Thursday, May 6, 2010

Television Delivers People

"You are delivered to the advertiser." "He consumes you." "You are the product of television." This short film of scrolling text and elevator music was about how advertisers purchase you, you don't purchase products. I think this was done to emphasize societies attachment to multimedia and the effects advertising and technology have. Since so many people tune into tv daily - the tv can consume all of them in one shot. The way the video was made kind of makes you zone out and get sucked into the scrolling text that seems never ending. Since there are no images you're forced to read the text. The text consumes you as does television, as well as advertising. The elevator music is supposed to be soothing and causes you to relax. This music makes me think of being on hold and how badly I want it to be over. This video had the same effect because the music brings me to an impatient state of mind. This video was created by Richard Serra in 1973.

Human Body & Technologu - Stelarc

I find Stelarc's art to be something of it's own league. Technology is what advances this world and is what, we as human beings, are obsessed with and couldnt live without. Stelarc takes this to the next level by intergrating technology into himself. His third ear on his arm is so random, but is something that has never been done before. By him installing this and creating a place on the internet where people can log into and listen is incredible. It allows the public to be a part of his artwork. I also think his third arm is a unique invention. In my opinion it's an invention but I guess that means it is art. By combining technology into his artwork he's showing the deep routed connection society has with technology. Stelarc is also famous for the many suspensions he did. Here he would suspend himself from the ceiling with hooks. By correctly balancing and placing the hooks in certain locations around his body he can successfully hang there. I particularly like the suspension with the rocks that are used to balance him. All in all, his work is quite interesting and unique.

Video Art

From Inside the Bubble

For this video art piece I wrapped my phone in bubble wrap multiple times and then went at popping them. I mostly like the audio in this piece because it's so much louder and chaotic then I thought it would be. It sounds more so like you're at a shooting range then underneath layers of bubble wrap.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Orlan

What I find most interesting abour Orlan is her plastic surgery performances. Something that many women go through but in an element of privacy. Most women wont even admit they've had work done. Orlan saw this as an opportunity to shock the world and create art that nobody else has done. The glamorizing the procedures with costumes and props, Orlan went through numerous surgeries to her body without amnesia. As you can see in the image, the perfomance wasn't fake and included numerous bloody, graphic scenes. She also had horns installed in her forehead that remain there today. She wanted to make her performances obvious, and by adding horns - there was no hiding it. I think her message was that if you're going to undergo certain procedures that are costly and life changing - why not share the experience with everyone. By making artwork out of it she attracts a new audience - an audience who have never seen anything like this. By integrating props I believe she is saying how normal and everyday these procedures are for people. I think she made a huge statement by filming these surgeries and took a huge step in the definition of art.

Joseph Beuys

Joseph Beuys was an artist who came into light during the FLUXUS movement. Although he did participate in many FLUXUS performances he decided to take a different route in art. His main goal in his artwork was to present political and social issues within in order to show his feelings about a subject and to evoke emotion in others. An example of one of Beuys' performances was him holding a dead hare and whispering things to it behind a glass wall. People didn't know the hare was dead and they didn't know what he was saying. He was also covered in honey and gold leaf. Each aspect of the performance meant something to Beuys and symbolized some sort of social or political relationship. Another interesting image is a piano covered in clot with a stiched red cross on it called "Homogeneous Infiltration for Piano." To me he is saying playing the piano is old art. It is art, but needs to be combined with other mediums to create something special in this era. By covering the piano, he is enclosing it's identity and forcing the music to be closed off. By the addition of the red cross I am getting the idea that it needs to be fixed, or combined with other art otherwise it is not new and fresh. He was making a stand for his new way of art that presented problems in society.

