Grilles by rote

What started out as an interest to utilize undervalued fabric to create tapestries through various tying techniques led to a series of exploration and experimentations of how other commercial fast discarded materials (e.g. used event banners, old bicycle inner tubes etc.) could also be repurposed th...

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Main Author: Chia, Thong
Other Authors: Chalit Kongsuwan
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74446
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-744462019-12-10T12:22:45Z Grilles by rote Chia, Thong Chalit Kongsuwan School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music What started out as an interest to utilize undervalued fabric to create tapestries through various tying techniques led to a series of exploration and experimentations of how other commercial fast discarded materials (e.g. used event banners, old bicycle inner tubes etc.) could also be repurposed through similar tying techniques to create form and structure in products. Various experimental results led to the discovery of how these materials can actually be harnessed to bring something old and forgotten into a new, modern context. As such, local steel window grilles commonly found in old buildings and estates around Singapore in the 1900s was chosen as the main focus of this project, which seeks to remind people of the memories they associate these heritage window grille designs with. In recent years, lesser of these patterned window grilles are seen around our cityscape, as grille designs have since been simplified, due to rising production cost and mass production practices. Much of what we see today, along our streets and corridors are uniform bar windows that serve the primary function of security and nothing else. Since these steel window grilles were key aesthetic features in many local architectures of the past, many locals have unknowingly associated them with nostalgic memories of the past; be it events, people or places. With nostalgia and a sense of loss, Grilles By Rote project acts as a memoir for these past memories in modern-day context and space. Through a tapestry sliding screen system, people can customize and select grille designs which holds the greatest significance to them; in hope to habitually help people grow awareness and understanding of these almost forgotten grille designs, which form an integral, yet overlooked part of our shared Singaporean heritage. Bachelor of Fine Arts 2018-05-18T01:46:40Z 2018-05-18T01:46:40Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74446 en Nanyang Technological University 35 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music
Chia, Thong
Grilles by rote
description What started out as an interest to utilize undervalued fabric to create tapestries through various tying techniques led to a series of exploration and experimentations of how other commercial fast discarded materials (e.g. used event banners, old bicycle inner tubes etc.) could also be repurposed through similar tying techniques to create form and structure in products. Various experimental results led to the discovery of how these materials can actually be harnessed to bring something old and forgotten into a new, modern context. As such, local steel window grilles commonly found in old buildings and estates around Singapore in the 1900s was chosen as the main focus of this project, which seeks to remind people of the memories they associate these heritage window grille designs with. In recent years, lesser of these patterned window grilles are seen around our cityscape, as grille designs have since been simplified, due to rising production cost and mass production practices. Much of what we see today, along our streets and corridors are uniform bar windows that serve the primary function of security and nothing else. Since these steel window grilles were key aesthetic features in many local architectures of the past, many locals have unknowingly associated them with nostalgic memories of the past; be it events, people or places. With nostalgia and a sense of loss, Grilles By Rote project acts as a memoir for these past memories in modern-day context and space. Through a tapestry sliding screen system, people can customize and select grille designs which holds the greatest significance to them; in hope to habitually help people grow awareness and understanding of these almost forgotten grille designs, which form an integral, yet overlooked part of our shared Singaporean heritage.
author2 Chalit Kongsuwan
author_facet Chalit Kongsuwan
Chia, Thong
format Final Year Project
author Chia, Thong
author_sort Chia, Thong
title Grilles by rote
title_short Grilles by rote
title_full Grilles by rote
title_fullStr Grilles by rote
title_full_unstemmed Grilles by rote
title_sort grilles by rote
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74446
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