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July
8, 2004
One hundred identical four
by four by four inch white boxes, tied with white ribbon were "hidden" in
public places throughout Southern and Central Vermont.
Attached to each was a simple tag
which read:
For: You!
If you are holding this box,
you are its intended recipient.
www.foundabox.com
In each box there was a small item
wrapped in white tissue--a random token such as a key, a cassette
tape,
a vintage photo,
a recipe, etc. There were also things
such as the cardboard core from from a finished roll of toilet paper, old
telephone wire.
The concept for this piece included a couple different
components.
The Art of Surprise:
The first was to initially surprise
people with the box itself. What was their first reaction when
they discovered a box? What
did they individually
experience?
Intrigue? Fear or suspicion? Delight? What did the unexpected feel
like? Was finding the box a positive, negative or neutral experience?
Luck,
Fate and Meaning:
Another component was to tickle curiosity and
generate wonder. Why was the item put in the box? Why did they
find it? Were they
individually
meant to
find it?
Was a box put in a particular location -- predestined by a higher
power or universal force -- so they would find it or was it
serendipity? What
is the
role of luck,
fate and faith in our lives?
Did they relate to the item directly in any way or were they completely
baffled. Were they offended? Did the item make them recall or imagine
another time,
place, person, or experience, past of future. How did the item
in the box engage them?
Did it hold any meaning for them? What meaning might the same item
have had if discovered by someone else.
And Then, What? What would they do with the box? As in life, there
were no instructions for what they could, should or might do.
They could do with it
whatever they
chose with
the box. They could open it or not. They could leave it where
they found it or give it away. They could open it then close it
back
up and leave
it for
someone
else to find. They could throw it away. They could open it, and
later remove the item, insert another and then leave that box
for someone
else to find.
They could destroy it.
No instructions were given. What did they do?
The Gift is Never
in the Box:
Another element of the piece was the message that
the gift is never in the box. The true essence of a gift is the
excitement
and the
surprise or anticipation
before even opening the box. Just holding it. The gift is
in the thought that went into putting something in the box for
another person. The
gift
is what
the
thing makes one think, feel, remember, imagine, or do. The
thing is never the gift. It's a thing. [VISIT
THE SITE AND READ THE RESULTS]
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