INVENTORY METHODS: do the math.

Inventory Methods is an artwork about accretion and subtraction; accumulation and reduction. A record of old pajamas discarded as useless and accumulated as rags.

It is a record of weights, each tube containing 4 ounces of waste materials: rags. It is a declaration of the beauty that remains in the devalued, worn, discarded. Record of an ongoing process of reduction and a questioning of the nature of what, and who, we devalue and discard.

Each tube represents 4 ounces of weight lost: a reduction in body size, a quest for health and a consideration of the pressures on bodies to conform to cultural standards.

Gaining and losing weight is very public.  Unless one hides away from the eyes of others, the process is subject to value judgments, comments, encouragement, discouragement, vilification. That which is intensely private and personal becomes a public spectacle, subject to comment.

With this artwork I want to direct the commenting process, developing community conversation at the intersection of numbers and beauty. I will use a QR code to bring people into an active commenting process.

When did curves become unacceptable? Did fat cease to represent wealth and fertility? What advanced age becomes frail and disrespected?  When did age, weight, beauty, and numbers begin to intersect with moral judgments?

As I lost weight, I wanted to mark the progress, but also name as beautiful that which was subtracted.  I accumulated art as I reduce my size. There are 160 tubes.  Do the math.