Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Mass Observation 2015: #EHUFreshers, only backwards

Surroundings

A man stands out from across the lake. He walks with confidence in his stride, greeting people as they briefly pass each other, and wears a bright orange jacket. He disappears, and then all I see of him is an orange shade behind the brush surrounding the river.

Three women huddle close together, bracing themselves in the cold as they breathe out smoke and pucker their lips for the next drag of their cigarettes. Amongst them is an older woman with yellowing nicotine stained fingers. She taps the side of her cigarette, knocking ash into the wind. A bright pink ring of lipstick remains on the discarded stub.

Two men walk at a brisk pace, both of them carrying their limit of respective goods. The student holds a stack of books between his hands and chin, fumbling as he tries to keep them secure and straight. The chef holds an incredibly large wad of napkins against his waist. Both men ask each other how they’ll succeed in their fields.

30s in a trench coat, unbuttoned. She acts like the wind un-phases her, but her expression screams irritation and her face is raw from the chill. Her dark rooted hair continues to make its way to the front of her face, as she continues to push it back and carry on with her route.

Two friends discuss matters over a mid-day meal, the youngest of the pair speaks loud yet raspy voice. The older often nods and occasionally slips in a word of agreement, but for the most she stays silent and allows her friend to continue.

A lad with sunglasses stops in the middle of the wooden bridge. He admires the small waterfall feature by cannot truly appreciate the sound of its running water because he’s using one of his earphones. He takes out his mobile phone and surveys the surrounding area, to not be embarrassed by anyone that may be watching him as he takes a snapshot of the scenery. He then puts his phone away and continues with his route. He does not remove his sunglasses.

A girl clasps a book to her chest as she sits on a hillside, occasionally peering up to observe the environment and scribbling into a notebook. She’s trying to be unseen, but with red hair it’s difficult.

 

Sam Wright

 

25/09/2015 – Edge Hill University, Ormskirk

I sit on a grey marble slab near the lake. The air is clear and there is a whiff of an autumn chill, cold and crisp. The still quiet of the late morning is shattered by a flock of noisy students, trooping to get to their next lecture. Their noisiness disappears and silence returns. Moments later, more human traffic rushes past me, in greater numbers this time. An older woman is sat on a wall to the right of me, chattering loudly down her phone in an endless mantra. Her conversation soon ends and she departs. I hear the echo of footsteps dancing throughout the vacant spaces between the buildings. It is followed by more a flood of more students. I walk around the campus gardens and sit on an old stone staircase. Its dark lime blocks are old and withered. Behind me is a middle-aged man mowing the lawn, circling the grass in unpredictable patterns. He frequently vanishes behind the trees briefly before emerging again into sight. In front of me is another man albeit younger, who has finished mowing the other island of grass. All around me are the bodies of fallen leaves in orange, auburn, and yellow. The man with the lawn mower roars past me from behind. The trees dotted around the garden are like giants, their branches extend far and outwards offering shade from the sun. Another leaf descends and lands with a slight crack in front of me. No noisy students here, only the growl of the lawn mower. 

 

Jack Carter

 

Posters

There is a pleasant smell in the air, a combination of what appears to be coffee, muesli and other various (yet unidentifiable) scents which would typically be found in a cafĂ© or coffee shop on any given morning. I am sat facing a stall that sells a range of vivid and colourful posters. A solitary woman stands among the stands that display the posters, carefully studying them individually. She seems to glide between each of the somewhat sporadically placed stands, remaining silent and paying no attention to a pair of students that have suddenly entered the labyrinth of posters. There is a distinct contrast between the behaviour of the woman and the behaviour of the two other students – the students laugh and joke amongst themselves (remaining subtle and inoffensive) whilst flicking hastily through various posters on display, whereas the woman remains soundless, passing through the stands of posters with a steady sense of direction. Both the pair of students and the woman seem to settle on their posters of choice within moments of each other, before almost simultaneously drawing them from their protective display casings. They head towards the sales counter at the same time, forming a small queue, before completing their transactions. Following this, the two students and the woman leave the poster stall, each heading in a separate direction.

Will Hewitt

 

hub (no.2):

 

The wind whistled through the open window weaving between strands of the woman’s hair as she gazed out the window at the ancient tree in front of her. Her reflection seemed so young in contrast.

