The Occupational Travel Kit, 2007
Tool
felt, bone, wool, fabricated and found tools, paper, thread; 12 x 12 x 2 inches
This is one of many projects based on the ideas of Frederick Fröebel (1782-1852), the German educator who designed, implemented and named the first kindergarten program. Fröebel’s program fashioned itself around a philosophy of unity, leading children to manipulate materials through various exercises (called “Gifts” and “Occupations”) to address forms of Nature, Knowledge and Beauty. Key modernist architects, such as Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier, passed through the program in its heyday, and some writers have made the case that it provided the seed-pearl of modernism.
Through an intimate exploration and reinvention of Fröebel’s exercises, Clark Espinal’s contemporary manifestations take the form of “found objects,” which serve to highlight the parallels between Fröebel’s concepts and modernist ideals. The Occupational Travel Kit allows one to carry out the exercises of Fröebel’s second Occupation (Sewing-Out) in any location. Needle, thread, paper, scissors, and embroidery punch are all carefully encased within a felt purse.