Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Media Artists

http://vimeo.com/87129913 - Jim Campbell

Jim Campbell, Constellation, 2012











Rafael Lorenzo Hemmer Relational Architecture 11













Sabrina Raaf












http://vimeo.com/78011026 - Toni Dove, Spectropia Episode #6: Time is Slipping













Under Scan, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Relational Architecture 11 - See more at: http://artobserved.com/2008/08/electronic-artist-rafael-lozano-hemmer-to-flood-trafalgar-square-november-2008/#sthash.6gs4xWW9.dpuf

Monday, April 21, 2014

Manifesto

For college this semester I am suppose to write a manifesto and so I begin . . . with conflicting ideas and feelings on the subject. Warning nothing will make sense.

Apparently art is in Post-post modern art period, also known as metamodernism, which is art that says nothing in particular and appears vague because any future suggested may not exist. Well if that doesn't make sense to you - it's okay because it doesn't make sense to me either. Maybe that's because I'm a hopeless Romantic which fantasizes a heterogeneous world made of empathetic individuals who live their lives trying to help their neighbour. As I write that sentence I can see how I could be ridiculed, but what am I suppose to do? Become a metamodernist and think of a future that probably won't exist, give up on hope and stop loving and caring?

Do I think art today is in a metamodernist period? No - I see that we have entered a period of banalism because we so frequently see images of art so readily available (Internet) that we no longer create an original idea. Yes every idea stems from another idea, but it shouldn't imitate it. When I recently went to the Armory Show in NYC I first went to the modern exhibition. I spent hours with sweat rolling down my back looking at previous masters create genius original works of art. I could clearly see how each era of art influenced another, as did artists of their time, but it was genuine and honest, which accounted for the work being theirs'. When I ventured down stairs into the contemporary section, it was almost twice the size, and what I saw bored me. I would walk past each booth and get the meaning of the art very quickly. Almost everything I saw was comprised of multiple art movements, but stripped down and simplified with bright colors and patterns. I also noted that other audience members were like myself, they didn't take the time to investigate the art around them. It was disheartening, I felt like I was at a mall where everything is manufactured, the same, banal.

Another large impeding factor I have noticed is how frequently we research the art project we are working on, on the Internet - we watch how to YouTube videos, images on Google, Flickr and Pintinterest, and I' not trying to say I don't fall prey to this as well but I like to think that I do more investigating on my own through working out my ideas . . . hoping to find the happy accident and not looking for what my art should resemble because I create from memoirs that belong to me alone. I do take into account others opinions, theories and ideas, attempting to understand different perspectives to allow the work I create to be seen on levels which appear to a larger public. I listen to people vent about the same atrocities I face and am trying to make clear how people are effected by pain. Hasn't every person in the world experienced pain?

Art for me is based on the romantic principle, but with a twist of realism. This means I take into account what is going on around me, knowing that some people will never care about others and will look into themselves, whilst other people will (like myself) give back to society and the community. Art for me is not about making a home more beautiful and interesting with a wall piece but rather a realistic honest depiction of my experiences from the world. How can I make art about something I cannot feel or know? Researching a subject only takes you so far - it's experience that is not found in books or reading that my art is made from. The irony is I first begin my process by writing out the autobiographical story before physically manifesting it into a work of art.

The manifesto I wrote is below:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1w_goSRysbAuAtTUokiqRjPAZ2xBhSS9LpUb2fifRpC0/pub








Sunday, March 30, 2014

Reading #9













Isa Genzken Urlaub, 2004
















Manfred Pernice Foundation, 2009










Kathy Wilkes I Gave You All My Money, 2008











Bernd Krauss, 2012













Jason Dodge What we keep doing to ourselves, 2014

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Reading #7 - Metamodernism












Didier Courbet series, 1999 - present











Tacita Dean still from Craneway Event, 2010



















Cindy Sherman as Maralyn Monroe, 1982












Thomas Demand True World becomes a Fable,
2011










Jeff Koons Antiquity 3, 2009-2011 

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Reading #6 - Relational Art









Bertolt Brecht - his beginning













Thomas Hirschhorn The Power Plant, 2008











Jeremy Deller The Snack Bar, 2009


















Ilya Kabakov The Man Who Flew into Space, 1981-88












Adrian Piper Funk Lessons, 2013 stills

Monday, February 24, 2014

Reading #5 - Dematerialism, Arte Povera, Unmonumental and post Minimalism












Guy Ben-Ner Stealing Beauty (still) 2007

















Louise Bourgeois In and Out 1995




















Alberto Burri Red plastic 1964

















Jenny Holzer Inflammatory Essay (1 out of 10) 1982
















Barbara Kruger Who's the fairest of them all? 1989

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Reading #4 - Why Have Their Been No Great Women Artists