 

Cara Jones

The Hub:

 

Up the concourse, and then down again, only to return and move to the Reception desk, a suit strides, with plastic-protected documents wrapped under his arm. Overhead, above the the summit of the stairs, a tiny FIRE EXIT sign hangs by two strings from a white, round-sided ventilation duct of either thin metal or shiny plastic; a contrast to the mostly-grey, multi-panelled ceiling it is affixed to by several thin rods. A sparse, thinly-spread, lumpy gathering of primarily youthful individuals sit at the numerous seats, more drinking than eating, as it is yet too soon in the day for a proper lunch. Either individually, or in pairs, people step the stone floor proudly reading IN SCIENTIA OPPORTUNITAS, either jaded, uncaring, or perhaps even ignorant to the significance of the Vatican's ancient tongue so far from home. An irregular scent of fresh food, tantalising and hunger-inducing, comes and goes according to the exterior breezes wafting in from the opening and closing sliding doors, glass like many of this place's walls. Sunlight of ever-shifting intensity invades through these surfaces, supported by surgical streams from the skylights, geometric without exception. The din is endless: of footsteps, of overlapping voices, of striking hammers, and the clattering of cutlery, highlighted by the occasional rolling trolley, many of them loud and heavy with unseen loads. The echoes are profound in this high-ceilinged space. The physical design is sound, with the only development present in the foreseeable future being the removal of the many stickers dotting many vertical surfaces.

 

Bradley King-Spooner

 

 

Mass Observation: Group 3 (Arts Centre)

 

 

I ambled into the art centre in the midst of a small crowd. Most of the people in this group were drawn to the art exhibition off to the left; the wide variety of art works displayed there intriguing its new found audience. The costumes are made out of different materials like plastic cups, paper and metal, but every last detail on the items is sculpted to perfection. There are paintings and sketches of people who looked like they were about to jump off the page and mingle with their admirers. The group moved along to props made for the stage; the props were simple enough, but made professionally by students of time gone by.

 

The word “art” encompasses a variety of different aspects, and when the crowd departed from the exhibition another aspect of “art” came into view: a lone man walking along the path, only to set his bag down and produce 6 tennis balls. This man then proceeded to juggle to six balls with seeming ease, a master practicing his craft in front of a captivated crowd.  He made no mistake in his juggling and bowed to the gathering a few minutes later after his routine had finished.  I left the crowd to their admiring and wandered more of the art centre, passing chattering throngs talking about everything and nothing at the same time. Looking at my watch I realised that my time was up, and I made my way to my next meeting.

 

By Emily James

 

 

Mass Observation

‘Arc’

 

Out from the Reedmace which shivered against the sharp autumnal breeze, a girl seemingly from another era of time, walked around the bed of the lake which glistened with stars below a clear blue sky.

Wearing a black floppy hat and an equally oversized handbag, her outfit cried out that it was 1964, only for the headphones swaying from under her curled auburn hair confess to it being the 21st Century.

As the girl entered the shadow emerging from the building composed of glass and turquoise, she passed by and made her way inside.

 

‘Tangent’

 

Balloons of white, green and yellow are tied to pillars outside the Faculty of Education Building. Passers-by fail to see the celebration, as their faces remain sombre and transfixed ahead.

 

‘Circumference’

 

At the source of the lake, against the exterior of the Psychology and Social Sciences Building, a boy looks to the sky in ornate concentration as he juggles five tennis balls with immense talent.

With his back turned away from the handful of people gathered, he performs to an audience of trees.

 

Philip Pierce

 

 

MASS OBSERVATION

Dimensions

 

OUTSIDE

 

Front

 

     There is a polished black cuboid of a building -- the Hub -- positioned before me, its front made up of panels, windows and doors, with six large, marble-white poles supporting the whole structure and two rows of smaller grey poles positioned in a formation akin to turrets. A row of windows sinks into the surface of the upper and lower levels. The windows on the lower level are adorned with images of wine bottles and crisps, and catch a blurred reflection of the building behind me. Crisp orange leaves rustle across the pavement, crackling in a mild but biting wind, which is otherwise not strong enough to tug at the five trees arranged in front of the building. There were many people – students and teachers – walking past, but now the space is suddenly very quiet and almost completely empty, save the few sat on benches, huddling around coffee cups or handbooks or each other. There is a laptop in front of me.

 

Left

 

     Doors that cut into the fabric of the building remain shut for a time, until they automatically slide open once they detect the advance of two students, both wearing skinny blue jeans and 'trackie tops'. A bridge, formed from bricks, mortar and stone, fuses the Hub to the original Edge Hill site. There was a song playing on a radio nearby – a woman's voice – that was trying to break through the static. But there is now a more dominant sound – an electronic whir, coming from within the building, not unlike the hum of a factory. The wind still continues to bite, but once closer to the plants beds, the scent is much more potent. There is a laptop in front of me.

 

Right

 

     Flower beds are encircled by rings of crimson bricks, with sharp plants leaning over. A metallic orangutan swings – but without any motion, its artificial limps gripping a strip of wire. It is mounted upon a plinth, amongst the lush vegetation of its private jungle, its fixed expression focused quite intensely upon the people that pass by. A vivid 'orange-peel' staircase burrows into both the side of the building and into the ground, acting as a fire escape. It is even colder here. There is a laptop in front of me.

