Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Peter Gasser
Peter Gasser is one of America's premier artists. He specializes in the art of photography. An art that is so hard to be excellent at,
Peter Gasser really has the art down and knows how to produce amazing images. As this quote from one of the Getty's many books published on photography, Gasser states that photography is an act of love, it can reinstate the world around the photographer and the viewer. I fell the same about photography as he does, in fact, this quote basically sums up what I think about photography.
He was born in Switzerland in 1947 and has always had a strong connection with the arts. He loves music an has since he was a child. Gasser feels that music can determine a persons photography more than they know. There is a strong connection between the photography a person takes and the music that a person listens too.
He has recently turned from landscape photography to shooting people, which is where he resides in his art today. He has had many famous icons that he loves to study, such as Ansel Adams, Brett Weston, and Paul Caponigo. Like them he is a superb crafts man when it comes to his photography. He produces his own prints and develops them himself in the old style in a darkroom.
His photography is quite amazing because he isolates a certain element of an area and focuses on them specifically to create unity in his pictures as well as a sense of individuality for the subjects that he is shooting. He has a way of making them look special and unique.
They are some of the most beautiful pictures I've ever seen. I have just recently found this artist and can not stop looking at his prints because they are just so very beautiful! I love them! I like how he plays with light and makes the subjects look so interesting and deep. He is just an amazing photographer in my opinion, and I would one day love to shoot images like he does. The complexity in his pints is also amazing because they just have a way of stunning the viewer whether its the first time you have seen his pictures, or you are a follower of this artist. I just am in love with these and they are truly a form or art for me. It seems as though you can really tell exactly what he was feeling and thinking when he takes each and every one of his photos and that it what I love about photography.
Final Project #2
So today we finished our projects for our final. We also started installing a little bit. But the majority of our time was spent painting the figures and putting them back together after they began falling apart during the weekend. It was somewhat disappointing to see them all fall apart, but we figured out how to get them back together, and it was better from then on. They look pretty epic, and I'll have pictures on thursday about them.
I think that I will continue to write on my blog, however I'm a little hesitant because I don't really like it. But I think I will post some of my pictures so some of my friends that I don't see a lot can keep up with my photography. I do think its useful for that.
I find blogging a really interesting subject because of the way that many people feel about it. It bothers me mostly because of the fact that whatever I put up here is accessible to everyone and it will never go away. Which is why I'm a bit hesitant to put my pictures up here because people could steal them. So that's a little unnerving. However, I do put watermarks on my pictures, so that will help a little bit.
I have an art history test this week. I'm not really excited about it. Its our last one however, so that'll be nice! It covers Romanesque and Gothic art mostly. I think that these two time periods are really interesting because its like they forgot about the classical artists and styles and just started doing whatever. It is very interesting to me how the arts were only used to teach people about religion and not really for hte sake of doing art. It makes me somewhat sad. I guess, however if we didn't have these times we wouldn't have the art we have today, so for that I am happy!
I think that I will continue to write on my blog, however I'm a little hesitant because I don't really like it. But I think I will post some of my pictures so some of my friends that I don't see a lot can keep up with my photography. I do think its useful for that.
I find blogging a really interesting subject because of the way that many people feel about it. It bothers me mostly because of the fact that whatever I put up here is accessible to everyone and it will never go away. Which is why I'm a bit hesitant to put my pictures up here because people could steal them. So that's a little unnerving. However, I do put watermarks on my pictures, so that will help a little bit.
I have an art history test this week. I'm not really excited about it. Its our last one however, so that'll be nice! It covers Romanesque and Gothic art mostly. I think that these two time periods are really interesting because its like they forgot about the classical artists and styles and just started doing whatever. It is very interesting to me how the arts were only used to teach people about religion and not really for hte sake of doing art. It makes me somewhat sad. I guess, however if we didn't have these times we wouldn't have the art we have today, so for that I am happy!
Monday, December 6, 2010
underwater photography
So lately I have become really interested in the art of underwater photography. I think that this is a really unique art form because of the way that people look underwater. The liquid has a unique ability to catch almost everything that makes up your body and move it in a way that makes it beautiful. You can shoot many things underwater, but my favorite pictures that come from under the water is of human bodies.
This is an extremely challenging area of photography because of the special equipment that is used as well as the fact that water has a way of distorting things that shooting around can be really hard. One of the major things that water distorts are the waves lengths of colors that the person, animal, plant, or other subject puts off. It can be especially tricky to get what you see in real life to translate onto the camera's memory.
I think that this is probably one of the the challenges that the photographer meets with a happy heart. I believe that you have to be a pretty dedicated person to work on your images that hard to ensure a beautiful shot. There are ways to prevent the loss of color from happening as bad however. You should always use a wide angled lens so that you can get extremely close to the object that you are shooting and you should use a flash to restore some of the color in the object of your focus.
Many times you can shoot underwater with the camera that you already own, you just have to buy some simple things, like a water proof case and flash, to keep your equipment safe. Many like to shoot underwater because it produces beautiful pictures and they are ones that can not be replaced.
I have never shot underwater, but I really would love to try it out. I think that it could be a really fun experience and it would help me further my portfolio and my skill set for the future job that I want of being a photographer.
This is an extremely challenging area of photography because of the special equipment that is used as well as the fact that water has a way of distorting things that shooting around can be really hard. One of the major things that water distorts are the waves lengths of colors that the person, animal, plant, or other subject puts off. It can be especially tricky to get what you see in real life to translate onto the camera's memory.
I think that this is probably one of the the challenges that the photographer meets with a happy heart. I believe that you have to be a pretty dedicated person to work on your images that hard to ensure a beautiful shot. There are ways to prevent the loss of color from happening as bad however. You should always use a wide angled lens so that you can get extremely close to the object that you are shooting and you should use a flash to restore some of the color in the object of your focus.
Many times you can shoot underwater with the camera that you already own, you just have to buy some simple things, like a water proof case and flash, to keep your equipment safe. Many like to shoot underwater because it produces beautiful pictures and they are ones that can not be replaced.
I have never shot underwater, but I really would love to try it out. I think that it could be a really fun experience and it would help me further my portfolio and my skill set for the future job that I want of being a photographer.
Some more of my pictures and what I think about them
So I took this picture this summer, actually when I was driving up to come to orientation for college. It was taken somewhere in Oregon, and I really like it. I think that its a little different than the stereotypical picture of person with camera in car mirror because of the surroundings that were happening when I was taking the picture. I think that my mom was like freaking out because I had just gotten my new camera, and I was literally holding it out of the car to get the shot, and my dog was like nudging my other arm, we had all been in the car for like ever!, and everyone was pretty tired of this trip lol. So what do I do? add some excitement to our trip and start taking pictures. :) I also think that this picture is down right sweet because of the fact that the mirror is perfectly crisp, but the outside is blurred, this is pretty hard to achieve, and I kept taking the picture until I got this effect. I also like the mountain in the back....... kinda looks like a pyramid (my art history nerdyness coming out, sorry). Any ways, I just really like this picture, and it kinda means a lot to me because if you notice it shows my class ring on my finger, so its kinda like looking back at the past, high school, while the current is passing by me, which is something that I try to avoid, because I want to live my life to the fullest.