Rosa Bonheur Horse Fair 1852















Emily Mary Osborn Nameless and Friendless 1857


















Sabina von Steinback Notre Dame Cathedral Tower 1318-1339


















Lavinia Fontana Self-Portrait at the Clavichord with a Servant 1577











Marietta Robusti Self Portrait 1556



Sunday, February 9, 2014

Reading #3 - Artists - Post Modern


















Piet Mondrian Composition No. 2 1939


















Pablo Picasso Les Demoiselles dAvignon 1907


Paul Cezanne Nudes in Landscape 1900-1905



















Joseph Beuys Felt Suit 1970
















Wassily Kandinsky Composition VII 1913

Friday, January 31, 2014

Reading II - 5 Artists - Minimalism

Tony Smith Die 1962
Robert Morris Untitled 1965-1966
Auguste Rodin Burghers of Calais 1884-1889
Candida Hofer Douze-Twelve 2001
Vladimir Tatlin Tatlin's Tower 1919

Monday, January 27, 2014

Reading I - 5 Artists

Bronze Gate, 2005, Robert Morris
Still Life with Guitar, 1913, Pablo Picasso
Fountain, 1917, Duchamp
Perimeters, Mary Miss
Expanded Expansion, 1969, Eva Hesse








Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Definition of Sculpture (list) - "Indefinitely Malleable"

- anything and everything
- new, used and old
- free standing or a base
- lighting
- installation
- performance
- video
- audio
- photography
- multi-combination of media
- nature
- drawing
- painting
- collage
- clothing
- props
- dramatic
- fun and frisky
- dark and serious
- uncanny
- bewildering
- real
- sculpture
- metal, wood, paper, glue, screws
- unlimited types of media
- diverse
- array of techniques, forms and concepts
- became popular post modernism
- earthwork
- situational
- site orientated or not
- mirrors
- documentaries
- music
- ground, ceiling, floor
- empty space or empty gallery
- architecture
- underground
- excavated earth
- logs
- fire pits
- stone henge
- Indian burial mounds
- statues
- monuments
- doors
- steel
- casting
- function
- purpose
- aesthetic
- abjection
- base
- unfinished
- sloppy
- craft
- skilled
- technical
- marble
- bronze
- aluminum
- iron
- "what is it not?"
- new alter installation
- effects
- dry ice
- a mindset
- negotiator
- cars
- demonstrations
- adornments
- mobile architecture
- choreography
- costumery
- reflection and or refraction
- semi-permeable membranes
- elevators
- designs
- a fun ride
- "duck"
- "decorated shed"
- kinetics
- kinetic sculptural dance
- stacking
- movement
- relics
- collections
- shaped paintings
- musical instruments
- misuse
- re-purposing
- distribution
- set of systems
- original
- copy
- referentialism
- etching
- ceramics
- porcelain
- clay
- slide shows
- film
- text
- essays
- object
- new material
- inventions
- formica
- Plexiglas
- brass
- shape
- size
- interior
- machinery
- spatiality
- experience
- time
- duration of experience
- poetry
- singing
- living sculptures
- taxidermy
- arbitrary
- public art
- tower
- chip board
- heavy industry worker
- a role
- environment
- proletarian worker
- raw production in public realms
- artistic producer
- figure/ground configuration
- slashed canvases
- balloons

The word "sculpture" in our contemporary time is misused and misunderstood. Society believes that a person in sculpture creates an object from material. Unfortunately this is not true. Contemporary sculpture is any type of art that isn't painting and for this statement to be true a person would have to define what painting is. The matter becomes even more confusing when a painting is no longer a traditional rectangle canvas because then it becomes sculpture. The definition above is a list format of what sculpture may be or may include but is not limited to the words above. I believe it would take a lifetime to finish a definition of sculpture. Here is a link to the etymology of the word sculpture. Instead of updating the definition to contemporary times, it may be more useful to appropriate a new word for sculpture to prevent any confusion.