Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Friday, July 10, 2015
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Unmanageability of Visual Culture
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Thinking of the reality of a still life. It is no longer alive, it's “still/dead” and waiting there to be painted. Put upon multiple frames, reminds me of the video culture we have become. Unless it moves, people tend not to look at it.
other quotes to think about:
Christopher Stackhouse:
Insidious Reproduction of Art
Unmanageability of Visual Culture
Crowd-sourcing Quality
Macha
Current Culture Tools
Guy Kinnear
find: Flaneur
see: Walter Benjamin -
Phsychogeographic Review (blog)
Charts of Knowledge
Monday, July 6, 2015
WTF
My thoughts lately have been about using graphic design as an expression. I have looked up the term “graphic expression” and it's not necessarily a widely used term in the arts, but it does help me start to place myself in a “conversation” in the art world.
I am not a street artist, and not of this generation with their willingness to be out on a ladder, up a wall or over a fence to make a statement. But I have realized that the artworld is very influenced by artists who bring a digital/design sensibility to their art. This is a genre where I am curious how far I can go.
I do have things to say in respects of symbolism or semiotics of how our society accepts certain truths such as “guns kill people.” I feel like there are numbers of icons like the gun that people jump to conclusions instead of thinking it through.
Why The Firearm? WTF — a flag that questions our view of weapons.
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Sunday, July 5, 2015
APU Studio 5 - July 2015
Studio #5 at APU this summer. I jammed in all of the different work that I brought. This configuration allows me to parse out the different items, and speak to how I arrived at some of these visual conclusions.
One area, the unstretched canvases to the right are based on maps from throughout my life. Then the back wall is balanced with the print on plywood panel, which is a direction I feel strongly about due to its employing digital aspects with analog mark making too.
The framed canvases on the left side of the back wall is an entry into a world where I can explore some humorous tendencies that I am finding very fulfilling.
One area, the unstretched canvases to the right are based on maps from throughout my life. Then the back wall is balanced with the print on plywood panel, which is a direction I feel strongly about due to its employing digital aspects with analog mark making too.
The framed canvases on the left side of the back wall is an entry into a world where I can explore some humorous tendencies that I am finding very fulfilling.
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