So this picture I took at a wedding a few months a go. It was some of Ben and I's friends getting married, it was super cute! Anyways, this was after the wedding, and we were getting ready to leave, and someone handed me this rose. I thought that it was beautiful! So, since it was a wedding, and there was white everywhere, I layed it on a white surface, because monotone is very appealing to the eye in pictures like this.
This is actually one of my favorite pictures that i have taken in a long long time. I like how the rose is a bit worn out, and how you can really see that in the picture, it really makes me have an emotional reaction to this scene because you don't know if it was at a wedding or prom or something, without me telling you. It is not very specific to the event, which I think in some pictures, works. This is one of them. I really love how the depth is also portrayed in this picture because of the way the stem lays in the background. It is just a really beautiful composition.
Last one for today. I took this picture at a county fair in Twin Falls county, where I'm from. It was at the rodeo, and I was so excited to be going! It was the first rodeo that I'd been to in awhile, so it was pretty awesome! I love the sun-rays that are present in the picture and how it bounces off the lens, hence the dots. I think that the image content is really cool too, because I love horses. This may not be the best picture, but it is definitely not a bad one I think. I really just love the ruggedness of the dirt and the whole idea of the beginning processions at the beginnings of rodeos, so its a really stunning picture for me. I also like how it reflect something that this part of the country takes seriously, and that is the sport of rodeo, and also the beauty of the opening scenes of this epic sport.
So this picture I took at a wedding a few months a go. It was some of Ben and I's friends getting married, it was super cute! Anyways, this was after the wedding, and we were getting ready to leave, and someone handed me this rose. I thought that it was beautiful! So, since it was a wedding, and there was white everywhere, I layed it on a white surface, because monotone is very appealing to the eye in pictures like this.
This is actually one of my favorite pictures that i have taken in a long long time. I like how the rose is a bit worn out, and how you can really see that in the picture, it really makes me have an emotional reaction to this scene because you don't know if it was at a wedding or prom or something, without me telling you. It is not very specific to the event, which I think in some pictures, works. This is one of them. I really love how the depth is also portrayed in this picture because of the way the stem lays in the background. It is just a really beautiful composition.
Last one for today. I took this picture at a county fair in Twin Falls county, where I'm from. It was at the rodeo, and I was so excited to be going! It was the first rodeo that I'd been to in awhile, so it was pretty awesome! I love the sun-rays that are present in the picture and how it bounces off the lens, hence the dots. I think that the image content is really cool too, because I love horses. This may not be the best picture, but it is definitely not a bad one I think. I really just love the ruggedness of the dirt and the whole idea of the beginning processions at the beginnings of rodeos, so its a really stunning picture for me. I also like how it reflect something that this part of the country takes seriously, and that is the sport of rodeo, and also the beauty of the opening scenes of this epic sport.
Owyhee County Historical Society Museum
This weekend I had to the chance to drive the treacherous roads to Murphy, Idaho. Apart from it being a learning experience for me, since I am just learning how to drive, it was a trip that was packed with information about the Owyhee Indians. Much of what remains of the historical things that these Indians used are in this museum, preserved for all to see. I really wished that I had my camera, so I could show you what the museum looked like, but I forgot it. I should really start carrying it around with me, so because it seems lately you never know what I'm going to come across in this great land. Just in case you don't know where Owyhee county is, I've included a map. Its the biggest county in the state of Idaho.
Any who, I loved this museum. It was small and personal, which are the exact museums that I like. There were so many things to looks at when you first walked in, but it was not overwhelming, so I read it all! First there was the history of the Horny Toads that populate the land, then a day in the life of an Indian that would have lived there, then there was the history of what happened when the westerners came over and displaced the Indians, and even an first eye account of how the Indians fought back.
My favorite part of the museum was, well I actually had several, but I think that the one that resignated with me the most was the exhibit that included around 200 spurs and 500 or so bits for horses. I liked this one the best because I am an avid horse rider, and love the metal work that goes into these pieces of art, or at least that is how I view them. I thought that many of the pieces were wonderfully crafted and you could tell that they were made with expertise. The most amazing thing that I found out while I was there was the fact that all of these artifacts were collected by one man, and he kept record of everyone that he had, as well as where he got them from, and if the history was given about how old it was, who used it and such, he had it down. I truly believe that if we did not have people like this man that collected all of these things, and really searched for the history of each item in his collection, a lot of our history about this land would be gone. We have already lost so much history, it a shame, but without individuals like this, much more would be gone.
I thought that this was a really interesting museum and it held a lot of old art and artifacts that I think have become so everyday to us in our society that we quickly forget to realize the art in everything.
Any who, I loved this museum. It was small and personal, which are the exact museums that I like. There were so many things to looks at when you first walked in, but it was not overwhelming, so I read it all! First there was the history of the Horny Toads that populate the land, then a day in the life of an Indian that would have lived there, then there was the history of what happened when the westerners came over and displaced the Indians, and even an first eye account of how the Indians fought back.
My favorite part of the museum was, well I actually had several, but I think that the one that resignated with me the most was the exhibit that included around 200 spurs and 500 or so bits for horses. I liked this one the best because I am an avid horse rider, and love the metal work that goes into these pieces of art, or at least that is how I view them. I thought that many of the pieces were wonderfully crafted and you could tell that they were made with expertise. The most amazing thing that I found out while I was there was the fact that all of these artifacts were collected by one man, and he kept record of everyone that he had, as well as where he got them from, and if the history was given about how old it was, who used it and such, he had it down. I truly believe that if we did not have people like this man that collected all of these things, and really searched for the history of each item in his collection, a lot of our history about this land would be gone. We have already lost so much history, it a shame, but without individuals like this, much more would be gone.
I thought that this was a really interesting museum and it held a lot of old art and artifacts that I think have become so everyday to us in our society that we quickly forget to realize the art in everything.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Final Project!!
So my final project idea was rejected. I pitched to the class that we should make a collection of origami animals or shapes and then display them in a vitrine for the public to see. It was rejected, which it should have been, compared to the rest of the ideas, so I'm ok with it. :) So I chose to be on Cara's team, on which I am a part of making clay sea animals that have ran away from the set because their series, Nautical Dude! has been canceled. However, 50 or so years later, they have been found, and are on display for the public to see.
So these creatures consist of molded clay, seashells, and acrylic paint, not yet applied. I had a lot of fun creating these characters, they look really awesome! I took some pictures of the ones that I have created for you to see. They look really cartoonish, which is a huge accomplishment for me, since I have never been able to create characters like this. So I'm really excited to reveal them during the
museum exhibition that our class is putting on during finals week! So here they are... each of the creatures is complete with a shell that
they either live on, call their home, or is attached to them for protection. I think that they look really cool and I had the most fun making this project so far. I also think that they will be a great part of the exhibition, and I'm really excited about showing them off.
