For a couple of
years I’ve been reading articles about an uptick in hostility by way of
electronic messaging. Politicians and celebrities send lewd photos or hateful texts,
forgetting how easily they can be retrieved and used against them. Students tap
out hostile twitters about the professor to other students in class, but it’s
OK if no one gets caught. We say things in a text or an email that we would
never say to someone’s face. Politeness, respect and etiquette have gone the
way of privacy and state secrets.
Mantle for Textual Assault, Reverse, 2015.
“We fear the risks
and disappointments
of relationships with
our fellow humans.
We expect more from
technology and less from each other.”
Turkle is concerned that people are becoming dependant on
their devices for company and are forgetting or not even learning the value of
engaging with other people face-to-face. Here is a quote from an 18-year-old
male she interviewed in her research:
“Someday, someday, but certainly not now,
I would like to learn
how to have a conversation.”
Mantle for Textual Assault, 2015, shown on steel stand.
Distilling my thoughts on this cultural challenge into a
piece of jewelry was very difficult. I chose to use steel chain mail in an
armor situation, thinking it would be lightweight and easy to wear. My design influences
began with historical chain mail worn by foot soldiers in Medieval Europe
combined with Tudor era plate armor and a nod to 18th century military uniforms.
Then I progressed towards Edwardian handbags and the drippy, bugle-bead-encrusted-dresses
worn on Downton Abbey. I hung it all off a heavy wool felt base for
flexibility. A mantle is an old word for a shawl or cape.
Steel chain mail hauberk or coat, Western European, 16th century.
"Mail is a network of interlocking iron or steel and occasionally brass rings whose density and tight construction created a surface resistant to the sharp edges of cutting weapons."
Arms And Armor in the Art Institute of Chicago.
Stamped and die formed aluminum and steel chain mail.
The icing on the cake was stamping the epaulette-like
shoulders with Turkle quotes and NetLingo, the new language evolving from
texting. (You can actually buy a NetLingo dictionary!)
Detail of Reverse.
My goal is to empower the wearer with authority and
fortitude and combine it with a message of temperance to deflect textual
assault. THINK SMART before sending a message and THINK SLOW to insure your
message is one you won’t later regret. Now if I can just learn to follow my own
advice.
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