Wednesday, December 10, 2014
In case anyone was in too good of a mood
https://medium.com/the-multilarity/the-play-of-plays-219a6f113282
Something I found online
“I recently wrote an article about photography and art; the essential point being that photography is an art but by and large as it is practiced by most photographers, will be remembered as a minor art because it lacks the essential ingredient of all major arts which is invention. Photography is essentially an act of recognition by street photographers, not an act of invention. Photographers might respond to an old man’s face, or an Arbus freak, or the way light hits a building—and then they move on. Whereas in all the other art forms, take William Blake, everything that came to that paper never existed before. It’s the idea of alchemy, of making something from nothing. I feel the more a photographer intrudes into the photograph, the more he creates. But people expect less from photography than they do from the other arts. They’re quite happy to simply reproduce someone’s face and they assume that that represents the person and if that person looks attractive, so much the better. It’s the most democratic of all the arts in that anyone can take a photograph or has had their picture taken; so accessible that we don’t demand as much and that’s what makes me angry. Even the pace setters and the professionals in the field, the people who define photography themselves never expect more from the medium than that. Szarkowski, it seems to me, feels that the history of photography has already been defined and it’s simply a matter of refining that definition. Photography is not even a hundred and some years old and it’s already this staid, ossified institution. People are still lighting candles under Stieglitz and under Weston’s green pepper, and rightly so, but let’s get on with it! I’ve seen enough of France at the turn of the century! If photography is a viable living art form, it has to change. It should not be threatened by a handful of non-conformists. The real danger to the medium is the photographer still photographing parking lots in California and being heralded a genius.”
Monday, December 8, 2014
Weekly post- anne
official trailer
The Congress
The Congress is a live action/ animated hybrid film by the same dude that did academy award winning animated documentary feature Waltz with Bashir. Its bizarre, like actually the most nonsensical movie ive ever seen. It tells a tail of a world in which actors sell themselves as a character that can forever be reused and created digitally for films. This notion of losing the 'person' aspect of acting was really peculiar to me. The premise and theme of the film is very art to nail but the animated part is like a visual feast.
The Congress
The Congress is a live action/ animated hybrid film by the same dude that did academy award winning animated documentary feature Waltz with Bashir. Its bizarre, like actually the most nonsensical movie ive ever seen. It tells a tail of a world in which actors sell themselves as a character that can forever be reused and created digitally for films. This notion of losing the 'person' aspect of acting was really peculiar to me. The premise and theme of the film is very art to nail but the animated part is like a visual feast.
Alejandro Guijarro - Momentum
Holy shit I'm in love I think.
http://www.alejandroguijarro.com/ongoing/blackboards/
This is some of the best work I've personally seen in awhile. This guy is travelling the world to visit the laboratories and studies of some of the foremost researchers working on quantum mechanics. He simply photographs the blackboards as he sees them, and presents them as large prints. ITS EVERYTHING I WANT TO DO. I've had an idea for a series recently that involves making large prints of complex graphs with absolutely no context. I like the idea of knowledge and information operating as foreign language; something is there, and you know it, but you can't get anything from it. The art is directly in front of you, the experience is immediate, but the information is years of studying away from you. Holy fuck I love it so much. Seeing his stuff makes me want to start my new series immediately. I need an organic chemistry book, that shit is wildly confusing.
This also makes me think about Cy Twombly, and artist I know nothing about. Perhaps he would be another person to look at for all of this?
http://www.alejandroguijarro.com/ongoing/blackboards/
This is some of the best work I've personally seen in awhile. This guy is travelling the world to visit the laboratories and studies of some of the foremost researchers working on quantum mechanics. He simply photographs the blackboards as he sees them, and presents them as large prints. ITS EVERYTHING I WANT TO DO. I've had an idea for a series recently that involves making large prints of complex graphs with absolutely no context. I like the idea of knowledge and information operating as foreign language; something is there, and you know it, but you can't get anything from it. The art is directly in front of you, the experience is immediate, but the information is years of studying away from you. Holy fuck I love it so much. Seeing his stuff makes me want to start my new series immediately. I need an organic chemistry book, that shit is wildly confusing.