 

INSIDE

 

Downstairs

 

     It is much warmer inside the Hub. Television screens are hung from the top of more poles that act as the bones of the building, forming a white skeleton that bonds the stone staircases to the modern architecture. Those sliding doors continue to open and close in response to approaching humans. Tables and chairs dominate the vast ventricles. Some chairs are wooden, whilst others are padded with red velvet. Men and women, young and old, are either sat down or walking past. Some are talking and smiling to each other, whilst others are deep in concentrated thought, deciding whether to go for the apples or the Apples. Confined to the sides are the computers and the large stands containing chilled drinks and sandwiches, arranged in rows like terminals. Amongst the chatter of people is the clanging of trays, the hissing of coffee spewing from the coffee machines and the giggling of a baby in a pushchair who has just been escorted into the building. You can look out at the people and buildings through the vast windows, some plastered with large sticker strips that read #EHUFreshers, only backwards. A spiralling staircase is laid out in front, leading upwards. Soft, white light radiates from the roundels fixed into the ceiling, although the light grows much harsher if you look up and stare for too long at the glowing bulbs. Suddenly, I now see specks of colour in front of my eyes when I blink. But there is still a laptop in front of me.

 

Upstairs

 

     Through the windows on the side of the atrium, there is a panoramic view of the campus, albeit a view that only touches the roofs of buildings and the tops of flourishing trees. However, you can see the open sky stretched out across the canvas of creation. The clouds are grey. There is a second view; the glass wall between me and the empty void of the upstairs space allows you to peer over and watch the people walking in and out of the Hub, often accompanied by the clicking of high heels or the pounding of heavy footsteps in sturdy boots. Once more, there are padded chairs – although this time with fabric – and computers arranged upon tables, some receiving attention, others remaining neglected. A Fire Exit sign indicates towards the doors that lead out onto the 'orange-peel' staircase that spirals from top to bottom on the right hand side of the building. There is a laptop in front of me.

 

Harry Draper

 

A man stands …

A man stands by a large tree. He seems confused as to what he’s doing. He stands there seemingly unaware of what he’s trying to do. He leans absentmindedly against the trailer clipped to the back of his gardening vehicle. A spade which once was propped against the trailer has fallen on to his foot but he doesn’t even flinch. He picks it up, scratching his head and begins to scrape away at the soil beneath the large tree.

The screeching sounds of a lawnmower echoes throughout the trees. It circles around the gardens, giving the grass its weekly haircut. All of a sudden it screeching comes to a halt. Silence falls around it. The lawnmowers driver steps down from his high perch to collect two plastic cups which lay stranded amongst the grass, most likely the after mass of a night out.

In the middle of the gardens sits a young man. A pad of paper in his lap and a pen in his hand. He stares into the distance as the cogs and gears begin to turn inside his head as he searches his mind and his surroundings for ideas and inspiration. His head soon turns to face his paper, his fingers press the pen against the paper and he finally begins to write. Another man wanders nearby, choosing to sit just a few yards away from his fellow writer. He pulls out his notepad, placing it in his lap and begins to write just the same. They seem almost identical. Soon after, a woman appears. She too chooses to sit just a few yards away from her fellow writers, pulls out her notepad and pen and begins to write just like the others. They seem to be completely unaware of each other.

A group of young women stroll past, they are captivated by the sculptures and pieces of art that they can see inside the red walls of the building in front of them. Intrigued by the pieces of art, they discuss how these pieces might have been made. Specifically the ones which are made from just paper and nothing else.

The courtyard is deserted. Only the sounds of the wind and singing birds can be heard. All of the curtains have been drawn, secluding people inside from the outside world and stopping people on the outside from peering inside.

The sounds of footsteps and the smell of baked goods have filled the air. A woman wonders down and around, following the paths. She watches, listens, smells, taking in everything around her. Just waiting for something interesting to happen, with a pen in her hand and a pad of paper in the other, just waiting for something to write about. As she wonders around, searching for ideas, she writes in her paper. She’s writing about herself.

An empty egg shell lays amongst the leaves beneath a tall tree. What was once the home to a small, developing bird, is now a hollow shell containing nothing. It no longer holds a purpose and has been tossed to the ground. It’s been used and is now worthless.

Lucy Ellis

Mass Observation

Wispy Wasp

 

Sitting on a two person black leather couch, in front of a huge TV; Blaring out the news in deep bass voices, two women enjoying yoghurts while discussing some notes they had made; probably from a university session a few moments ago. They were very alike, from the colour and style of their hair to the floral patterned tops they were wearing.

A wasp started buzzing around them, swishing from side to side in their faces and around their yoghurts. One woman panicked practically throwing her yoghurt pot to the table, leaping off the couch and running waving her hands around her head. While the other laughed, explaining that “it was just a wasp”. It buzzed around another person; a man casually sitting on a similar couch next to them listening to big headphones while watching something amusing on his phone. The standing woman begged him to kill it as he swung out at it as well, missing with every swipe.

