
Through the process of capillary action water is drawn from a plastic suspended container through a J-Cloth and drips on to a sheet of plate glass (suspended at the corners by wire). The accumulation of water eventually spills from the glass and is absorbed by finishing plaster laid out in the floor below. Depending on the humidity the process takes about 30 hours to complete.
There are long pauses between each drop and there is a noticeable contrast between the subtle splash of water on the glass and the silent 'thud' as the drops vanish in to the plaster. An ever increasing cavity is created in the plaster throughout the duration of the process and if left indefinitely would be, along with some slight staining on the glass, the only physical evidence of a process having taken place.
There are long pauses between each drop and there is a noticeable contrast between the subtle splash of water on the glass and the silent 'thud' as the drops vanish in to the plaster. An ever increasing cavity is created in the plaster throughout the duration of the process and if left indefinitely would be, along with some slight staining on the glass, the only physical evidence of a process having taken place.
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