Abstract: Curbside is a personal exploration of (dis)ability and (im)mobility in wintertime Calgary. I use textiles, texts, and photographs to weave together self and the environment. Curbside connects quantitative data about snow and temperature with traces of environmental conditions using dyed yarns and photographs. Interlaced throughout are theoretically grounded autobiographical reflections about disability. These reflections focus on how landscape forms and interacts with disability in ways that are informed by water, snow, and ice. It embodies how different forms of data such as quantitative weather data, material traces, and personal stories can work together. Curbside also provides an example of how data art can incorporate highly personal experience to illuminate local systems in thoughtful ways.
Karly Ross Karly Ross is a graduate student in computational media design at the University of Calgary. Karly’s work —creative and otherwise— ponders data absences and orientations while attending to physical mobility in urban space. |