The Morning News

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Currently: TMN wishes you a very good weekend equipped with interesting things to read. Thank you, as always, for reading us. http://tmne.ws/h
1 day ago

» Advertise on TMN via the Deck

Inner State of Things

Interview by Rosecrans Baldwin

Brittny Badger’s series of disassembled appliances is a delight: a study in how the inner materials of, for example, an ordinary coffee maker can become abstract art. It’s not too far removed from what Kent Rogowski did to a bunch of stuffed animals, though geared more to the graphic design set, or those of us who love grids and graph paper. As Badger notes below, “I am interested in the idea of viewing everyday objects from a completely different perspective. My inspiration comes from anything and everything that is well designed.”

All images © Brittny Badger, all rights reserved.



* * *


Tell us a little bit about the project. Where did the inspiration come from? What were you working towards?

This was my senior thesis project at the Hartford Art School this past year. It was a combination of my two artistic passions, photography and design. I am interested in the idea of viewing everyday objects from a completely different perspective. My inspiration comes from anything and everything that is well designed.

What do the inner workings of these machines say about what they do?

When I started disassembling appliances I was intrigued by the mechanical parts inside; I found them to have much more visual interest in their disassembled state than their original form.

In the beginning stages of this project I was only interested in the form of the parts rather than their functions. As I began to spend more time arranging them and taking more apart, I began really thinking about how the parts work together to make the appliance work.

These photographs are arresting, partially because they’re so wonderfully abstract. Looking at them, do you see the objects you disassembled or the images you built from them?

I stopped seeing the original objects as soon as I took them apart. When I look at the finished product I notice the arrangement of the objects and am reminded of the painstaking process of laying out the separate pieces to make them visually fit together.

What are you working on now?

Right now I am working on getting my web site up and running. I also do some freelance photo and design work. I have a few projects in mind, I plan on getting back into the studio soon.
—Published August 25, 2008 » Tweet this gallery » Post to Facebook » More TMN Galleries
Rosecrans Baldwin
Rosecrans Baldwin is a founding editor of The Morning News. His first novel, You Lost Me There, is forthcoming from Riverhead Books (August 2010). He most recently wrote the Letters from Paris column for TMN. Someday his ashes will be tossed off Mount Desert Island. You can catch him on Twitter or find more on his web site.

» More by Rosecrans Baldwin


TODAY’S FEATURE

The Game of Love

Anyone who says video games shouldn’t appeal to adults, let alone women, has never flirted with General Carth Onassi. MARIE MUTSUKI MOCKETT explores a virtual courtship.

OUR MAN IN BOSTON

More From Gore Vidal

Like the man himself, Gore Vidal's scrapbook of the past half-century is unparalleled.

SOCKING STUFFERS

If a Bird Can’t Fly It Walks

Sanguine and adhesive, our bumper sticker makes a swell gift for anyone who’s swearing off excuses in the new year.
» ORDER NOW

TMN TALKS

RoseLee Goldberg

RoseLee Goldberg is an art historian, curator, and author of Performance Art: From Futurism to the Present. In 2004, she founded PERFORMA, a non-profit arts...