So these creatures consist of molded clay, seashells, and acrylic paint, not yet applied. I had a lot of fun creating these characters, they look really awesome! I took some pictures of the ones that I have created for you to see. They look really cartoonish, which is a huge accomplishment for me, since I have never been able to create characters like this. So I'm really excited to reveal them during the
museum exhibition that our class is putting on during finals week! So here they are... each of the creatures is complete with a shell that
they either live on, call their home, or is attached to them for protection. I think that they look really cool and I had the most fun making this project so far. I also think that they will be a great part of the exhibition, and I'm really excited about showing them off.
Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons was born on January 21st in York, Pennsylvania. As a child he went door to door selling wrapping paper for some pocket change. As a child his biggest art icon was Salvador Dali, as he said that he loved the way that he distorted the everyday images and made them fantasy. He attended the School of Art Institute of Chicago as well as the Maryland Institute College of Art. After college he went onto Wall Street and was a commodities trader while trying to make it as an artist. He finally got his break when he received recognition from TIME magazine in the 1980s.
He then started his studio in New York City, very near Andy Warhol's The Factory. He even ran it in a similar way. Koon's employs around 30 aspiring artists to make his art for him. None of his pieces are actually touched by him, however, he comes up with the ideas. He is ridiculed for not being an artist, however he says that everyone is an artist, everyone has ideas and then has others fulfill them for them, just no one admits it.
He specializes in recreating pre-made objects, or just bringing them together. He has gotten himself in a lot of lawsuits because of this. He does not claim the objects as his, however, just the mere idea of bringing them together. There are two categories for his art, that almost every piece can fit under, or so it seems to me. These categories are: Over 10 ft. or made of metal. An installation that meets both of these criteria is the exhibit named Statuary, which are a series of large, steel, blow up toys or balloon animals finished with a mirrored finish.
Koons has had a very tumulus love life. He and his college girlfriend had a child, then given up for adoption, but now has reconnected with him. He also married a porn start, and they had one child, then she ran to Rome with the child. Koons won custody of the child until it went to Roman Court, where he lost it, ending the marriage. He is now married to one of his aspiring artist, Justine Wheeler. They have been married, happily may I add, for almost 10 years.
I have a hard time accepting Koons' work as in fact art. I mean many artist take pride in creating the forms and the ideas themselves, where, rather, he has others do them for him. I have an extremely hard time with that. However, the forms that he makes are very beautiful, and just a pieces, I consider them art, but I do not like the background behind them.
He then started his studio in New York City, very near Andy Warhol's The Factory. He even ran it in a similar way. Koon's employs around 30 aspiring artists to make his art for him. None of his pieces are actually touched by him, however, he comes up with the ideas. He is ridiculed for not being an artist, however he says that everyone is an artist, everyone has ideas and then has others fulfill them for them, just no one admits it.
He specializes in recreating pre-made objects, or just bringing them together. He has gotten himself in a lot of lawsuits because of this. He does not claim the objects as his, however, just the mere idea of bringing them together. There are two categories for his art, that almost every piece can fit under, or so it seems to me. These categories are: Over 10 ft. or made of metal. An installation that meets both of these criteria is the exhibit named Statuary, which are a series of large, steel, blow up toys or balloon animals finished with a mirrored finish.
Koons has had a very tumulus love life. He and his college girlfriend had a child, then given up for adoption, but now has reconnected with him. He also married a porn start, and they had one child, then she ran to Rome with the child. Koons won custody of the child until it went to Roman Court, where he lost it, ending the marriage. He is now married to one of his aspiring artist, Justine Wheeler. They have been married, happily may I add, for almost 10 years.
I have a hard time accepting Koons' work as in fact art. I mean many artist take pride in creating the forms and the ideas themselves, where, rather, he has others do them for him. I have an extremely hard time with that. However, the forms that he makes are very beautiful, and just a pieces, I consider them art, but I do not like the background behind them.
Mick Rock
Mick Rock, known as "The Man Who Shot the Seventies", is a photographer that is responsible for creating many of the images of iconic rock bands from the seventies to present day. He is most known for shooting Queen, Joan Jett, Iggy Pop, The Sex Pistols, and Motley Crew. Along with these and many others, he is the main photographer for David Bowie, since meeting him in 1972.
He was hired as the main photographer of Rocky Horror's Picture Show in the late 1970s as well as touring with David Bowie, shooting him live and on location of many of his concerts.
In recent years he has published many books on the images that he has taken of iconic rock legends. he is also working on may new things, like an exhibit in Liverpool, Berlin, New York City, Tokyo, Los Angeles, as well as Amsterdam. These exhibits include some of the old images but mainly focus on the new images that he has taken in the past few years. These subjects include Snoop Dogg, Lady Gaga, the YeahYeahYeahs, The Killers, Kate Moss, and Michale Buble.
he lives in New York City with his wife Patti and daughter Nathalie. Nathalie is a model, also shot by her dad, during New York Fashion Week in Times Square.
I think that he is a very interesting artist, as well as an influential photographer in general. He has paved the way, and was one of the firsts to be worldly recognized,for photographers today to shoot risque shots as well as shoot what they really feel. I think that his work is pretty amazing and I think that along with shooting many of the icons today, he is a legend for shooting the crazy rock stars from the 70s and 80s.
I think that he had a hard time on some of his pictures, which you can trace back to some of the events that were happening during the time that he was shooting. Like when he shot Queen II, you can tell that there is something behind the scenes of this shoot. This is because this was shortly after Freddy Mercury announced that he was dying from AIDS, and it was shortly before their release of Bohemian Rhapsody, which was a very controversial song at first.
I really admire Rock for his intuitive shots as well as how creative he is with his angle. I think that this is one of the things that has set him apart throughout the years. The way he holds his camera and sees these icons as just normal people is really awesome because it just shows them as they are, when they aren't being rock starts, or making rock history. I think that is why people connect to his shots so easily, because they are real. They bring the legends down to our level, and who doesn't like to live like icon Sydney Barrett in his messy house or sitting on top of a car.
He was hired as the main photographer of Rocky Horror's Picture Show in the late 1970s as well as touring with David Bowie, shooting him live and on location of many of his concerts.
In recent years he has published many books on the images that he has taken of iconic rock legends. he is also working on may new things, like an exhibit in Liverpool, Berlin, New York City, Tokyo, Los Angeles, as well as Amsterdam. These exhibits include some of the old images but mainly focus on the new images that he has taken in the past few years. These subjects include Snoop Dogg, Lady Gaga, the YeahYeahYeahs, The Killers, Kate Moss, and Michale Buble.
he lives in New York City with his wife Patti and daughter Nathalie. Nathalie is a model, also shot by her dad, during New York Fashion Week in Times Square.
I think that he is a very interesting artist, as well as an influential photographer in general. He has paved the way, and was one of the firsts to be worldly recognized,for photographers today to shoot risque shots as well as shoot what they really feel. I think that his work is pretty amazing and I think that along with shooting many of the icons today, he is a legend for shooting the crazy rock stars from the 70s and 80s.
I think that he had a hard time on some of his pictures, which you can trace back to some of the events that were happening during the time that he was shooting. Like when he shot Queen II, you can tell that there is something behind the scenes of this shoot. This is because this was shortly after Freddy Mercury announced that he was dying from AIDS, and it was shortly before their release of Bohemian Rhapsody, which was a very controversial song at first.