This also makes me think about Cy Twombly, and artist I know nothing about. Perhaps he would be another person to look at for all of this?
Taylor Stevenson: Viviane Sassen
Viviane Sassen implicates Western beliefs and how they have imposed on the African culture. I
feel as if her work defiantly relates and can help me understand my
work better. I remember in a couple of my crits it was said that once
I show a face in my pieces it tends to fall flat. In Sassens work she claimed
that she normally abstracts the identity of her subject, when asked why she claimed
that "the gaze of the viewer
and about my own perspective” as opposed to “some truth about the photographed
subject.”
I think that it is
interesting that Sassen often abstracts her portraits since in art school we
are told if you want to do a portrait you often need to include the face.
However Sassen feels as if including portraits that give identity
one will begin to "prove a single
truth" about the subject. Since the work she is
making isn't focused on one particular person or of
an individual story this abstraction for the face generalizes the
subject matter and allows the viewer to focus on the body and how
it contours with the light and space around it.
After
reading and understanding the factors that Viviane uses in her work i understand
what Shane meant in regards to the fear of black bodies.
The interest in how black bodies interact with
light fascinated me last year however it was just touching the
surface and wasn't as complex. I hadn't understood the
language that I had been implementing, I was just interested in seeing
how african american bodies would register in nude studies.
I need
to dive into my topic and simply just start doing it.
Taking elements such that have been successful I'm previous
images and using them to help guide my future work.
Kim Keever
Kim Keever is someone I saw on "but does it float". Again, I'm writing about this work because of how off put I was when I saw it. I mean it's more fucking color abstractions of inky stuff in water. Booooooooooooooooooooooooooooo. Do better Kim. But for the sake of the conversation Shane and I had last week I'm going to try to seriously talk about this stuff and find something I can learn from it.
This is the only work I know of Kim Keever because, like I said, I only just saw her on BDIF. The most striking thing about this stuff is obviously the fluid compositions women out of various colored inks. The color is so unpleasant to me it hurts. There are a few of the images that I can almost start diving into, and it's no coincidence that those are the same images with simpler color palettes, but even those look like uninspired, as if the artist discovered Adobe Kuler and was in awe. I can tell that the artist is trying to create a certain atmosphere with the images. I think of weather when I see these, like certain storms and temperatures. The colors have a great effect on the scenes, but there just doesn't seem a lot inspired about the work overall.
The artist sees these as a response to landscape photography, and I'll totally give her that. She also describes them as a method for her to engage in pure exploration and the "random" events that occur when paint and water mix. I don't find it interesting really. I think the images can be interesting to look at for a little, but I'm left wondering where I should after the initial viewing and then I'm lost.
What do you think about the work/what do you think I'm looking at incorrectly?
This is the only work I know of Kim Keever because, like I said, I only just saw her on BDIF. The most striking thing about this stuff is obviously the fluid compositions women out of various colored inks. The color is so unpleasant to me it hurts. There are a few of the images that I can almost start diving into, and it's no coincidence that those are the same images with simpler color palettes, but even those look like uninspired, as if the artist discovered Adobe Kuler and was in awe. I can tell that the artist is trying to create a certain atmosphere with the images. I think of weather when I see these, like certain storms and temperatures. The colors have a great effect on the scenes, but there just doesn't seem a lot inspired about the work overall.
The artist sees these as a response to landscape photography, and I'll totally give her that. She also describes them as a method for her to engage in pure exploration and the "random" events that occur when paint and water mix. I don't find it interesting really. I think the images can be interesting to look at for a little, but I'm left wondering where I should after the initial viewing and then I'm lost.
What do you think about the work/what do you think I'm looking at incorrectly?
