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Nagiko learns to type in Peter Greenaway's 1996 film The Pillow Book
Invited contribution by Gigi Chang, assistant curator of China Design Now exhibition held at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 2008.

A Chinese typewriter was specially acquired for the V&A exhibition China Design Now (2008) to illustrate the uniqueness and complexity of Chinese typography.  It was pure good fortune that we managed to find one.  We were on a research trip in China, visiting a fashion designer's showroom in Shanghai.  On the same street, there were a number of shabby-looking antique shops.  Nestled amongst table lamps and chairs and in the middle of this narrow street sat a Chinese typewriter!  We had been looking for such a typewriter for a long time, and were about to formally borrow one from a Shenzhen-based graphic designer, so without hesitation we purchased it with the intention of acquiring it for the Museum's permanent collection. 

Chinese characters could be such a mystery to someone unfamiliar with the language.  For the exhibition, we felt it was important to find a object that could anchor the graphic design works on show, especially those dealing with Chinese typography.  A Chinese typewriter does the job very well, as the shape faintly recalls western typewriters (especially the roller), whilst the tray with its thousands of character helps to visually elucidate how Chinese characters come about in print. 

Typing in Chinese before widespread computerisation was a specialist skill.  A Chinese typewriter does not have a keyboard, but instead uses a tray that contains over 2,000 characters, arranged according to 214 groups of meaning classifiers (the building blocks, or bushou, of characters). Several thousand more would be available on a second tray.  The typist first aligns the tray and then presses a key, which makes an arm pick up each desired character in turn and strike it against the paper.  It is a time-consuming process, however professional typists could average 3,500 characters per hour.

Gigi Chang

Link to a Taiwanese blog with good photos - 'memory of mother as a typist': http://jasonblog.tw/2009/06/memory-about-chinese-typewriter.html

V&A China Design Now original exhibition website: http://www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/microsites/1636_chinadesignnow/the-exhibition

A touring version of the exhibition is showing at Portland Art Museum (Oregon) until 17 January 2010: http://portlandartmuseum.org/exhibitions/feature/China-Design-Now
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Nagiko loses patience with the difficult task of learning to type (from The Pillow Book)
 
Matches 11/12/2009
 
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I was recently discussing the Autopsies Project with a friend who was eager to find out whether matches come under our remit for dead objects. On consideration, I decided they may in fact be the ultimate in dead objects, for their useful working lives are so short they are pretty much dead on arrival. They are struck, they burst into momentary flame and then are consigned to ashtray, bin, or pavement. On a wider scale, matches have been traditionally shunned in favour of the mechanical lighter which is refuelled and re-used.

The friend in question has been collecting boxes of matches for some time, mainly from junk and curiosity shops around Brighton. He kindly donated the box pictured for inclusion in the Autopsies project. I am unable to say with any certainty when the box dates from but it features detailed prints of Italian landmarks, a delicately crafted inner-box and a strip of very worn sandpaper. The matches inside are needle-thin and so chic in comparison with the lumpy affairs we grope for during power cuts today. These are elegant and fashionable. The strangest sensation comes from lighting one, as the smell it creates is the dead come to life--for it smells so much like the past.

    --Rebecca Harrison
 
Typewriters 10/13/2009
 
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Mechanised writing systems were first developed as writing aids to those who were blind or had impaired vision.  These systems included the ‘typographer,’ designed by William Burt in 1829, whereby the user turned a dial to select keys and the ‘chirographer’ designed by William Thurber in 1845.  The need for  an automated system was more widespread, however, with stenographers and telegraphers in popular demand for their efficiency in communication.  In 1865 the first marketable version of the typewriter was patented by Rev. Rasmus Malling in Denmark and became known as the ‘Hansen Writing Ball.’

Two years later in Wisconsin, Christopher Soles, Carlos Glidden and Samuel W. Soule put their design for the ‘QWERTY’ typewriter into production with Remington (a company then famous for its manufacture of sewing machines).  By 1910, this design had become the standard throughout the industry.  Early designs often featured floral patterns in order to appeal to the vast number of female secretaries and typists who used them.  The typewriter soon broke through this stereotype and became popular with journalists, novelists and in the home.  In Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Mina famously records her tale using a typewriter; she transcribes every letter and document in order to standardise and make legible the disparate elements of her story.

The electrification of the typewriter was investigated as early as 1870, as Edison experimented with relaying typed information down a telegraph line.  It was not until nearly a century later that this idea was popularised.  Indeed, electrification was the death knell of the mechanical typewriter, with electronic keyboards taking their place.  Today the romantic notion of ‘typecasting’ keeps the typewriter alive (a process where bloggers type their posts and scan the results onto a computer), as do collectors (who famously count Tom Hanks among their number).

    --Rebecca Harrison
 
Perfume Bottles 10/10/2009
 
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The use of perfume can be traced back to ancient civilisations in Mesopotamia, Egypt and India, where incense-based perfumes were widespread.  The first known chemist was a maker of perfumes in about 2000 BC.  Perfumes, as precious commodities that were often bound up in the rituals of religious practices (especially those involving death) were often held in elaborate containers.  These might be ceramic or more frequently stone, a porous material.  The Romans would use hollowed-out precious stones, a common practise until the invention of glass.  Glass perfume containers found in Palestine date back to around 500 BC.