I really admire Rock for his intuitive shots as well as how creative he is with his angle. I think that this is one of the things that has set him apart throughout the years. The way he holds his camera and sees these icons as just normal people is really awesome because it just shows them as they are, when they aren't being rock starts, or making rock history. I think that is why people connect to his shots so easily, because they are real. They bring the legends down to our level, and who doesn't like to live like icon Sydney Barrett in his messy house or sitting on top of a car.
Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol, as we know him today, was born Andre Warhla on August 6th, 1928 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He was the 4th child born to his parents, having two older brothers, and a brother that he never meet, seeing as how the family immigrated her from Slovakia in the early 1900s, and he died before they moved. His father moved here in 1914 to work in a coal mine, his mother shortly joined him after the death of her grandparents in 1927. However, his father died a short 4 years after from an accident in the coal mines. His family was devout Byzantine Catholic, which he was a believer and a avid one at that till the day he died, despite his homosexuality.
As a child he was diagnosed with Chorea, a symptom of having scarlet fever as a child. This disease left him bed-ridden as a child, which made him an easy target for ridicule from other children in the community where they lived. This made him cling to his mother and draw to help the time and the illness pass. He says that he does not resent that time because it was time he needed
to develop his skills and preferences towards the arts. The main infliction that this disease left him with was the inability to control his movements, so he worked on refining the random and rapid movements so that he could continue his art pieces.
He had his first solo gallery opening on July 9th, 1962 in Los Angeles. This exhibition marked the start of pop art in the west. The exhibit included his 100 Campbell's soup cans, 100 Coke bottles, 100 dollar bills, and his tribute to Marilyn Monroe, seeing as how she died a few weeks before the opening, Marilyn Diptych. He was ridiculed for making a business out or art and making iconic American images available to the world.
After this opening he had enough money to open his first studio, which he offered to many up-in-coming artists as a haven for artistic development, sexual experimentation, and just as a hangout. It was called The Factory. The studio was in downtown New York and was the place for many of his pieces of artwork to become the icons they are today.
Unfortunately, one of these artists that he opened his doors to, Valerie Solanas, tried to murder him on July 3rd, 1968, only two days before the assignation of JFK. This artist was part of the factory scene and appeared in many of Warhol's videos and production because of her beauty. While in The Factory, she started a movement named S.C.U.M. (Society for Cutting Down Men). I think that you can figure out what their main opposition was. Andy Warhol was seriously injured by the shot fired by Solanas, damaging his heart, lungs, and spleen. It is said that the physicians had to hold his heart and massage it, so that it would regain movement. Solanas was arrested and said that that main reason why she shot him was because he had too much control over her life because he was in love with her, which was by no means true, Warhol says.
In the 1980s his work really took off when he started painting pop icons, such as Michael Jackson. This paining lead to him producing Thriller, which was a major success in Jackson's career.
He dies on February 22, 1987 due to a cardiac arithmea during his sleep while recovering from a gallbladder surgery. He is buried in the St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cemetery in Pennsylvania.
As a child he was diagnosed with Chorea, a symptom of having scarlet fever as a child. This disease left him bed-ridden as a child, which made him an easy target for ridicule from other children in the community where they lived. This made him cling to his mother and draw to help the time and the illness pass. He says that he does not resent that time because it was time he needed
to develop his skills and preferences towards the arts. The main infliction that this disease left him with was the inability to control his movements, so he worked on refining the random and rapid movements so that he could continue his art pieces.
He had his first solo gallery opening on July 9th, 1962 in Los Angeles. This exhibition marked the start of pop art in the west. The exhibit included his 100 Campbell's soup cans, 100 Coke bottles, 100 dollar bills, and his tribute to Marilyn Monroe, seeing as how she died a few weeks before the opening, Marilyn Diptych. He was ridiculed for making a business out or art and making iconic American images available to the world.
After this opening he had enough money to open his first studio, which he offered to many up-in-coming artists as a haven for artistic development, sexual experimentation, and just as a hangout. It was called The Factory. The studio was in downtown New York and was the place for many of his pieces of artwork to become the icons they are today.
Unfortunately, one of these artists that he opened his doors to, Valerie Solanas, tried to murder him on July 3rd, 1968, only two days before the assignation of JFK. This artist was part of the factory scene and appeared in many of Warhol's videos and production because of her beauty. While in The Factory, she started a movement named S.C.U.M. (Society for Cutting Down Men). I think that you can figure out what their main opposition was. Andy Warhol was seriously injured by the shot fired by Solanas, damaging his heart, lungs, and spleen. It is said that the physicians had to hold his heart and massage it, so that it would regain movement. Solanas was arrested and said that that main reason why she shot him was because he had too much control over her life because he was in love with her, which was by no means true, Warhol says.
In the 1980s his work really took off when he started painting pop icons, such as Michael Jackson. This paining lead to him producing Thriller, which was a major success in Jackson's career.
He dies on February 22, 1987 due to a cardiac arithmea during his sleep while recovering from a gallbladder surgery. He is buried in the St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cemetery in Pennsylvania.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Some of my pictures
This is one of the photographs that I took while visiting Rome in the Spring of 2008. I took it in the District Olympic Rome, a neighborhood near the Coliseum. I think that this is a really stunning picture because it has nice line and really nice detail. It is in perfect focus and even has a sense of depth when you look at the picture. I think that this was one of my favorite pictures that I took in Rome because it completely captures that essence of the neighborhood. We spent a lot of time there and we were able to get to know quite a few of the people that lived in the quarter.
It was quite and not very lively since it was that time of the afternoon that many people in Europe take a nap. I think that this shows that because there is no one in the picture, as well as the color of the print really makes me think of what it would look like if you were sleeping there.
I think that the most interesting part of this experience was the meeting all of the people that took residence in the district. I think that many of them loved their lives, and some even wouldn't trade it for anything else in the world, unlike many of the people today. There was one older woman that told me how her son had lost his job, due to the very beginning of the recession there, and how he came back home to live with his mother. She said that it is sad that he has no work and that they are struggling for money, but she wouldn't have it any other way. She loves having him home.
I think that the biggest difference between their happiness and ours is the fact that they seem to be happy with anything that life deals them, even if its not what they had planned. I think that this is something that our country has lost in the midst of trying to get to the top, no matter what it cost us or anyone else. I wish that we could just go back a few centuries and remember what it was like to frankly have a loaf of bread in the house, not to mention the butter that we hold low on our chart of importance. I think that maybe I would like to do a piece on this one day because it is something that is very interesting to me. I try to be thankful for everything that I achieve or am given, even if its not what I want, and I think it would be really interesting to research that through other people and see how they react to this situation.
It was quite and not very lively since it was that time of the afternoon that many people in Europe take a nap. I think that this shows that because there is no one in the picture, as well as the color of the print really makes me think of what it would look like if you were sleeping there.
