The materiology of junk and scrap

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Aneta Panek

This essay explores the materiology of junk and scrap, focusing on their transformation through welding processes and conceptualizing trash as a time machine. Key elements include waste materials such as junk, wire, screws, locks, pipes, spare bike and machine parts and scrap, which are examined as valuable resources imbued with time through phenomena such as oxidation, rusting and corrosion. In my artistic and scientific work, through welding, pottery, poetry, digital and analogue filmmaking, theatrical productions, collages and writing, I analyse various creative practices as akin processes within materiology. Emphasizing hands-on engagement with materials, my research highlights the tactile aspects of moulding and transforming waste into new forms, in an alchemical process where mundane materials are transmuted into something of value. This interdisciplinary investigation sheds light on the profound connections between art, thought and the materiality of time and everyday detritus. This essay is informed by a year-long personal exploration during which I have engaged in welding and sculpture creation using scrap materials sourced from a neighbour’s garden – a space previously inhabited by the late Michael Lachmund, a painter, sculptor, educator and philanthropist who was also a collector of scrap.

Keywords
alchemy, debris, junk, scrap, sublimation, time traces, transformation, waste

Article Details

How to Cite
Panek, Aneta. “The materiology of junk and scrap”. Artnodes, no. 34, pp. 1-7, doi:10.7238/artnodes.v0i34.426807.
Author Biography

Aneta Panek, Researcher, writer, filmmaker and performance artist

Aneta Panek is a Berlin-based researcher, filmmaker and performance artist working in the fields of theatre, opera and film. Recurrent themes in her work include alchemy, transmutation, subversion and rebellion as means of self-discovery. Based on other knowledge and performative research, she explores the necessity of visualization and associative speculation in formulating and deconstructing theories and questioning reality. She completed studies in art history and archaeology at the Sorbonne in Paris with MA and DEA diplomas, and earned her doctoral degree (Dr. Phil.) at the University of Arts Berlin, with a thesis on Alchemy of Punk. While her practice culminates in experimental film, she also stages performances and operas and writes analytical texts, poetry and compositions.

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