In self-sufficient households people used to have devoted, long
lasting relationships with objects. Unlike today, waste equalled
failure. Cleaning is a creative way of making sense of our physical
surroundings and forging bonds with the things we own.
If the processes of getting dirty and clean are made
equal through the use of an object, we can regain control
of ownership. There is no dirt in nature. No-one expects a puddle
of mud in a forest is to be cleaned. By creating associations
between certain objects and natural creatures that have
their characteristic behaviour and expectations, I can blur
the experience of dirt. The decay of these objects becomes
acceptable, and cleaning them becomes natural.
Cleaning tasks are repeated day after day, generation after
generation. I want to show that a delicate caring relationship
between the owner and the object is hidden in this routine.
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