STANFORD MFA THESIS 2009
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2009: MEMORY SCENE, MFA Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the Stanford MFA Art Practice degree, Art and Art History Department of Stanford, California, 2009.

I regard the “self” as a complex system that constantly internalizes exterior landscape, and not simply as an entity that "perceives” and “acts;” but I also view the “self” also as dynamic, recursive, mirroring force, existing in flux between forming and again disappearing/disintegrating. The “self” as landscape. Imagination as the “self.” Imagination as jumping over irrational distances and perspectives.

Design and Photo Credit: Andreas Brendhaugen
Manifesto of Actions
push, shift, distribute, substitute, replace, shunt, intercept, time as intensity (duration that it takes to perform actions has time as related to the traveling of my avatar. time or durations for (e)motions to take place. direction: all the actions have implied directions in which they relation of speakers to visual focus points.
trajectory (all actions can happen on trajectory for example spiral, expectation (an action over a short distance in time has less density – the rate of change layering. different layers of the above actions and events

Design and Photo Credit: Andreas Brendhaugen