I think that the most interesting part of this experience was the meeting all of the people that took residence in the district. I think that many of them loved their lives, and some even wouldn't trade it for anything else in the world, unlike many of the people today. There was one older woman that told me how her son had lost his job, due to the very beginning of the recession there, and how he came back home to live with his mother. She said that it is sad that he has no work and that they are struggling for money, but she wouldn't have it any other way. She loves having him home.
I think that the biggest difference between their happiness and ours is the fact that they seem to be happy with anything that life deals them, even if its not what they had planned. I think that this is something that our country has lost in the midst of trying to get to the top, no matter what it cost us or anyone else. I wish that we could just go back a few centuries and remember what it was like to frankly have a loaf of bread in the house, not to mention the butter that we hold low on our chart of importance. I think that maybe I would like to do a piece on this one day because it is something that is very interesting to me. I try to be thankful for everything that I achieve or am given, even if its not what I want, and I think it would be really interesting to research that through other people and see how they react to this situation.
Snow
So today we woke up and there was tons of snow outside!! so much so that school was canceled. I like this fact. :) Anyways, the snow kind of inspired me to do a little photography journey one of these days when it isn't snowing outside, but there is still a lot of snow out there. I wanted to go outside and find a random car that has been there for awhile and has frost on the windshield. I wanted to take a picture similar to this one. I think that this would be really cool because every snowflake is different and they are so hard to preserve, unless you find an opportunity like this. I think that these pictures are really pretty and they really inspire me to go out and take lots of pictures one of these days soon and give them to my mom, because I know that she'd love them .
I think that these single flakes of snow, that have been frozen on the window are and excellent example of Christmas and the spirit that comes along with the holiday season. I really think that a lot of people forget how joyous and happy this time of year is and they simply forget to just be grateful for the snow that is around them.
I love them snow!And since I've been living in California for awhile I haven't really bee able to see much of it. So I enjoy every chance that I can get to go out and look and play in the snow. I think that it would also be cool to do a piece on snow angels and how everyone's snow angel is different, just as we are all different. I think that this would be really interesting, if I could get it to develop right.
I think that Christmas is the most wonderful time of the year! I know that that is really stereotypical of me and really lame, but I truly do believe that there is no other time during the year that everyone seems so joyous and happy. It is great to see families getting together to celebrate whatever religion they profess, or simply to just spend time together as a family. I think that that is something that our world takes for granted now a days, and it is really sad.
I think that these single flakes of snow, that have been frozen on the window are and excellent example of Christmas and the spirit that comes along with the holiday season. I really think that a lot of people forget how joyous and happy this time of year is and they simply forget to just be grateful for the snow that is around them.
I love them snow!And since I've been living in California for awhile I haven't really bee able to see much of it. So I enjoy every chance that I can get to go out and look and play in the snow. I think that it would also be cool to do a piece on snow angels and how everyone's snow angel is different, just as we are all different. I think that this would be really interesting, if I could get it to develop right.
I think that Christmas is the most wonderful time of the year! I know that that is really stereotypical of me and really lame, but I truly do believe that there is no other time during the year that everyone seems so joyous and happy. It is great to see families getting together to celebrate whatever religion they profess, or simply to just spend time together as a family. I think that that is something that our world takes for granted now a days, and it is really sad.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Project 4 #3
So I think that I have finally come up wit ha collection to present to the class today. I want to make around 50 paper figures that can be displayed in a vitrine. I want to make these so that I can comment on what a precious resource paper is, and how we do not use it as such.
I want all of the figures to be made of recycled paper or handmade paper to go with this connotation of having the sustainability of the paper. The figures can include animals, boxes, or anything else made of paper. I think that it will be a really cool project that will call people's attention to this issue of sustainibilyity.
Before break I was able to see The Streetcar Named Desire, a play by Tennessee Williams. It was about a woman, Blanche Dubios, who was fired from her job for having sexual relations with a student, and her story of how she is slowly diagnosed by her sisters husband as being mentally insane, and how she is sent off to a mental institute. I thought that the story was really good, and was one of my favorite plays that I've seen all semester. I think that this could translate into my art in a way because of the fact that I have had family member who have been diagnosed as insane. So I will see where that takes me, and maybe I will make something that I never would have thought of without seeing this play.
Class should be fun today. I'm really excited to hear everyone's ideas and be a part in deciding what we will make in our final project. I think that this project will be really interesting and should be a lot of fun to work on with my other class mates.
I want all of the figures to be made of recycled paper or handmade paper to go with this connotation of having the sustainability of the paper. The figures can include animals, boxes, or anything else made of paper. I think that it will be a really cool project that will call people's attention to this issue of sustainibilyity.
Before break I was able to see The Streetcar Named Desire, a play by Tennessee Williams. It was about a woman, Blanche Dubios, who was fired from her job for having sexual relations with a student, and her story of how she is slowly diagnosed by her sisters husband as being mentally insane, and how she is sent off to a mental institute. I thought that the story was really good, and was one of my favorite plays that I've seen all semester. I think that this could translate into my art in a way because of the fact that I have had family member who have been diagnosed as insane. So I will see where that takes me, and maybe I will make something that I never would have thought of without seeing this play.
Class should be fun today. I'm really excited to hear everyone's ideas and be a part in deciding what we will make in our final project. I think that this project will be really interesting and should be a lot of fun to work on with my other class mates.
Museum resaerch project
So for my display/exhibit, I decided to go to Macy's and draw that huge dress made of bags on the manikin. The display was over 9 feet tall and was made of 200+ Macy's paper bags.
This is an actual photo of the display and it definitely commands your attention as soon as you walk in the door. She is HUGE! The display was about the gift of giving and how every purchase made from Macy's they would give money to some sort of charity, so all of the bags are gift bags.
I think that the information being portrayed in this display is extremely clear and that it is arranged well. You are captivated by how large and beautiful the dress is, and the plaque that accompanies it is small enough to read at a short glance, yet it conveys the message that the company wants to portray the the public.
I think it is nice that the exhibit can be looked at up close and you can even touch it if you dare. I think that this was not something that was meant to just be looked at, but experienced as well. There were even some store representatives there to help the customers that had questions about the exhibit. I think that Macy's does one of the best jobs of making displays that are beautiful and high fashion, such as this dress, however they relate to the people who shop there quite well.
I also thought that the grouping made a lot of sense as it was arrange, in fact, it was one of the better displays that I have seen this holiday season. There was a definite flow around the enormous figure, and no one stopped to question what was going on. There was a sense of importance that the figure conveyed, which I thought was one of the best parts of the display.
The beneficiary was the Make A Wish foundation that Macy's works so closely with. We were privileged to know this information, as I don't think that the installation would have made as much as an impact on the viewer if that information was not there.
This is an actual photo of the display and it definitely commands your attention as soon as you walk in the door. She is HUGE! The display was about the gift of giving and how every purchase made from Macy's they would give money to some sort of charity, so all of the bags are gift bags.
I think that the information being portrayed in this display is extremely clear and that it is arranged well. You are captivated by how large and beautiful the dress is, and the plaque that accompanies it is small enough to read at a short glance, yet it conveys the message that the company wants to portray the the public.
