Autopsia-TV

Saturday, January 15, 2011


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About Me

A.M.
Hello, and thanks for visiting my photo dump/blog. My name is Arley Marks, and I am a recent graduate from the Rhode Island School Of Design. Following my graduation in the spring of 2010 I was named the recipient of the Jacques and Natasha Gelman travel fellowship. Between October and June 2010-2011 I will be travelling throughout China, Malaysia, and India, where I will be researching the birth and death life cycle of the television. If you would like to read a more detailed description of my project, please check read my Travel Statement. Thanks for checking in and I hope you enjoy some of these glimpses into my travels! -Arley
View my complete profile
The blog has now become split. On the homepage is my current writing. The pictures are slowly becoming buried beneath it. One can skip back a few pages and see pictures from Singapore, Malaysia and China and a few other places.

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A photograph I took in Shanghai was recentlyselected to be shown in LA at the 2011 Michael H. Kellicutt International Photo Show

something that I have been thinking about while traveling...

Devices are becoming more and more integrated into our lives, and our senses are being incorporated into these devices as well. A blink of an eye, a swipe of a finger, these are what control our interactions with technology. The result of these fusions between the senses and their fabricated interfaces is that we become more involved with the technological, digital world. When we are continually engaged with technology, where is our focus? We move through space, but do we truly experience it? When we walk through the park are we really taking in the beauty of the trees or are we fingering the I-phone in our pocket in suspense between incoming e-mail messages? These technologies are creating a situation where our attention is being stretched thin. We become impatient. The immediacy of the internet, compared to the slow, almost invisible movement of the sun as it advances towards the horizon creates a palpable tension as we traverse our highly cluttered environment.

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