Lost Property
unconscious|museum|love|loss|longing|inventory|commission|collaborationA book resulting from a collaboration between us, the London Underground and Public Art Development Trust. It represents a selection of things from one days property recovered by the London Transport Lost Property Office.
We are easily seduced into acquiring, exchanging and displaying vast quantities of material things. Accumulation, in its broadest sense, is the literal writing-into-being of an individual or culture.
Things are found, polished, displayed and treasured; bought, bound or framed and collected; the object, plucked from the generic soup of a media culture, is momentarily arrested and woven into an intimate personal narrative, "I bought this when I was in Paris". It is this enveloping which marks the thing as a possession and simultaneously allows the narrator to refine and evaluate experience, to evolve a sense of difference or belonging. The thing itself, as commodity, inheritance, gift or souvenir, has become a privileged vehicle for establishing an emotional and intellectual identity. Things authenticate experience.
This much is well known.
The dark shadow within our seamless assembly of possessions and continuous narration of `self`, is loss. The word loss delineates a terrifying space, it is the void over which all exchange and collection precariously take place, but, from which no insurance or story can ever protect. Loss infuses accumulation with fear, everything, even our most precious belongings continuously circulate within its grasp.
Lost Property touches the wound opened between lost property, and the emotional investment implicit in personal possession. There will be no attempt to suture that gap. Comprised of photographs and texts, the book mimics the dispassionate style of a museum catalogue in an effort to re-inscribe the absence all the more emphatically. Inevitably, the book has more to do with the conventions of representation, than recovering a material presence. The things pictured, are still missing from these pages.
A temporary collection bound by this catalogue parodies the conventions established by museum acquisition. Although the collection is a well known paradigm of perfection, the objects here are always already incomplete, misplaced, fallen from narration, and never to return.
Lost Property is a selection from one days property recovered by the London Transport Lost Property Office; on average, some three hundred items. Designed as a desirable pocket size souvenir by Stephen Coates, Lost Property was released at the moment of spectacular accumulation, Christmas 1995
148 pages, 140 B & W images