My rendition of the dress. |
I also thought that the grouping made a lot of sense as it was arrange, in fact, it was one of the better displays that I have seen this holiday season. There was a definite flow around the enormous figure, and no one stopped to question what was going on. There was a sense of importance that the figure conveyed, which I thought was one of the best parts of the display.
The beneficiary was the Make A Wish foundation that Macy's works so closely with. We were privileged to know this information, as I don't think that the installation would have made as much as an impact on the viewer if that information was not there.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Francoise Duresse
Francoise Duresse is a Jamaican- Haitian artist that deals mainly with printmaking and making collages. Her work is very interesting because it has a lot to do with the racial tensions that she herself has had to deal with during her own life. these include accepting ridicule from her grandmother up to this very day for being too dark and not looking white enough for her liking, even though she herself is black. Also it deals with some of the racial profiling that she has see throughout the world, like the black lunch counters of the 50s and the black seats on the buses in that time also.
It was very interesting to listen to her talk about the work that she has developed because she likes to put herself in the pieces as a caricature, Queen Nappy. She sees this character as a strong, independent woman that lives in a world that does not have racial tensions or anything like that. I think that this is a really big step in the art world today because, even though racial profiling is not as prevalent in our society, it is still there, and still a problem.
I think that her pieces are really nice due to the fact that they also capture her heritage in them as well. I appreciate that she used her grandmothers drawings in many of her new works, and it trying to interpret what the drawings are, even after her grandmother is dead. I think that that is a really sweet gesture and in a whole, continues the narration of her grandmother even in the afterlife.
Many of her works give off the appearance of creepy I think because many of them have a lot of things that repeat over and over again, and I just don't like looking at those sorts of things. It makes me uncomfortable. Which I guess is good considering her intention for the pieces. I think that they truly make others think about what is good and what is bad in this world because of the different colors, all similar to a paper bag. This is because she found an old tradition of measuring people by the color of their skin, which is not new to us, but it a new way that I have never heard of. This was by comparing them to a paper bag. If they were lighter, they could go where they wanted to go. If they were darker, they were considered to black to be in the social eye, and if they matched the bag, they were treated the same as the white people. It think that this is a horrible, yet true thing that has happened in our world,and it is unfortunate that we judge people by the amount of melanin in their
skin.
I think that it is very brave of her to do this experiment because it is more of a social experiment then it is a artistic one. It really makes the viewer uncomfortable when they look at it, especially after knowing the behind story of all of the pieces. I think that in a whole this is a really beautiful piece because it carries its own connotations of right and wrong, and it tells the story of history from a different view than what we are used to. The images are disturbing enough to make a person want to change, as well as make them think about other stories other than their own. I think that she is a very groundbreaking artist because she has now opened the door, even wider, to art that comments on how or society works, and why many things are wrong, but they are the things the people think we need to make the world go around.
It was very interesting to listen to her talk about the work that she has developed because she likes to put herself in the pieces as a caricature, Queen Nappy. She sees this character as a strong, independent woman that lives in a world that does not have racial tensions or anything like that. I think that this is a really big step in the art world today because, even though racial profiling is not as prevalent in our society, it is still there, and still a problem.
I think that her pieces are really nice due to the fact that they also capture her heritage in them as well. I appreciate that she used her grandmothers drawings in many of her new works, and it trying to interpret what the drawings are, even after her grandmother is dead. I think that that is a really sweet gesture and in a whole, continues the narration of her grandmother even in the afterlife.
Many of her works give off the appearance of creepy I think because many of them have a lot of things that repeat over and over again, and I just don't like looking at those sorts of things. It makes me uncomfortable. Which I guess is good considering her intention for the pieces. I think that they truly make others think about what is good and what is bad in this world because of the different colors, all similar to a paper bag. This is because she found an old tradition of measuring people by the color of their skin, which is not new to us, but it a new way that I have never heard of. This was by comparing them to a paper bag. If they were lighter, they could go where they wanted to go. If they were darker, they were considered to black to be in the social eye, and if they matched the bag, they were treated the same as the white people. It think that this is a horrible, yet true thing that has happened in our world,and it is unfortunate that we judge people by the amount of melanin in their
skin.
I think that it is very brave of her to do this experiment because it is more of a social experiment then it is a artistic one. It really makes the viewer uncomfortable when they look at it, especially after knowing the behind story of all of the pieces. I think that in a whole this is a really beautiful piece because it carries its own connotations of right and wrong, and it tells the story of history from a different view than what we are used to. The images are disturbing enough to make a person want to change, as well as make them think about other stories other than their own. I think that she is a very groundbreaking artist because she has now opened the door, even wider, to art that comments on how or society works, and why many things are wrong, but they are the things the people think we need to make the world go around.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Andy Goldsworthy
"I think it's incredibly brave to be working with flowers and leaves and petals. But I have to: I can't edit the materials I work with. My remit is to work with nature as a whole."-Andy Goldsworthy
Andy Goldsworthy was born on July 2, 1956 in Cheshire, England. He was home schooled until the age of 13 when he went to work on a farm as a laborer. He says that this job was one of his favorites early in life because he liked the repetitive work of the tasks that he was expected to preform. Her now equates that with his process when he makes sculpture. He is a formally trained artist; he attended Bradford Art College in England from 1974-1975 and then transferred to Lancaster Art College in 1975, where he finished out his degree in sculpture in 1978. He married Judith Gregson in 1982, they had four children before they split up. Now he lives with his partner, Tina Fisle, and Art Historian, in their Yorkshire apartment that they have owned since 1990.
After college he started developing his portfolio quite heavily by creating ephemeral works that hinged on the collaboration with nature. He had an endless supply of materials because of this, his past works have included materials such as: snow, ice, leaves, rock, clay, bark, stones, feathers, pettels, and twigs. He says that because of the ephemeral nature of his works he must record them with color photography since the real artwork is the natural decaying process that happens within his work as it gets older.
Goldsworthy always works within the space that he finds his materials. He says that he does not want to disrupt that natural environment or ecosystem, so he never tries to go more than a mile outside of where he found his material that he wants to work with. Also, he has made himself promise that he will not change a location of one of his projects because of the weather or other threatening things. He does this because he does not want to make a mark on the environment, that is not what his work is about. His work is about finding the connection with the environment and helping others understand the nature around them a little bit better. One thing that Goldsworthy is especially good at is capturing the life and blood of nature, the movement, the change, and the growth. He really like cataloging how things change and why they do so. This has led to one of the newest types of art, said to be created by Goldsworthy himself, Rock Balancing. He himself does not take entire credit for the development of this genre, but instead credits nature, since that is where he ultimately gets his inspiration.
