Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Articles

Vol. 14 No. 1 (2019): Drawing||Phenomenology: tracing lived experience through drawing

Sites of Conversation: The Table Method

Submitted
30 October 2018
Published
28-10-2019

Abstract

Through our lives we sit at many tables, eating, preparing food, playing, making drawings, doing homework, working and more. In other words, the table is a focal point where words and materials meet, cross each-other, collide or come together. The table can take us to a space and time where forgotten memories emerge and embodied actions are found.

The Phenomenology and Imagination Research Group (PIRG) is an independent research group whose aim is to develop research through active fine art collective practice. PIRG’s Table Method (tm) is a process that has grown organically over a period of five years and has been cultivated through a desire to bring words, texts, actions and materials together as it invites participants to respond to a text through conversation, the handling of materials and tools.  The work draws from the new materialist turn through the ideas of Gaston Bachelard, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Karen Barad and Jane Bennett.  PIRG has extended its practice of conversation as a research methodology to include the phenomenological and material interaction that has become the tm.

The tm is an unfolding dialogue between materials and phenomenological thinking, which expands the possibilities of what conversation can be and become, it utilises material thinking as a way to open out discourse beyond the constraints of language and other representations.