Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Production 2
I thought I'd post some of the images I had been working with in the early stages of my current project. This is the Bubble Chair by Eero Aarnio. Seeing it function hanging from the ceiling reminded me of an experience we had on our farm with one our our holsteins.
An example of a commercial sling for cattle, used to move them or to pick up injured animals, called "downers". My dad constructed one of these using large seed bags and nylon straps in our barn.
I plan to reconstruct this, as well as the bubble chair using this material.
Until more strict regulations and laws were put in place, downer cattle still went to sale. I think there's also a PETA video that came out a few years ago that showed some workers pushing a downed cow with a skid-loader. It's heartbreaking.
By Design response
After another assigned reading, I learn yet again that my newly "enlightened" self has overlooked something in the movies I thought I could fully analyze.
Titles and graphics were things I thought about briefly last year while watching Psycho and other Hitchcock movie titles. But every other time in my life up until this reading I hadn't thought about title sequences at all. A lot of work and conception goes into this work and it "remains essentially invisible to many contemporary viewers". Yep, that's me, young and ignorant of another form of art.
I wonder if I'd had a lengthy title sequence to work with in the past in my work, I'd have put more thought into it. Even in my documentary I wanted something low key.
Anyway, title sequences will be something I'm interested in researching further.
I'm glad this reading takes time to defend music videos also. I agree that whether they mean to or not, music videos mirror exactly what a large group of our youth want, fear, imagine, or covet. But on another scale they work to experiment and push the borders of the medium. I find those videos more enjoyable like Hardest Button to Button, than the recent videos I've seen on mtv 2 like Justin Bieber.
I'm excited to watch as many of the videos referenced in this article as I can find.
Titles and graphics were things I thought about briefly last year while watching Psycho and other Hitchcock movie titles. But every other time in my life up until this reading I hadn't thought about title sequences at all. A lot of work and conception goes into this work and it "remains essentially invisible to many contemporary viewers". Yep, that's me, young and ignorant of another form of art.
I wonder if I'd had a lengthy title sequence to work with in the past in my work, I'd have put more thought into it. Even in my documentary I wanted something low key.
Anyway, title sequences will be something I'm interested in researching further.
I'm glad this reading takes time to defend music videos also. I agree that whether they mean to or not, music videos mirror exactly what a large group of our youth want, fear, imagine, or covet. But on another scale they work to experiment and push the borders of the medium. I find those videos more enjoyable like Hardest Button to Button, than the recent videos I've seen on mtv 2 like Justin Bieber.
I'm excited to watch as many of the videos referenced in this article as I can find.
Acidosis for economics
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Future of the Feature Response
I found this article to be a summation and very thorough message similar to what we discussed a lot in class last semester in digital filmmaking. It was also very nice to read an article like this and have seen a good majority of the films mentioned or have a good idea of who many of the names are.
Even though my generation is in this amazing time where anyone can make a movie and we have access to all the tools. These tools are now smaller, more portable, and cheaper, I still feel too swept up in it. I'm not sure how to explain it, but I feel like I don't have the best frame of reference to appreciate these facts and how culturally significant digital has become. I wish I had the point of view and experience Coppola and Godard had when they dreamt of these things.
I do like that since the technology is out there for everyone on a certain plain the movie making process isn't so much about money. Descent cameras aren't too expensive and iMovie isn't a bad program. But on the Hollywood defensive they make it even more about money because that's what we don't have. Maybe this could be similar to the painters' reaction to photography. They tried to emphasize what photography couldn't do and impressionism was born.
I really enjoy the passages to the Dogme 95 movement because I had some existing knowledge about it, I just added many more other movies to my netflix queue though. This article also made me re-think a few movies I really didn't like. For example, The Pillow Book. I'm glad that TimeCode and Russian Ark were mentioned, they were both clearly significant steps for DV.
It's an interesting moral quandary I have between film and video. Even though in idea DV is so much better because of it's democracy and relevance in current culture and technology, I still want that look film has. Technology and virtuality are fascinating but there's something about organic processes I can't help but go back to. The physical object of each frame is something special and denied to many today because of cost. I've never shot film but I admire it.
Even though my generation is in this amazing time where anyone can make a movie and we have access to all the tools. These tools are now smaller, more portable, and cheaper, I still feel too swept up in it. I'm not sure how to explain it, but I feel like I don't have the best frame of reference to appreciate these facts and how culturally significant digital has become. I wish I had the point of view and experience Coppola and Godard had when they dreamt of these things.
I do like that since the technology is out there for everyone on a certain plain the movie making process isn't so much about money. Descent cameras aren't too expensive and iMovie isn't a bad program. But on the Hollywood defensive they make it even more about money because that's what we don't have. Maybe this could be similar to the painters' reaction to photography. They tried to emphasize what photography couldn't do and impressionism was born.
I really enjoy the passages to the Dogme 95 movement because I had some existing knowledge about it, I just added many more other movies to my netflix queue though. This article also made me re-think a few movies I really didn't like. For example, The Pillow Book. I'm glad that TimeCode and Russian Ark were mentioned, they were both clearly significant steps for DV.
It's an interesting moral quandary I have between film and video. Even though in idea DV is so much better because of it's democracy and relevance in current culture and technology, I still want that look film has. Technology and virtuality are fascinating but there's something about organic processes I can't help but go back to. The physical object of each frame is something special and denied to many today because of cost. I've never shot film but I admire it.
Day 2 of construction
Another related artist
Friday, September 3, 2010
research is fun
Here is one story I found to be interesting as the living chair. It took him over 20 years to sculpt a tree...
Above is from an exhibition by Roxanne Jackson, she seems to be similar to Simen Johan and I find her work to also be inspiring.
These are two pieces by Nick Ervinck and the closest stylistically to the pictures I have in my head of what I'd like my installation piece to look like. I'm going to try to manipulate bone in these ways as much as possible.
Another, and my favorite, sulking skeleton.
Another Roxanne Jackson, very appropriate.
Kris Kuksi is an American artist born in Missouri and raised in Kansas. His distaste for typical American life and pop culture show in his grotesque sculptures.
This underwater sculpture by Jason de Caires is another example of a relation to "life" and some sort of connection to what is natural. Frankly, it's amusing.
I also admire this spunky piece by Roxanne Jackson.
I drifted into the world of grotesque art and was drawn to Olivier de Sagazan's work. I also watched a few of his performance videos. I feel like he is trying to speak and express the agony of those who cannot. Some of his performances are fairly disturbing and gut wrenching.
Above is from an exhibition by Roxanne Jackson, she seems to be similar to Simen Johan and I find her work to also be inspiring.
These are two pieces by Nick Ervinck and the closest stylistically to the pictures I have in my head of what I'd like my installation piece to look like. I'm going to try to manipulate bone in these ways as much as possible.
Another, and my favorite, sulking skeleton.
Another Roxanne Jackson, very appropriate.
Kris Kuksi is an American artist born in Missouri and raised in Kansas. His distaste for typical American life and pop culture show in his grotesque sculptures.
This underwater sculpture by Jason de Caires is another example of a relation to "life" and some sort of connection to what is natural. Frankly, it's amusing.
I also admire this spunky piece by Roxanne Jackson.
I drifted into the world of grotesque art and was drawn to Olivier de Sagazan's work. I also watched a few of his performance videos. I feel like he is trying to speak and express the agony of those who cannot. Some of his performances are fairly disturbing and gut wrenching.
More research
Here are more sulking skeletons. A taste of what's yet to come.
I found these images whild continuing to search slightly disturbing sculpture and hyperrealism of artists like Patricia Piccini and her piece The Embrace (below).
Above is the piece Unbearable Lightness by Tomas Gabzdil. It reminds me of a take on Piss Christ, and is an installation that features a sculpture of Jesus and about 40,000 honey bees.
Each cell was filled with honey before the public viewing, over time the bees cleaned the honey out of the cells and took it back to their hive. It is a comment on the human condition and the manipulation of living creatures. I love this relationship of a sculptural work and living things.
This work, The Sulking Skeletons of Marc Da Cunha Lopes, is as close as I could get to finding any skeleton sculpture. Still, I want to do something different.
I am in love with this piece by Simon Johan. Mocking the domestication and possible joke of toy dogs? I'll keep thinking about it.
I found these images whild continuing to search slightly disturbing sculpture and hyperrealism of artists like Patricia Piccini and her piece The Embrace (below).
Above is the piece Unbearable Lightness by Tomas Gabzdil. It reminds me of a take on Piss Christ, and is an installation that features a sculpture of Jesus and about 40,000 honey bees.
Each cell was filled with honey before the public viewing, over time the bees cleaned the honey out of the cells and took it back to their hive. It is a comment on the human condition and the manipulation of living creatures. I love this relationship of a sculptural work and living things.
This work, The Sulking Skeletons of Marc Da Cunha Lopes, is as close as I could get to finding any skeleton sculpture. Still, I want to do something different.
I am in love with this piece by Simon Johan. Mocking the domestication and possible joke of toy dogs? I'll keep thinking about it.
Research continued
Here are two pictures from "Head On" by Cai Guo-Qiang, and also 3 pictures from Simen Johan's exhibition entitled Until the Kingdom Comes . Both of these artist are working with "natural" subjects and is experimenting and seeming to comment on possible domestication of animals and our twisted views of the wild.
I am inspired by both of these artist's work in sculpture as well as still image in the same show. I too want to work similar to this style.
Re-assemblage of the bovine and what it eats: research
Here is the first little post between my production construction of the train of thought leading up to this project. Doing an image search to find some work similar to what I'm interested in I found no specific bone sculpture artists, but I was continually drawn to photography or furniture.
One of the first searches I made was "disturbing furniture". I found Charlotte Kingsnorth's piece, "at One". A functional piece commenting on the media coverage of obesity and inspired by the works of painter Jenny Saville.
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