FLUXUS

FLUXUS was started by a man named George Maciunas. This term stands for a network of artists who blended different means of art together. FLUXUS means "to flow" and that is what these artists strived for. In the early days of the movement John Cage explored music. With different compositions he created art. Other artists chose to get visual and create video art as well as short performance pieces. In my opinion this was a good move in art. By combining different elements they create something new and fresh. These new creations have so much more power than traditional art and music, because with the combination they present new ideas - they represent the feelings and the opinions of the individuals creating it. This is something that hadn't been done in the past. And, it was the door swinging open for talented people to combine their means and basically go crazy with the artwork presented.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Xerox Project

I decided for this project to scan whatever I could at the library and to create different monster like puppets with different arrangements of body parts and objects. I cut out and glued each peace to thick neon paper to add some color to the vast array of black and gray.  I then glued pieces together and used beads as a handle so the finished project could hang. There are 4 versions of the monsters (seen above) and each is unique in its own way. I really enjoyed this project once I went ahead and did it, but I'm a procrastinator so I didn't leave myself much time to complete it. I think it came out pretty well, just wish I could have created a better way of hanging it/displaying it.

Grid Art Project

These beads created my impressionist sunset. By lining them all up vertically and horizontally I created this grid art. Blues, greens and silvers were used for the ocean and reds, purples and golds for the sky.

Un Chien Andalou

Un Chien Andalou, done in 1929 was quite interesting. The beginning with the slicing open of the eyeball (donkey's eye) seemed gross but held so much power being something that doesn't come up in film often. The clever use of transistions allowed this silent film to leave a powerful memory. Everything seemed a bit chaotic and unworldly. The ants in the hand, the dead donkey, the boy being killed. It was all random and not put in film before. I dont know what else to say about this film, it was just so random and at times disturbing.

Marcel Duchamp Mona Lisa

This recreation of Leonardo De Vinci's Mona Lisa was done in 1919 by Marcel Duchamp. By adding facial hair and labeling it after translation"her ass is on fire" Duchamp gave Mona Lisa, and women as a whole new freedom. Not only was it different then what was done in art in the past but it was the end of WWI and it was a point in history where women were coming into their own. Throughout the war the women held the fort and worked while their husbands and brothers were gone at war. So, when the men returned, if they did at all, the women had experienced something that they werent going to let go of. Mona Lisa, a portrait of a woman with a very deceiving look upon her face; you can't tell if she's happy or sad. You just don't know what she is thinking. By Duchamp adding some elements it really hides her identity and what she stands for. I think this gives women power and a slight rising in status. She has more freedom, the freedom to do whatever and think whatever she likes.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Flipbook

 


 

 
  
  
  
 

Monday, February 15, 2010

Singin' in the Rain

In the 1950's when Singin' in the Rain came out, music and color were just new additions to film. The song was a happy song and reflected on the simple pleasures of life. Films were a huge part of entertainment at this time and many people enjoyed going and seeing them. In 1971 A Clockwork Orange came out. This film was about the end of civilization where laws and order werent being followed. Sex, drugs and crime were popular in this film as well as in civilization. The sexual revolution of the '60's led up to why this film was the way it was. With this and the rise in different forms of music and drug use, Singin' in the Rain was not so much about the simple happy things in life. When the man sings this in A Clockwork Orange he's taking advantage of a woman. He's swinging her around, tieing her up and touching her inappropriately. He plans to rape and kill her. The difference between the 1950's and the 1970's was because of what went on in between. Between the casual sex, the drug use, and the different forms of music people were acting and entertaining themselves in new ways.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

First thoughts of ART 211..

Welcome to my blog for ART 211. I'm a senior at the University of Tampa and I'll be graduating with an Ad/PR major and communications minor in May! I'm originally from California but I quickly moved and grew up in Western Mass. I decided to go to Florida for something new, originally pursuing a marine biology major. Not too sure what I'm going to do when I graduate, just that I want to make it back to California. I'd like working in the design/creative side of advertising but what really interests me is scuba diving. :)

This course on first sitting seems to be something new. I haven't had many art classes @ UT, but this one definitely seems unconventional. I'm excited to explore new ways of art and the shift art has taken from portraits or still life paintings. The professor is also quite unique; I've heard good and interesting things so I'm also excited to have him as a professor for my last semester here at the university.

The following posts will relate to my journey through ART 211: Art & Technology. Comments are always welcome! :)