Omer Fast - The Casting
http://vimeo.com/70885581
"The Casting" is a short film and novel by video artist Omer Fast that presents one or two narratives seemingly seamlessly woven into one another. Fast interviews a soldier who tells a story about a German girl he goes on a date with, and about his vehicle running over an IED. The entire story is fabricated, then edited together using sound bites to create a new story, apparently ungrounded entirely from reality. The book form of the work contains the story that's being told along with photographs of the interview and of these scenes. Every picture is a still from a short video that was taken of that scene. A picture of two soldiers standing along side their vehicle is taken from a short clip of them awkwardly standing in a position that mimics running, and the wind and dust of the Middle East (California) ensures that no one can stand still for long. Even the shots of the interview are fake. Omer is seen in the book talking to the subject, mid word when the photo was taken, but the video shows Omer quietly sitting with his mouth half open, saying nothing, giving the illusion that he was engaged in conversation.
The two narratives blend together to create a third, more fluid story line that seems to jump around the world and back with no regard to the reader. Fast edited the interview extensively to create this story, and the audience isn't sure what is true and what isn't, even though they were fully engaged. This is interesting considered one short bit of the story in which fast asks the viewer how he knew he wasn't dreaming. The subject pauses for a moment is admits he can't really know. I suppose that this is the foundation of the work as a whole. Fast ends the film by saying that he is interested in how memory turns into narrative that is ungrounded from reality by means of time. He also says he isn't sure if this story (the story he is being told in the interview) will work, because it has taken up nearly 30 minutes, which contradicts the films 15 minute run time. This quick remark by Fast informs the audience that there is much they weren't told, even though the story seemed complete and believable.
"The Casting" is a short film and novel by video artist Omer Fast that presents one or two narratives seemingly seamlessly woven into one another. Fast interviews a soldier who tells a story about a German girl he goes on a date with, and about his vehicle running over an IED. The entire story is fabricated, then edited together using sound bites to create a new story, apparently ungrounded entirely from reality. The book form of the work contains the story that's being told along with photographs of the interview and of these scenes. Every picture is a still from a short video that was taken of that scene. A picture of two soldiers standing along side their vehicle is taken from a short clip of them awkwardly standing in a position that mimics running, and the wind and dust of the Middle East (California) ensures that no one can stand still for long. Even the shots of the interview are fake. Omer is seen in the book talking to the subject, mid word when the photo was taken, but the video shows Omer quietly sitting with his mouth half open, saying nothing, giving the illusion that he was engaged in conversation.
The two narratives blend together to create a third, more fluid story line that seems to jump around the world and back with no regard to the reader. Fast edited the interview extensively to create this story, and the audience isn't sure what is true and what isn't, even though they were fully engaged. This is interesting considered one short bit of the story in which fast asks the viewer how he knew he wasn't dreaming. The subject pauses for a moment is admits he can't really know. I suppose that this is the foundation of the work as a whole. Fast ends the film by saying that he is interested in how memory turns into narrative that is ungrounded from reality by means of time. He also says he isn't sure if this story (the story he is being told in the interview) will work, because it has taken up nearly 30 minutes, which contradicts the films 15 minute run time. This quick remark by Fast informs the audience that there is much they weren't told, even though the story seemed complete and believable.
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Katrin Freisager
So I want to write about this work because when I initially see it I'm uninterested. I don't really like it off the bat. Abstractions using the human body tend to bore me because I feel like I've seen those pictures so many times. I'm going to try though, I'm going to talk about the work in an attempt to understand it before I dismiss it.
The first thing I notice in the work is the bold disruptions the artist has placed throughout the entire length of the frame. The foremost limbs create a visual entity so strongly out of place that I am made aware of the space the photograph was made in. Immediately after that realization, I notice the soft Robin's egg blue of the backdrop on which these fleshly amalgamations take form. Again, this color provides a sense of depth (unlike something warm, like orange, which would collapse the scene into a studio), but it also just looks nice by responding to the reds, oranges, and yellows of the skin, of which there is a lot. One thing I do genuinely like about the work is how quickly the artist references the space the photo was made in without making it too direct. This is something that interests me deeply, a photograph as a stage, and a "photograph that knows it's a photograph".