I like his work, personally because it really captivates the nature of nature itself. I like how he works purely with biodegradable materials and leaves them in their environment, to be destroyed by nature, he very thing that created it. I think that this is one of the most beautiful and, unfortunately, lost art of being an artist. The most inspiring and I guess surprising thing that I learned about him was that he catalogs all of his works as the decompose. I think that this is really beautiful because the real artwork in nature is not only how things grow, but how the Earth composts them and reuses them to make something even better and more grand.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Anne Geddes
Anne Geddes was born in Queensland, Australia on September 13, 1956. She grew up on a huge cattle farm in Northern Queensland and is the 3rd of four daughters. During her childhood she was a true tomboy; she and her sisters enjoyed swimming the the overflow of the stream near their house during the spring, riding horses, and herding cattle on long drives for the family ranch. She was not necessarily interested in photography as a child, until one day it became clear to her while talking to her mother one day in their family garden. She says that her mother thought that she was just playing, however she knew that she wanted to photography nature as well as people. From that day forward she studied National Geographic and Life pictures, she says that she was fascinated by the way that the photographers capture the moments in time that can never be repeated.
At the young age of 17 she took a job for a tourist hotel chain in New Zealand. She decided that since this was the first time that she had ever been out of the country, she would document everything with her camera. It is her that she learned to appreciate different textures and the different natural light
that is present in nature. Along with all of the extraordinary things that she got to experience, this immense traveling brought her to Hong Kong, where she met her husband, Kel Geddes. They were married in Hong Kong in 1983.
She and Kel stayed in Hong Kong long enough for Anne to start her own portraiture business. She started out photographing her friends and their children on location at their home, gardens, or local parks. She took one day a week to just go out and take pictures purely for her own enjoyment. She learned to love nature even more than she already did, as well as learning how light bounced off of different surfaces.
In 1984 Kel and Anne returned to Sydney so that Kel could continue his career in public broadcasting. It was a very exciting time in their life seeing as how Anne delivered their first daughter there. Anne, then obsessed with her new little girl, decided to start photographing her little girl for fun. She developed many good shots as well as an expert eye for detail. One of these pictures was made into the families first Christmas card; leading Anne to want to develop more cards, so she started her own small card business.
In 1986 she and Kel moved again, this time to Melborne. She was very fortunate due to the fact that the house that they moved into had an old garage in the back that she reclaimed as her photography studio. the family stayed there for less then a year before moving to Auckland, New Zealand. There she started seriously focusing on child photography. She stated out using her own children, by then she had two young daughters, but then added others children and her business boomed from then on. She published her first calender in 1988.
In 1992 Kel quit the broadcasting business to become Anne's business partner. He helped her build her business into a huge empire. They started this by launching a very successful line of cards, then moving to calenders, then books.
She is very influenced by nature, in particular flower buds and pupa. She loves to experiment with her art form still, and will continue, she says, till the day she dies. She says that the pictures are not taken to make money, she photographs because it is soothing to her.
Her photography really influenced me because I want to become a portrait photographer, however I love nature. She has made a balance between the two that is very beautiful to me. She is a true inspiration to the photography world, and will continue to make new way for herself and other photographers.
At the young age of 17 she took a job for a tourist hotel chain in New Zealand. She decided that since this was the first time that she had ever been out of the country, she would document everything with her camera. It is her that she learned to appreciate different textures and the different natural light
that is present in nature. Along with all of the extraordinary things that she got to experience, this immense traveling brought her to Hong Kong, where she met her husband, Kel Geddes. They were married in Hong Kong in 1983.
She and Kel stayed in Hong Kong long enough for Anne to start her own portraiture business. She started out photographing her friends and their children on location at their home, gardens, or local parks. She took one day a week to just go out and take pictures purely for her own enjoyment. She learned to love nature even more than she already did, as well as learning how light bounced off of different surfaces.
In 1984 Kel and Anne returned to Sydney so that Kel could continue his career in public broadcasting. It was a very exciting time in their life seeing as how Anne delivered their first daughter there. Anne, then obsessed with her new little girl, decided to start photographing her little girl for fun. She developed many good shots as well as an expert eye for detail. One of these pictures was made into the families first Christmas card; leading Anne to want to develop more cards, so she started her own small card business.
In 1986 she and Kel moved again, this time to Melborne. She was very fortunate due to the fact that the house that they moved into had an old garage in the back that she reclaimed as her photography studio. the family stayed there for less then a year before moving to Auckland, New Zealand. There she started seriously focusing on child photography. She stated out using her own children, by then she had two young daughters, but then added others children and her business boomed from then on. She published her first calender in 1988.
In 1992 Kel quit the broadcasting business to become Anne's business partner. He helped her build her business into a huge empire. They started this by launching a very successful line of cards, then moving to calenders, then books.
She is very influenced by nature, in particular flower buds and pupa. She loves to experiment with her art form still, and will continue, she says, till the day she dies. She says that the pictures are not taken to make money, she photographs because it is soothing to her.
Her photography really influenced me because I want to become a portrait photographer, however I love nature. She has made a balance between the two that is very beautiful to me. She is a true inspiration to the photography world, and will continue to make new way for herself and other photographers.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Project 4 #2
So I think that I may have come up with an idea for my project. I think that I will go with a Kara Walker approach and make silhouettes in my pictures and make them in a way that pertain to my life. I think that this could be really interesting because I really like photography and making silhouettes with this art form. I think that some possible ideas for these silhouettes would be horses, basketball and volleyball players, as well as other sorts of animals that I love. I think that this could be really cool when we work in a group as well because then it could be like an exploration of what is important to each of the people in our group.
I think that the installment I would like to make would have 3-5 people for an ideal size and have 3 photo's each. Each one of these pictures would examine different aspects of the persons life and would be complete with an explanation of what your life would be like with out that thing and how it is different with that thing. I think that this could be really interesting and could be in fact really influential if done on a bigger scale.
I am becoming more comfortable with this project because of the fact that I have thought about it long and hard and have done my research, so it is becoming easier as I go on with the project. I think that this will be a really fun project for the class, and it will be interesting to see what everyone does.
Ideally my project would have to do with a persons history, but it is not necessary. I think that many of the people in our class will like this project because many of them have experience with a camera. I think that it would be really fun to work with others and develop their skills if they aren't familiar with a camera or the process it take to make silhouettes in pictures.
I really hope that my project gets picked because I think that it will be displayed well in the space that is provided, and I think that it would interest a lot of people, and could catch a lot of people's eye.
I think that the installment I would like to make would have 3-5 people for an ideal size and have 3 photo's each. Each one of these pictures would examine different aspects of the persons life and would be complete with an explanation of what your life would be like with out that thing and how it is different with that thing. I think that this could be really interesting and could be in fact really influential if done on a bigger scale.
I am becoming more comfortable with this project because of the fact that I have thought about it long and hard and have done my research, so it is becoming easier as I go on with the project. I think that this will be a really fun project for the class, and it will be interesting to see what everyone does.
Ideally my project would have to do with a persons history, but it is not necessary. I think that many of the people in our class will like this project because many of them have experience with a camera. I think that it would be really fun to work with others and develop their skills if they aren't familiar with a camera or the process it take to make silhouettes in pictures.
I really hope that my project gets picked because I think that it will be displayed well in the space that is provided, and I think that it would interest a lot of people, and could catch a lot of people's eye.
Anna Skibska
Anna Skibska was born in Poland and her family migrated to the United States when she was in the 3rd grade. Her family has a strong hold in the art world in Poland. Her grandfather is an art professor at one of the most renowned at schools in Poland. Also he family has had a history of storytelling, in which she says influences her artwork in a great deal.
