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Another great day for bottles

October 22nd, 2011

Doug

Dorian is still collecting empty bottles for an additional test wall. Can’t have too many bottles on hand. Today was the Run for the Cure downtown, so Dorian arrived when the race was finishing to do her collection. It takes her a while to get comfortable diving into the trash cans, but once she gets going she forgets to be embarrassed. We’ve got a good cause too! Once she has a bag half full, people start giving her their bottles, which makes things easier. Later today, our good friends Jose and Frances, started collecting at Veteran’s Park in St. Johns County. Seems like most of the parks down here have special recycle containers for cans and bottles, which made things a lot easier. Today the parks were crowded with lots of soccer games. Thanks Dorian, Jose, and Frances for the bottle booty today!

The test wall is in place

October 20th, 2011

Doug

Yesterday I moved the test wall into our room that we will use for a production area. The wall was easy to move, in fact you can just pick it up or slide it along the floor. Two 5 ft x 6 ft panels are wedged together between a column and a wall. I built a cardboard shim to make everything snug. Today I took a few photos just to get a feel for the wall. I find that photography allows you to go deeper with a subject, whether it is a person, a landscape, or a wall of plastic bottles. Finding something interesting is always a good exercise. The 25 x40 room we have is adjacent to my studio and is basically a large rectangular space. For now it is empty which is great. Soon it will be filled with bottles if all goes well.

 

When is it art?

October 18th, 2011

Doug

As I start working on the second section of the test wall I ask myself is this really art or just a bunch of water bottles glued together. When does something make the transition from stuff to art? I remind myself that the purpose of testing things out is to learn the material and see what works and what doesn’t. I didn’t have an expectation of producing a piece of art, that’s why it’s called a “test” wall, not a “masterpiece” wall. So it’s ok that it isn’t gallery or museum ready. But looking at it from different angles and light does reveal some interesting properties of the bottles. Especially the translucency of the plastic and the patterns of the multi-colored caps on the “topside” of the wall. I think the transition to “art” happens when the “stuff” ceases to be stuff, and becomes part of a whole that feels and looks totally new. When you look at the wall and it has it’s own personality as a whole, then it ceases to be a pile of recycled plastic. If it expresses the intent of the artist, then I guess it becomes art. What do you think?


  

Test Wall 2

October 16th, 2011

Doug

Made more progress today (Sunday) on the wall. No A/C in the studio, so it was getting a bit warm. If you’ve smelled silicone caulk curing you know it has this sour smell reminiscent of old gym clothes. The part of the wall I built yesterday was set and it held together well. After about 3 ft of height, I noticed that the bottles were tilting towards the cap side. This is because most of the bottles (Dasani the biggest culprit) have a base that is slightly wider than the top. I had to cut small shims to even out the tilt, another painful detail. The first section of the test wall, 5 ft long and almost 6 ft high was complete.

Test Wall

October 15th, 2011

Doug

I’ve been waiting to build a test wall for a few weeks now. 10 ft long, 6 ft high. Actually, I have no idea how this wall will go together. I tested some silicone caulk a few days ago and it held tightly. But you know what happens when you step into the unknown, right? In my studio I set up a cardboard jig to hold the bottles. I decided to build it in place, as a wall, in two 5 ft long sections. Good thing I had some corrugated cardboard that I rescued from the movers. A few big pieces yielded enough to setup two side forms and a base. I marked these off at 1 ft increments. I started going through the bags of bottles and realized that most of them still had labels and were filled with a bit of water from the cleanings. So I labored through label peeling and emptying each bottle as much as I could. Finally I had a pile of about 100, and started gluing them together. I soon discovered that there is an art to all of this, and that to properly glue bottles of varying shapes and sizes you had to do a little fitting and finagling, I suspect like a stone mason building a wall. Each bottle needed to be fit to see where the contact points were to adjacent bottles. You can’t just glob a mess of caulk like mortar, that stuff is expensive! After about two hours I had about 2 ft high of wall built.

 

More booty…

October 15th, 2011

Doug

Dorian’s been busy, this morning she went out to a walk-a-thon for breast cancer. Going through banana peels and other trash, she rescued these beauties for the test wall. Another week of collection at Mandarin Middle plus these gives us enough to start the wall.

Bottle booty

October 9th, 2011

Doug

Here’re our bottles from the weekend, about 240, sorted, washed, and ready for the test wall. We hauled everything to the backyard and hosed then down, cut off the labels, and rinsed out the juice and sports drink containers. There was something greasy and gross in the recyclables we got from Mandarin Middle School. But the bottles from the road race were perfect. I’m only up to about 400 so 1600 more to go.

I also added some resources to the How to Help page, some downloadable PDFs that you can print. Project description, signs, instructions, and even a business card.

We are trying to recruit a few test groups for the project with some success. We will document those as soon as they are in place. Thanks to everyone for your encouragement and help!

Looking for bottles

October 7th, 2011

Doug

Next week I’ll be working on a 10 ft trial section of the wall and need about 2000 bottles. I’ve got about 200 now, so it’s off to the recycle bins and asking friends to save them. We stopped by the ballpark to check out the receptacles and didn’t feel like going through the trash to retrieve a bottle. Yuk! We’ll visit a road race over at Town Center tomorrow and the recycle bin at Mandarin Middle school. It’s amazing how many bottles get used everyday.

Our first supporter

October 6th, 2011

Doug

I happy to announce that Advanced Disposal has donated 50 corrugated event boxes and lids to hold the collection bags. Thanks Katrine for supporting our project!

Progress

October 3rd, 2011

Doug

The website now has some content, menus, and preliminary information. I also started to load the blog with notes from the beginning of the project. It’s easy to get carried away with this but if the project goes, the historical stuff is always fun to read.

The model of the planter is complete. It’s actually 8″ too small but still over 15 ft long. I figured no one will know (except all of you!). Tomorrow I’ll start cutting straws and building a section of the wall. I’d like to also have a placeholder for the trees, should be easy to find some dead branches around my house since I’ve be ignoring my yard for months.