            Perfumes needed to be stored in containers that ideally shielded them from heat, light and oxygen, all elements that would speed up the process of decay.  Perfume bottles could remove these elements and the development of the atomizer allowed the perfume to be stored in an oxygen and dust free container. 

            The history of perfume and its champions is one of decadence and excess. The use of perfume was popularised in Europe in the fourteenth century, when Queen Elizabeth of Hungary became interested in its use.  In sixteenth century Italy, Catherine de’Medici hired a perfumer to live on site and guard the materials and mixtures he made from outsiders.  Perfume bottles reflect this ostentation and display of wealth through the nineteenth century up to the 1910s, when designers like Lalique were called upon to create one-off pieces.  Typically at this time perfumes would be sold in simple containers and decanted into exquisite bottles at home.  This activity seems to have died off around the 1960s, when perfume makers democratised their target market and began to sell perfumes in bottles made to standardised designs.  As each brand now makes sure to have its own eye-catching package, the need for the individual to store and display their perfume has become largely redundant.

   --Rebecca Harrison
 
 
Sewing Machines 10/07/2009
 
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The sewing machine became a popular tool during the industrial revolution, as the automated process of stitching saved time and ultimately money.  The first patent taken out on a sewing machine was in 1790, by the Englishman Thomas Saint.  His design, which enabled the user to stitch canvas or leather, was never put in to production.  Barthélemy Thimonnier advanced Saint’s original design in the nineteenth century: by 1841 he had eighty machines in a factory producing uniforms for the French army.

The domestication of the sewing machine took place around the 1850s, as the ‘Sewing Machine War’ took place over patents in the United States.  In 1856 The Sewing Machine Combination was instigated and companies (namely Singer) began to produce machines that were affordable to keep in the home.  Sewing machines were further developed by electronic technology in the early 1900s and in 1987 Orisol produced the first computerised machine.  Despite the utilisation of digital technologies, the sewing machine became redundant in most contemporary homes thanks to the availability of cheap ready-made clothing.  There are, however, indications that the fate of the sewing machine is not yet sealed, for sales figures have grown over the past year.  Analysts suggest this is may be a response to financial decline and a growing ethical awareness about the manufacture of clothes.
 
   --Rebecca Harrison
 
 
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The answering machine has existed since 1898. Vlademar Poulsen patented the Telegraphone, a device which records sound on steel wire. Since then, many different forms of the answering machine have been created, but it was only in the 1980s that it became commercially available to everyone. The device automatically answers the phone, after a few ring tones, and the message is recorded on tape. The answering machine, as a separate object, ceased to exist with the introduction of voicemail--a system permitting the answering machine to be a part of the telephone itself. 
     -Sheena Scott
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The Scopitone 10/05/2009
 
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The Scopitone was created in the year 1960 by the factory CAMECA (Compagnie d’Applications Mécaniques à l’Electronique au Cinéma et à l’Automistique). It was a machine designed to have the same function as a jukebox, the only difference being that it has a television screen showing a film created specifically to accompany one song. The Scopitone is the ancestor of MTV. Consisting of 36 films in colour and in black and white, the music films could be played continually, as one film would rewind while the next one was playing. The Scopitone was exclusively designed for cafés in France. The 16mm films made for the Scopitone were not shown on television. The production of Scopitone films came to an end in 1974.
    --Sheena Scott
 
 
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The incandescent light bulb is gradually being banned across Europe and being replaced with energy-efficient alternatives. The traditional lightbulb has been dealt a mortal blow and will soon die. The demise of the traditional lightbulb has, however, encountered a surprising amount of resistence. Newspaper letters pages have been filled with arguments in the incandescent light bulb's defense and complaints about the deficiencies of their energy-efficient replacements. The incandescent bulb is, I would argue, a thing of simplicity and beauty. Switching on a lightbulb makes us visualise the electrical energy that flows around our homes. The film camera has long been atttracted to the lightbulb that symbolises the electrical dreams of modernity. This still from Alfred Hitchcock's Sabotage (1936) is one of many in a film which starts with a power cut caused by a saboteur.
 For the film look here: http://www.archive.org/details/Sabotage1936
  --Karolina Kendall-Bush
 
 

Changes in hairstyles mean changes in equipment. The days of the 'style and set' are long gone. The overhead salon dryer of old, vital for 'setting', is now often only found in local neighbourhood salons that cater to the clientele who used them in their heyday in the fifties and sixties. The overhead salon dryer can be more easily found on film setting Doris Day's perfectly coiffed hair, in period pieces such as the TV series Mad Men, or in the ultimate kitsch film, Grease. In the latter, the song "Beauty School Drop Out" recreates the Fifties' version of the beauty salon.
   --Karolina Kendall-Bush
 
 
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Although the carts and cabins that littered street scenes for centuries, supplying anything from food to music, have by no means passed away completely, their presence is now largely confined to tourist hot spots in our capital cities. The barrel organ, in particular, is emblematic of a London street culture that has long since passed. Italian immigrants in the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century were associated with the barrel organs and ice-cream carts that they would push around the centre of the capital. These days, ice-cream carts have been replaced by ice-cream vans (still largely in the hands of Italian families), and the barrel organs have disappeared completely. This photograph of a barrel organ was taken in Warsaw, the first time I had actually seen a barrel organ being played in the street.
   --Karolina Kendall-Bush