Her sculptures are huge, over 10 ft. high, globular blown glass balls. They resemble a skeleton of sorts, such as the underside of a leaf or a spiderweb. They are extremely strong, since they are built in this way that is only found in nature. Each one of these huge globes can withstand up to 1,000 lbs. of pressure applied on them.
The objects, as mentioned before, are used in her family tradition of story telling. Each one of these globes are a metaphor, each piece of these balls have a specific story to them. Each of the pieces are very sentimental to her, and each hold a difference place in her heart. Along with this, they hold the delicate balance between nature, including the precious and the bold. They also encompasses the essence and problematic nature that the light that is shown on the pieces has. These pieces ten to capture the light in a way that gives the impression of a non-existent solidity.
Her pieces are made with a tiny blow torch and tweezers. they are made of colored or clear glass. Once heated, they are pulled into tiny strands, about an inch or two long, and then welded together into larger ball.
I really like these pieces, I think that they are really cool! They are so intricate and they look so very fragile! I really like the lines that the pieces employ and how they looks so light, yet they weight around 300 lbs. I also like how she plays around with different shapes and sizes to keep things interesting. She is really a visionary for the art of glass blowing as well as sculpting in general. She is really amazing due to the fact that she has come up with many techniques that now almost every glass blower uses when they want to make tiny, intricate strand of glass. She has really re-invented the glass blowing world, and they will never forget what she has done for artists now, and to come.
She says that many of her pieces relate to many of the domestic peoples of Poland and the immigrants that have come to America because they tell a story of a journey, and a path. She really loves her pieces to be heart-felt by her viewers, but in addition, she likes them to be questioned and analyzed so that their meaning can really show through.
Her sculptures are huge, over 10 ft. high, globular blown glass balls. They resemble a skeleton of sorts, such as the underside of a leaf or a spiderweb. They are extremely strong, since they are built in this way that is only found in nature. Each one of these huge globes can withstand up to 1,000 lbs. of pressure applied on them.
The objects, as mentioned before, are used in her family tradition of story telling. Each one of these globes are a metaphor, each piece of these balls have a specific story to them. Each of the pieces are very sentimental to her, and each hold a difference place in her heart. Along with this, they hold the delicate balance between nature, including the precious and the bold. They also encompasses the essence and problematic nature that the light that is shown on the pieces has. These pieces ten to capture the light in a way that gives the impression of a non-existent solidity.
Her pieces are made with a tiny blow torch and tweezers. they are made of colored or clear glass. Once heated, they are pulled into tiny strands, about an inch or two long, and then welded together into larger ball.
I really like these pieces, I think that they are really cool! They are so intricate and they look so very fragile! I really like the lines that the pieces employ and how they looks so light, yet they weight around 300 lbs. I also like how she plays around with different shapes and sizes to keep things interesting. She is really a visionary for the art of glass blowing as well as sculpting in general. She is really amazing due to the fact that she has come up with many techniques that now almost every glass blower uses when they want to make tiny, intricate strand of glass. She has really re-invented the glass blowing world, and they will never forget what she has done for artists now, and to come.
She says that many of her pieces relate to many of the domestic peoples of Poland and the immigrants that have come to America because they tell a story of a journey, and a path. She really loves her pieces to be heart-felt by her viewers, but in addition, she likes them to be questioned and analyzed so that their meaning can really show through.
Kara Walker
Kara Walker, born on November 26,1969 in Stockton, California, is a very talented and controversial artist. She has been encouraged to make art since she was young, seeing as her father is an artist and her mother was an administrator, but was always inspired by her family and eventually learned to develop her own identity as an artist. She completed her BFA degree in printmaking and painting at the Atlanta College of Art in 1991 and her MFA in 1994 from the Rhode Island School of Art.
Her art today has progressed from these two simple things into a style that is entirely her own. She now mainly works with butcher paper and chalk, in specifically black paper. Her art mainly explores the racial and gender tensions in America today, specifically in the Antebellum South. Her work also tries to complete the folklore that is so prevalent in the South today by solidifying some of the major details that flow though out many of the stories.
Her work has also had an amazing effect on the African American women who see her work. These works tend to raise identity issues for the women who view it because Walker tends to make the
women figure in the pieces rather soft and malleable, so she can be pushed around and can be used rather easily. They completely tear down what American women have worked so hard to gain and preserve. Many of the images have been taken from the textbooks that many American children use today, however they have been highly cartoonized. They are very childlike and fantastical, however the images carry a strikingly nightmarish identity.
Her art has been heavily influenced by Andy Warhol's Pop Art of the 1960s. The silhouettes are really striking due to the fact of how realistic they are as well as the images that they portray. Her installations take up an entire room with black butcher paper that have been cut to match her personal drawing of the past events that have happened. These events include the lynching of a black man, the raping of a black slave, and the stabbing of a black woman. The images are grotesque and startling when first seen, but they are very reminiscent of the life that many people before our time have lived.
I think that her work is really quite stunning because they are just such beautiful drawing, and they bring such a wonderful presence to the piece, yet they reveal a deeper, darker nature that America has been put through. They are really quite sweet figures, however they have a dark and mysterious past. I think that it is really cool how history influences her art because a lot of history also influences my art. I love how she studies and memorizes history and the religion of people to make some really stunning pieces. As an artist, she really influences me, however as a person she really makes an influence on our society, and one that people may not even know exist.
Her art today has progressed from these two simple things into a style that is entirely her own. She now mainly works with butcher paper and chalk, in specifically black paper. Her art mainly explores the racial and gender tensions in America today, specifically in the Antebellum South. Her work also tries to complete the folklore that is so prevalent in the South today by solidifying some of the major details that flow though out many of the stories.
Her work has also had an amazing effect on the African American women who see her work. These works tend to raise identity issues for the women who view it because Walker tends to make the
women figure in the pieces rather soft and malleable, so she can be pushed around and can be used rather easily. They completely tear down what American women have worked so hard to gain and preserve. Many of the images have been taken from the textbooks that many American children use today, however they have been highly cartoonized. They are very childlike and fantastical, however the images carry a strikingly nightmarish identity.
Her art has been heavily influenced by Andy Warhol's Pop Art of the 1960s. The silhouettes are really striking due to the fact of how realistic they are as well as the images that they portray. Her installations take up an entire room with black butcher paper that have been cut to match her personal drawing of the past events that have happened. These events include the lynching of a black man, the raping of a black slave, and the stabbing of a black woman. The images are grotesque and startling when first seen, but they are very reminiscent of the life that many people before our time have lived.
I think that her work is really quite stunning because they are just such beautiful drawing, and they bring such a wonderful presence to the piece, yet they reveal a deeper, darker nature that America has been put through. They are really quite sweet figures, however they have a dark and mysterious past. I think that it is really cool how history influences her art because a lot of history also influences my art. I love how she studies and memorizes history and the religion of people to make some really stunning pieces. As an artist, she really influences me, however as a person she really makes an influence on our society, and one that people may not even know exist.
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