By the time he had stood up to strike at it again. It was gone. 

 

Jessica Crichton

 

BULLETPOINTS

 

·        The two workers of the coffee shop worked in co-ordination with each other, both whizzing and weaving past each other to reach distant utensils. They did this continuously in order to serve the onslaught of thirsty customer’s queueing patiently.

 

·        The three workers turned to each other to engage in idle conversation, taking a moment of inactivity to socialise amongst each other, whilst they waited for people with enquires to approach.

 

·        The man strolled calmly and peacefully through the room but then suddenly stopped to gaze at a table filled with unusual items of clothing. After satisfying his curiosity, and offering a quick word, he slowly began to walk once more.

 

·        The girl walked along briskly, phone tightly in her hand as she made her way across the room. Then she spotted her friend, an expression of joy appearing on her face as she enthusiastically greeted her before both of them sped off down the hall together.

 

·        The two men talked to each other whilst both holding onto metal frames, filled with heavy contents for the shop they stood outside of. When the conversation ended both returned to work, one heaving the large cage into the shop while the other lifted items individually and carried them in.

 

·        The boy leaned forwards lazily, one hand holding his perched head and the other holding his phone out before him. His facial expression showed boredom but his eyes showed curiosity as the screen held his interest completely. Eventually he craned his head to the right, looking for someone, allowing both hands to rest on his lap. However, it was mere seconds before he returned to his previous position, gazing at his phone.

 

·        The two students sat alone in the large room, content with each other’s company. The only other sound was the roar of noise coming from outside the room, in the large hall outside filled with fellow students, and the only scent was that of the food before them.

 

·        The girl sat on the floor above, overseeing the whole room below filled with people. The noise drifted up towards her but she remained quiet, lazily spinning in her chair with one foot while the other foot lay across her lap.

 

The girl walked along casually despite her right foot being covered in a cast. However, it didn’t deter her walking ability as she continued forwards with determination to get to her destination.

 
Lawren McKenna

 

The Hub

10:40

A group of new friends walk down towards their lectures and look over at the food being prepared by staff in their smart uniforms. Their disappearance opens up space for viewing and now a hooded youth sits talking to his friends. The leather sofa he sits on looks evidently comforting as he slumps down.

 

10:45

Two people sit just in front and their conversation is audible. The man comforts his female companion with an arm rub and shows his support. A girl walks by twirling her long black hair, looking quite nervous. As she walks to quell her nerves she hides in a fringe that looks like it would serve as a good escape from the world. And all the people. The walls of the building look new and not tired. The students do though.

 

10:52

An older looking female carries a cup of coffee from the shop to her next destination. A desperate balancing act between her drink and her bag occurs on her arm muscles. The smell of food rings through the place and is enough to make any stomach hungry. A hungry stomach grumbles. In the distance a young black man is listening to music through earphones whilst carrying food, his lunch. He has a broad smile which makes others in the room happy.

 

10:58

The two view-blockers have left, leaving behind no rubbish however. They seem foreign as the signs for food disposal don’t register with them straight away. A man in a sharp blue suit walks by talking to a colleague of his and smiling, his colleague smiles too. They look professional and walk through the room seemingly unaware of others. They exit immediately.  

A man sits slurping an isotonic drink and wearing gym clothes, he does not look like he has exercised though, more like he is making a point of looking sporty. He glances over in a quizzical way and then loses interest. Another sporty man walks by in a university hoodie and shorts. His backpack looks full of things, spare clothes perhaps. A young lad stops him and asks a question but it is too far away to hear anything. Maybe another lost person.

 

11:05

A group of girls walk upstairs and are dressed in confusing clothes. They are carrying props which would indicate a group of performers moving to their next show. The traffic increases and queues start forming for food. A contrast of happy and hungry can be seen on faces.

UPSTAIRS

11:10

The people from below look tiny now and their voices sound tinier. The sound from up here is less clear and mixed. The social activity levels are higher as the floor gets higher. Across from the table there are 2 girls having a chat. Their clothes suggest it is cold outside as do the faces of passers-by down below. 2 Asian girls leave their table but continue talking in their native language. No one can understand them and that draws small glances of confusion.

11:30

The large TV screen plays the national news as no one really watches. The news reporter seems to be bored although it is the end of the week. The end of her shift is near it seems. A young lady sits and stares emotionlessly at her phone, messaging a friend or perhaps sending out thoughts to social media. She smiles occasionally and looks around, waiting for someone. The empty seats all around look sad. They will be filled soon. A long haired lad and his friend walk towards a building and look confident. His friend must have just washed as his hair looks wet and is blowing in the air.

 

Oliver James

 

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