activity just yet, but that may come later in the year when the leaf cover begins to thin out.  Being on a flight path, we also see the odd vapour trail or aeroplane light in the sky too.

Some of the changes that will become evident will be pretty obvious, such as the seasons.  Other changes will be more subtle.  My daily notes will give some insight into what is going on inside my head that morning, from my journal entry, and there will also be a record of what is happening in the world in general, from the news headline.

But the ‘view’ I am recording in One Year is not neutral, it is selected and framed by me.  Similarly, my journal extracts are selected from a much larger body of work; it is the ‘insight’ into my thinking that I choose to present.  Even the ‘news headline’ cannot be regarded as neutral, for it is subject to BBC editorial bias.

But there is a third party in the One Year process, one that is outside of my control. That person is you, the reader of this blog, the interested observer of the project.  I want people to bring their own interpretations, views and insights to this project.  All comments received will be reproduced in my weekly project reports.

About Bobby Seal

Freelance writer, poet and psychogeographer
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