During my first term at Chelsea I have been attending lectures that include theory and tasks for my blog. I have summed up my notes from my lectures in this piece.
The set of lectures I went to were based around the theme of Collecting to form a relationship with our practical theme.
There were many different threads of thought for the lectures, the pathology of collecting, collecting the exotic, obsessive collecting, what phycologists think of collecting and how we view certain collections.
The set of lectures we had made me open my eyes to not only my own collecting habit's but why we do it. My belief is that we do it to keep hold of certain memories or times when we believed we were happy or times we want to remember and cherish.
One of the lectures concentrated on “Collecting the Exotic” of which looked into the paintings of the 1830’s. The sample of paintings we looked at all depicted women being sexual objects and very free and “easy” and the majority looked like they were foreign. However the women in britain at this time had strict rules to wear corsets and dresses that cover their arms and ankles. Therefore most of the paintings were sold to western men who were fascinated about these desirable creatures from strange and wonderful countries. The purpose of the paintings were to for full the mens fantasy of women being sexual beings. Their wives were purely there to create heirs.
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La Grande Odalisque.
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
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Freud’s view of the Human Mind.
In Frued’s “Iceberg” diagram of the mind, it has three stages Conscious, Preconscious and the Unconscious.
The Conscious Level is part of the mind of which we are aware of, perceptions and thoughts.
The Preconscious level is the part of the mind that stores ordinary memory, where we collect knowledge and memories.
The unconscious level is the part of the mind that isn’t directly accessible to awareness, of which stores fears, violent motives, selfish needs, irrational wishes, shameful experiences and unacceptable sexual desires.
Looking at Frued’s diagram, it helps me understand the mind and helps me understand examples of behavior. For example a middle aged man had a deep desire to have sex with prostitutes however he knew it was wrong due to his conscious level. This resulted in whenever he had the desire to do so he would watch Blood Brothers to relax due to his preconscious level.
The Holocaust.
The Holocaust could be thought of as some sort of collection. In the way that the germans collected the Jews together and dressed them in the same striped clothes before they were sent to the concentration camps.
There was an actual collection within the Holocaust also. Of which the Jewish people would have to give up their personal belongings which was catalogued and tagged by the german soldiers. The collection of objects were then sold on or recycled.
The Holocaust is by far the most sick and disgusting collection of all history and time.
The last lecture we had was “People Leave Traces”.
This lecture looked at the personal story of collecting and more importantly the memories that we hold.
We looked at how clothes were the most personal thing we own. They are intimate, they sit on our skin and some even mould to our shape.
We don’t really have a personal connection with fashion or textile photography but I believe we have a small connection with the clothes themselves even if they are polished.
Fashion drawings however we understand and connect with better as it is how the designer actually believed it would sit on a person.
Fashion images in a museum are harder to connect with., they are even more polished and they sit behind glass so they are literally untouchable. When the image is behind the glass it reenforces the fact that it is in icealation that we couldn’t look at it closely if we tried, this compares to the images in fashion magazines where you can look at the image closely and study it in great detail. Museums such as the fashion section in the V+A have froze the fashion garment in time. It takes the use out of the actual dress and it becomes a object to study, not a object of desire.
The notes I have written up are from the lectures I thoroughly enjoyed or made me open my eyes.
Collecting is a present thing in everyones day to day life it goes from where you stack your mugs, to standing on the tube to the extreme like collecting sex dolls. We all do it, its just how we do it that is interesting.













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