The first thing I notice in the work is the bold disruptions the artist has placed throughout the entire length of the frame. The foremost limbs create a visual entity so strongly out of place that I am made aware of the space the photograph was made in. Immediately after that realization, I notice the soft Robin's egg blue of the backdrop on which these fleshly amalgamations take form. Again, this color provides a sense of depth (unlike something warm, like orange, which would collapse the scene into a studio), but it also just looks nice by responding to the reds, oranges, and yellows of the skin, of which there is a lot. One thing I do genuinely like about the work is how quickly the artist references the space the photo was made in without making it too direct. This is something that interests me deeply, a photograph as a stage, and a "photograph that knows it's a photograph".
There is something grotesque or off-putting about piles of arms and legs sitting comfortably in a light blue space. This juxtaposition I feel is the beginning of the conceptual side of these works. I'm not sure exactly what is being shown to me, but I can now use this initial confusion as the framework for the rest of my questions. Also, all the bodies seem to belong to white girls of a "normal" build. I suppose that makes sense though, as the artist is European.
The clothing that the women are wearing is interesting. Lot's of nylon looking stuff, so I think of dancers. I don't want to think that though, because that's such I silly way to approach dance in terms of photography; a sliding mess of body parts. Because of that, I don't believe that the artist is trying to do that, so I am still unsure of many of the artists choices. One thing that I do notice about the clothes is that they don't seem to change. Neither does the color, or the lighting. Because these elements don't vary throughout the photos, I'm led to believe that they are all of the same environment and timeframe. Is this a form of documentation? Is the art not the photograph, but the "sculpture"? Calling it a sculpture implies objectification, which seems evident because no faces are shown, only bits of bodies. Lots of legs, too, which are considered sexy parts of women. Weird. Uncomfortable. That's how I feel. I feel like the artist is inviting me to join in a morbid game of Twister that I can't involve myself in as a guy. Now I'm on a tangent, and my mind is making a million connections. A true can of worms has been opened, each one coloring the work in a different way, slowly closing me off from anything the artist had intended to communicate. Does that mean I've failed the work? Has the work failed me?
I don't know.
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Olafur Elisasson - The Weather Project - Simulations
http://www.ted.com/talks/olafur_eliasson_playing_with_space_and_light?language=en#t-133726
This is a TED talk by Olafur Eliasson, who is an installation artist primarily, and very active in the contemporary scene. I'm not going to try to sum him up entirely, or even just his artistic career. I will however briefly talk about some of the work he has done and what I find interesting about it. I first learned of him through a site called moonmoonmoonmoon. It's a 3D space that exists on a server, accessible through a browser, that hosts a large white sphere. On this sphere, anyone is invited to draw whatever they please, and the results are shown publicly and simultaneously; everyone has access to this moon.
This work is a good primer on what he is primarily interested in. An activation of space, one that is usually considered anti-social (the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall, various white-wall galleries, etc). In a sense, he create simulations. In his work "The Weather Project", the Tate modern played host to a simulated Sun, which was accompanied by a subtle fog, and a massive mirror in the ceiling so visitors could lounge on the floor looking up at themselves. More recently, he has simulated a rocky mountain side featuring a small stream running through a gallery space. The seemingly featureless, grey landscape was only broken by the trickle of water that bisects the room. This stream is also the beginning of a narrative.
So what interests me most about all of this is why anyone would be engaged by a simulation of something when the "real thing" is so quotidian. A 2D, orange circle in place of a star, a room half full with pebbles as opposed to an actual field. What makes such shallow "copies" of these environments even remotely meaningful or seizing? I like the idea that we find a simulation of something more meaningful compared to the "real" thing because we know that effort, time, and creativity was put into the creation of it.
