Wednesday, 19 October 2011

The Old Curiosity Shop


Photo taken from The Old Curiosity Shop website

This tipsy turvy boutique known for its handmade shoes can be found tucked away in the back streets of Holborn, London. The 16th century house was said to have inspired Charles Dickens novel of the same name. Even if that were just hearsay, it survived the Great Fire of London 1666 and the Blitz in WWII, and is one of the oldest buildings still standing in London today, that makes it magnificent in its own right.

Photo taken from The Old Curiosity Shop website

You can see the store and its shoes here. Some have found the inside to be disappointing, being more organised and emptier than they assumed. I think there is a world of detail that lies beyond the first glance, seen in the creaking wood floor boards, the unique shapes of the shoes and the small precarious staircase. You may even find collaborations with the like of Comme de Garcons and Eley Kishimoto. Like many I have been inspired by my visit and have written a small poem below.

The Curiosity of a Child

She pushes her wrinkled face up against the window
Her breath casting a soft fog across the glass
Reflecting benches cluttered with nostalgia

She enters the door with excitable anticipation
Her smile glimmers as she ventures into the room
There they lay, dusty and forgotten in the corner

She slips her foot into the supple aged leather
The nutmeg tone befitting her tarnished eyes
The sensation awakening her shattered soul

She scampers out of the shop time has forgotten
With the excitement of a child
She skips a road long lost

Pounding the pavement - liberated
The squelch of the autumn leaves
The splash of murky puddles

The water trickles down the seams
Creeping deep into the tweed uppers
Engulfing her fragile feet

Her smile an explosion of a million vivid colours
Her arms outspread spinning
She stumbles

The rope laces lie tattered and undone
And it saddens her to realize
That her childhood freedom has faded away 

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

'Travels Through Hyperreality'

Hypperreality is something we are faced with everyday. It captures an increasing postmodern condition. It is the creation of an illusion of reality. It is the exchange of signs and symbols used as instruments of communication making things appear more real than reality itself.

Jean Baudrillard on the theory of hypperreality stated, “We live in an age of simulacra.” On a day to day basis we are constantly bombarded by images that we are often only subconsciously aware of, many of the ideas they convey are false, and have turned the world we live into a realm of illusion.When something is simulated through signs and symbols it is not so much because it wouldn't be possible to have the real equivalent but because the public is meant to admire the perfection of the fake and its obedience to the program.

Technology is doing more for us today than ever before and encouraging us lose ourselves in images and fantasy. Technology not only shows us the the wonders of the future, but the danger that progress might cause humanity to regress, allowing it to lose itself in an environment of automation, simulation and reassuring intellectual illusions. A world in which we rely on technology, in which even experiences are manufactured for us by machines.

Here is my interpretation of a typical journey taken by millions everyday in London...minus the subliminal messaging.