: A Surfer’s Time

/ 2019
/ Maple St. Construct
/ Omaha, Nebraska
 


f: MSC
For most,

time

is quite repetitive, we get up have a coffee, go to work, have lunch, go back to work, clock out, go home, check in with the family, have dinner, and go to sleep.  For some, weekends might break the monotony with leisurely travels and dinners with friends only to repeat the previous week on Monday.  Some are lucky enough to have prolonged vacations giving the repetitive cycle a bit of discomfort.  For a few, time is quite valuable, moving at a fast pace with constant obligations and limited moments of slow reflection.  For others, time can be bitterly slow, a constant waiting period for some slight change or difference in a routine.  Most become quite content with either, falling into the controlling wave that time sets.  However, for a few, the individual can briefly control time.  This becomes about intention, where a person set on a wave of time unexpectedly decides to get off.  Why is this important?  It is important because our work can only be truly judged by playing with the pace of time; otherwise, we get judged by time. 

There is a saying that only time will tell…for a few, it should say only time will tell except for the moments they tell time.


Robin Donaldson is an architect and artist who lives a life of precious and expensive time, a repetitive swell of waves of time.  For Robin, time is not slowing down and not necessarily extending itself.  For Robin, Maple St. Construct becomes a moment of controlling time, a wave of time at his pace and of his intention.  For Robin, the seven days of time he spends in Omaha might be seventy days of time for someone else.  However, that doesn’t matter; what matters is he’s giving himself the time.  He’s giving himself the time as only Maple St. Construct presents time…a timeless wave of slow reflection and of course, making stuff.








Mark