We can appreciate The Weather Project because we know that someone else, another consciousness that exists outside of us, created and offered us an alternative version of reality. Maybe this is just me being solipsistic, but I think it makes sense. The "natural world" is a reflection of how we perceive reality through our limited, physical senses, but to see another's simulation of something, we gain a better understanding of how other's see reality. Again, it's a simple idea, but an important one, I think. I'd go as far as to say that simulations of things can be more meaningful than the "real" thing because it is a simulation. If it made by another consciousness, there is the implication and assumption that there is meaning, why else would anyone make it? This is only true under the assumption that one doesn't find the world inherently meaningful, or doesn't believe in some form of Creationism or higher power.
This is a TED talk by Olafur Eliasson, who is an installation artist primarily, and very active in the contemporary scene. I'm not going to try to sum him up entirely, or even just his artistic career. I will however briefly talk about some of the work he has done and what I find interesting about it. I first learned of him through a site called moonmoonmoonmoon. It's a 3D space that exists on a server, accessible through a browser, that hosts a large white sphere. On this sphere, anyone is invited to draw whatever they please, and the results are shown publicly and simultaneously; everyone has access to this moon.
This work is a good primer on what he is primarily interested in. An activation of space, one that is usually considered anti-social (the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall, various white-wall galleries, etc). In a sense, he create simulations. In his work "The Weather Project", the Tate modern played host to a simulated Sun, which was accompanied by a subtle fog, and a massive mirror in the ceiling so visitors could lounge on the floor looking up at themselves. More recently, he has simulated a rocky mountain side featuring a small stream running through a gallery space. The seemingly featureless, grey landscape was only broken by the trickle of water that bisects the room. This stream is also the beginning of a narrative.
So what interests me most about all of this is why anyone would be engaged by a simulation of something when the "real thing" is so quotidian. A 2D, orange circle in place of a star, a room half full with pebbles as opposed to an actual field. What makes such shallow "copies" of these environments even remotely meaningful or seizing? I like the idea that we find a simulation of something more meaningful compared to the "real" thing because we know that effort, time, and creativity was put into the creation of it.
We can appreciate The Weather Project because we know that someone else, another consciousness that exists outside of us, created and offered us an alternative version of reality. Maybe this is just me being solipsistic, but I think it makes sense. The "natural world" is a reflection of how we perceive reality through our limited, physical senses, but to see another's simulation of something, we gain a better understanding of how other's see reality. Again, it's a simple idea, but an important one, I think. I'd go as far as to say that simulations of things can be more meaningful than the "real" thing because it is a simulation. If it made by another consciousness, there is the implication and assumption that there is meaning, why else would anyone make it? This is only true under the assumption that one doesn't find the world inherently meaningful, or doesn't believe in some form of Creationism or higher power.
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Taylor Stevenson: Alyscia Cunningham
Over the thanksgiving holiday I attended the Reginald F. Lewis Museum in
Baltimore, Maryland. This exhibit focused on African American roots in Maryland
throughout slavery through to the civil war and to current issues. In the
exhibit there was a particular piece that interested me Alyscia Cunningham work entitled By Any Means. Which was a self-portrait of
the artist that takes Harriet Tubmans standpoint of never returning back to
slavery. Cunningham’s work employs dramatic lighting because she feels as
if it “fosters a greater interaction between the viewer and the
photographs”. I really enjoyed Cunninghams use of
historical reference in her photos, it shows that she is aware. This
work is also significant to the exhibit because it is relating past
historical moments to current forms of expression, which helps too tie the
exhibit together.
However she also known for her Feminine Transitions book that celebrates the beauty of women aged 7 to 103 years.
Monday, December 1, 2014
Liesa Collins - Weekly Artist Post
Gordon Stettinius
Gordon Stettinius is an American photographer based in Richmond, Va. He is the founder and director of Candela Gallery and Books. This series that he did in collaboration with Terry Brown is called the Mangini Studio Series and has over fifty studio disguises mainly focused around hair. This series is currently on view at Page Bond Gallery. When I was a freshmen, I emailed Gordon about some information on this series because I was recreating the idea in my own project. He was super great about it and told me it originated from an assignment when he taught at VCU and just messing around with Terry in the studio that they met at. Terry Brown is also an amazing person who I love to talk to whenever I get the chance. This is more of an appreciation text than anything. But this series is tight.
