TA: Rutvik FalduMaking Living Places: Craft, Song and Imagination
The making of our everyday life is not an isolated activity but involves living with other lives
and things. Stones and tables are as much alive as are the trees and the birds. Our everyday life
is an entanglement of things. And it is this entanglement that constitutes a place. So how do we
make things well? Or how do we make places of well-being? Where things share an inner
likeness with other things; a relation of sympathy. Like the one shared between a daylily and a
hummingbird or the hand and a door handle. This ‘shaping each other’ leads us to the necessity
of craft and imagination in the making of things and places. While craft is concerned with the
structure of things, imagination is a spirited flight into the world of dreams. But when both
these apparently opposing actions do intertwine, there emerges a song. A creative entanglement emerging out of a graceful correspondence between the material of engagement, the action of tools and the activity of dreaming. Can we learn ways of feeling-making-knowing that enable this creative entanglement of craft and imagination?