ExE exquisite enclave exquise
Presence is here. Drifter is here. Artist is here. Quasime is here. You enter. You look for clues, links, direction. You find some at the installation site, or in the printed publication. This is a derive. All links are site specific. Some are object specific. Most documents are linked from sites and objects elsewhere in the project, not from other on-line documents. You might be able to read some locations though from the sitemap which is photographed on one of the pavilion 5 blackboards.
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yard, in Merriam-Webster
Yard
Main Entry: 1yard
Pronunciation: 'yärd
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Old English geard enclosure, yard; akin to Old High German gart enclosure, Latin hortus garden
1 a: a small usually walled and often paved area open to the sky and adjacent to a building : COURT b: the grounds of a building or group of buildings
2: the grounds immediately surrounding a house that are usually covered with grass
3 a: an enclosure for livestock (as poultry) b (1): an area with its buildings and facilities set aside for a particular business or activity (2): an assembly or storage area c: a system of tracks for storage and maintenance of cars and making up trains
4: a locality in a forest where deer herd in winter
Main Entry: 4yard
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English yarde, from Old English gierd twig, measure, yard; akin to Old High German gart stick, Latin hasta spear
1: any of various units of measure: as a: a unit of length equal in the U.S. to 0.9144 meter -- see WEIGHT table b: a unit of volume equal to a cubic yard
2 a: a great length or quantity <remembered yards of facts and figures> b slang: one hundred dollars
3: a long spar tapered toward the ends to support and spread the head of a square sail, lateen, or lugsail
4: a slender horn-shaped glass about three feet tall; also: the amount it contains <a yard of ale> - the whole nine yards: all of a related set of circumstances, conditions, or details <who could learn the most about making records, about electronics and engineering, the whole nine yards -- Stephen Stills> -- sometimes used adverbially with go to indicate an all-out effort
home; (to) home, in Merriam-Webster
Home
Main Entry: 1home
Pronunciation: 'hOm
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English hom, from Old English hAm village, home; akin to Old High German heim home
1 a: one's place of residence: DOMICILE b: HOUSE
2: the social unit formed by a family living together
3 a: a familiar or usual setting: congenial environment; also: the focus of one's domestic attention <home is where the heart is> b: HABITAT
4 a: a place of origin <salmon returning to their home to spawn>; also: one's own country <having troubles at home and abroad> b: HEADQUARTERS 2 <home of the dance company>
5: an establishment providing residence and care for people with special needs <homes for the elderly>
6: the objective in various games; especially: HOME PLATE - at home 1: relaxed and comfortable: at ease <felt completely at home on the stage> 2: in harmony with the surroundings 3: on familiar ground: KNOWLEDGEABLE <teachers at home in their subject fields>
Main Entry: 4home
Function: verb
Inflected Form(s): homed; hom·ing
intransitive senses
1: to go or return home
2 of an animal: to return accurately to one's home or natal area from a distance
3: to proceed to or toward a source of radiated energy used as a guide <missiles home in on radar>
4: to proceed or direct attention toward an objective <science is homing in on the mysterious human process -- Sam Glucksberg> transitive senses: to send to or provide with a home
enclave, in Wikipedia
Enclave
quote
In human geography, an enclave is a piece of land which is totally enclosed within a foreign territory. If another country has sovereignty over it, it may also be called an exclave; it is an enclave of the foreign territory which surrounds it, it is an exclave of the country which has sovereignty over it.
(...) The word enclave crept into the jargon of diplomacy rather late in English, in 1868, coming from French, the lingua franca of diplomacy, with a sense inherited from late Latin inclavatus meaning shut in, locked up (with a key, late Latin clavis). The exclave is a logical extension created three decades later.
Wikipedia links: Enclaves of the world / Jan S. Krogh's Geosite / exclave.info
<1925> le cadavre / exquis / boira / le vin / nouveau </1925>
exquisite / enclave / exquise / domain / e / à / genius / radius / locus
ExE <2004> print catalogue