Raven M - Now! Again! Travis Wilkerson
"NOW! AGAIN! is a reenactment of a classic radical film, "Now" by Santiago Alvarez, staged this summer in Ferguson, Missouri by the cops themselves. Playing themselves, the cops reenact their own vicious history as if they were checking their performance in a mirror shattered by gunfire. NOW! AGAIN! blows up at the intersection of an avant-garde film act and an urgent manifesto for militant action, demanding an end to police violence NOW!"
Last class there was a brief moment where we brought up the concept of 'modern day lynching' and I noticed a bit of hesitation to refer to what in going on in our present day political stratum as a lynching. I didn't really know how to vocalize how that made me feel then, and perhaps I still have trouble putting words to why that "idea" seems so prevalent to me. Maybe the feeling to too raw now. But I was pointed towards this short film, by one of my favorite documenters and I feel that it speaks to what is going on now. People try to pull what's going on now away from the context of the Civil Rights Movements, when people try to demonize protesters and admonish people in there journey of grief, and these are things that drive me crazy simply because no one has the right to say how anyone should mourn. But back to the contact of the piece; Wilkerson draws an excellent parallel between then and now.
teddy-artist-keith miller
Keith Miller wrote and directed the film, Five Star. It is a film that blurs the line between fiction and reality. His main actor, James Grant, aka 'primo', is the actual leader of the gang, the bloods, in eastern New York City. In the film, Grant plays the same role. The film explores the relationship between Primo and a young man struggling to decide if he wants to pursue a life in a gang. In this film about growing up and manhood, gang life is shown from a different perspective. It explores a gang member away from a gang and the struggles that arise.
http://www.littlerockfilmfestival.org/2014/05/15/qa-with-five-star-director-keith-miller/
http://fivestarthemovie.com/
http://www.littlerockfilmfestival.org/2014/05/15/qa-with-five-star-director-keith-miller/
http://fivestarthemovie.com/
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Weekly Artist Post: Rina Shapira
I stumbled across Rina Shapira on a Lenscratch article and felt rather intrigued by the imagery of Rina's work. Being one who has spent much time in old, dilapidated buildings, I was never one to literally put a narrative into the building or complex I was exploring. Rina's will to recreate stories behind these stories that cease to exist and add a sort of spectral element is quite invigorating to me. It almost seems as if she somehow took old photographs from the mid-1800s to early 1900s and placed them in somehow. Finding a way about talking about the past in a contemporary since that opens up a new way to bring about the conversation is exciting to witness and that is what I experienced with this series.
Weekly Artist Post! Adam Landis
Jessie Edwards
Edwards' fabulous paintings from his so called "Real Life Paintings" portray still lives of banal, mundane objects that, arranged together become very interesting. Interesting juxtapositions, they are humorously relatable, some are more serious commentary on things in the lives of people who often get overlooked. Check the rest of his stuff out, he also happens to be a grafitti artist and a sculptor.
Edwards' fabulous paintings from his so called "Real Life Paintings" portray still lives of banal, mundane objects that, arranged together become very interesting. Interesting juxtapositions, they are humorously relatable, some are more serious commentary on things in the lives of people who often get overlooked. Check the rest of his stuff out, he also happens to be a grafitti artist and a sculptor.
Weekly Artist Post - Kirill Kuletski - Hannah Nees
Kirill Kuletski is a photographer based in London, England. He was born in Russia and captures the mood of the places he visits. There is not much information about the photographer online, but I was able to figure out that these photographs were taken on his way to Death Valley. He often tries to capture the feeling he was overcome with when seeing these places for the first time.
I enjoy his work, because I can definitely feel a mood (especially in this series, "Imposition") that he is trying to get across. Even though I don't necessarily know the mood he is trying to show to the viewer, I feel that I know what he is trying to say????
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