Monday, March 17, 2014

head on...

Brainstorming

the earth / gravity = heavy                      the air / smell = light

the smell of wet earth,
pleasant experience.
the right balance between reality and dreams.

Perceiving the unperceivable.

the rain comes from above.
the feet is grasping the earth.
the moment of connection between the unreachable and the reachable, sky + earth / air and land,



the diffusion of the limitations, the limits diffusion.  

hands on!

While researching how to generate in a very primitive and analogue way Petrichor smell I had several ideas on how to present the odor composition together with a analogue film performance. But starting from the beginning:

I've taken 2 samples from the driest earth in my garden. Both are kept in this new plastic containers, one of them has a solid base of cotton.

They've been for more than 2 weeks on top of the heater. 






Monday, March 3, 2014

New Research // Petrichor

Hallo!

It is time for me to start a new odor research. I thought it was a shame to create a new blog every time I start a new project so I'm going to pack my smell tasks all under "dailyodors". 

Dailyodors was the name I gave to the previous work which consisted in how odor affects our personal live, but in general terms what interests me the most is to research the ways how odor affects our visual perception. 

For the next project I am working on, I would like to extract odors from the 4th elements in the earth: air, water, fire and earth. 


Step by step, I will start with earth. Probably as many of you out there, I'm captivated by the smell of earth after the rain, also, not just earth, but how any pavement smells like at that moment. It seems this smell is a mixture of ozone, the spores of the bacteria actinomycetes and other vegetal components we might find in the soil. This smell has a beautiful name, many people called it Petrichor.

"Petrichor (/ˈpɛtrɨkɔər/) is the scent of rain on dry earth, or the scent of dust after rain. The word is constructed from Greekpetros, meaning stone + ichor, the fluid that flows in the veins of the gods in Greek mythology. It is defined as "the distinctive scent which accompanies the first rain after a long warm dry spell"".

Extracted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrichor