Monday, April 26, 2010
The Gaze
Friday, April 23, 2010
(Two hours of child observation) Children playing Ninja in the park
(One hour of child observation) Can parents connect with their children through video games?
Monday, April 19, 2010
(Three hours of child observation) Observing children in public places is more difficult than I had originally thought
In Linda Louis's Visual Development class we learned that in artistic development usually children between 8-10 years old fall under phase two or three. In these phases, children feel so strongly about their ideas that they need to share them to whomever will listen. This is because a child feels good/efficacious about something they have made and feel it is important enough to share and talk about to others. In this context these girls thought that because they had already seen the movie, their opinions were important enough to tell someone else. I'd be interested to see what the similarities are in general child development and visual artistic development. I'm curious to find out if these girls were so active in giving advice to each customer. Was it their age that made them so willing to share information or did they think movies were cool and by showing others that they were so knowledgeable about movies that were out of their typical age range made them even cooler? Or was it just that these girls were bored waiting for their parents and found it more entertaining to stand by the movie machine and share their thoughts with the other customers? I think it was a little bit of all that.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Reflection: classroom discussion on Folk Art
After last night's discussion, I spent sometime thinking about what we had talked about. In all of the folk art I have seen, the artists make the work because they just need to. They did not make art for extrinsic purposes. They were not looking for financial success or looking for outside affirmation. They made their work with confidence and knew that it was something important enough to keep doing.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Reflection on Visual Culture Show and Tell
Monday, April 12, 2010
Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution
WEBSITE- http://www.jamieoliver.com/campaigns/jamies-food-revolution
Thursday, April 8, 2010
(One hour cultural event) Tim Burton at the MOMA
As an artist who makes a lot of drawings, I really enjoyed seeing all of his rough sketches. I felt that the show gave me a better idea of who Tim Burton is as an artist-- not just a filmmaker. In his movies, you only see the most refined version and I really enjoyed seeing the process of how characters were drawn, created and then transformed into a moving image and made into 3-d models.
(One hour cultural event) William Kendtridge at the MOMA
The primary subjects investigated in Kentridge's work over the past 30 years have been: Soho and Felix (about a businessman and his alter ego), Ubu and the Procession (about excitement and change in post-aparteid South Africa), the artist in his studio, The Magic Flute (work inspired by set designs for Mozart's opera) and The Nose (the work inspired by his work for the Met).
As I walked around the show and watched the videos, I began to think of Kentridge as a magician of sorts. By using visual tricks (like playing the video in reverse) we are able to suspend our disbelief and just enjoy the show. He dazzles us with such interesting sights that it is easy to be drawn in by the images before you realize the themes of the work. He makes the mood complex and rich by his constant drawing and erasing and re-defining. By merging sometimes depressing or melencholy images and using triumphant, fun music, he reveals a mood mixed with hope and a long bitter cultural history. Mixing all of these formal and conceptual elements together evokes a liveliness in the work; the figures are moving, the images of the figures are changing, music is playing. In working this way, he is playing with our sense of time. There's a literal movement in time, even as we are watching the videos play.
(Two hour cultural event) Marina Abramovic at the MOMA
I want to preface this journal by saying that before this show I wasn't familiar with Marina Abramovic or her work. All I knew is that she was a feminist performance artist who did on-site performances at her exhibitions.
This was the first ever performance artist retrospective I had seen at the MOMA. Marina's first piece, where she invites us to sit and look at her, struck me with an overwhelming presence. Marina is seated in a long billowy target red dress and is staring at the participant with a gaze that is not a smile nor frown. Marina's dress was the piece of color in the white space which grabbed my eyes like a big strawberry in a cold, sterile, room. Before this, I had never seen the artist present in their own installation at a large museum like the MOMA. I couldn't stop thinking about how painful it has to be to sit for 8 hours a day for the whole duration of the show. When that thought struck me, I felt like I was starting to get an understanding of the context for her work. It is about discipline, persistance, power, control, sex, the gaze, etc. Who has the power? Who is looking at who and what does that look mean?
After seeing Abromovic's first piece went upstairs to check out the rest. My engagement was instantly activated when I saw models standing like manequins-- emotionless and some nude. Because the models had such good control and composure over themselves it encouraged me to walk up close to examine if they were "real". I moved through the space and found myself really soaking this all up. I had never seen art like this before in a museum. As art viewers, we are used to seeing nudes in paintings and sculptures, but I have never seen a live nude in a museum. This was the most engaging part of the show for me. These people were real which really added an extra wow factor. I felt like because the models had such a presence I found the videos completely unengaging. I would have really loved to see all of her performances re-performed instead of watching a documentation of her past performances. Then we would have been surrounded by art instead of documentations of past art pieces. The real deal is always way more exciting.
Abramovic's work was so successful to me for a couple of main reasons. I really enjoyed how all the models had emotionless expressions. It was like they were fake, because of how they stared right through you. This lack of expression made each viewer develop an understanding of the art through the specific position he/she was in. By taking that position (standing on the cross, sitting in a chair, etc) and letting the viewer imagine what is meant be this interaction, Abramovic inserts her own ideas, but lets each viewer form their opinion and understanding of their experience.
Ultimately Abramovic's work goes back to the "gaze." When observing how someone looks at another, they develop a stance on how they view certain worldy issues like, race, sex, gender, etc. This kind of art is so important because it helps people reflect and hopefully investigate how they feel and why they feel the way they do. Abramovic's work breaks the binary that we see so much in today's commercial society. Hopefully when people go to see this show they don't shut down and leave because they saw a nude person. I hope that people enter with an open-mind and begin to investigate what the performances means, how they challenge our insecurities and pre-conceived opinions about sex, gender, power, and control.
(Two hours child observation/One hour cultural event) Welcome to the circus in 2010...
AFTER MIDTERM (Two hour cultural event) The world's first ever Art Handler Olympics
The Art Handling Olympics (AHO) is the first event of its kind. It is equal parts competition, three ring circus, and foreign TV game show. The day’s events will be rowdy, fast paced and ending with a monster party.
"The teams will compete in a series of physically and mentally excruciating events that spotlight the absurdity and seriousness of our jobs. Picture the worst install you’ve ever worked on. Now add a psychotic art director frothing at the mouth, the world’s most indecisive client, a frantic truck dispatcher, an audience, a timer, and beer. Art will be destroyed and egos shattered. There will be glory to the winners, but nothing is sacred and no one is safe from humiliation in the olympic arena."
So why have such an event? This event revealed this sub-culture of art installers in the Museum and gallery world and brought some humor and fun to what can be a very serious and stressful job. I know when I think of people behind museums and galleries I think of bitchy, pretentious front desk girls and highly educated affluent curators who are very picky and are never satisfied. I don't think of a bunch of out of shape, dirty, hairy artists hanging and installing priceless works of art.
Most art handlers are freelance workers without health benefits. Sometimes we feel that we are not respected or given the attention we deserve by the higher-ups in the museum and gallery world. It feels like our work isn't recognized as it should be. After working long hours and rehanging the same piece in ten different places, the director and curator choose to show their appreciation by giving us a box of a dozen Dunkin Donuts. Sometimes there's such a class distinction between the curators and the installers that it feels like we're being exploited. I think the curators might say, "These poor artists will appreciate anything we give 'em. Let's work 'em hard. We're paying them, right? We're running tight on budget so lets just get them some donuts instead of taking them out to lunch or something." Many times the curators just don't know what we do. They think the show just hangs itself, but there is a lot of hard work that goes into making the show look like it placed by "god". haha.
The Art Handler Olympics is to me a "fuck you" to the higher ups in the art world. Shane, the organizer, took people like us out of the shadows by making an "art" event out of our day to day jobs. This event wasn't addressed as being art or a performance, but it was held in an art gallery. When you put something in a gallery it seperates the ideas from their original context, which allows people to look at the information in a new way. By exaggerating regular daily tasks, Shane was able to show the ridiculousness of our jobs. This event showed all the effort that we put into making sure the art is safe and is treated with the highest care. Since we were not working in the museum with real art, this event created an atmosphere where we were able to laugh and joke about what we do. For our team, team Asia, the Olympics was a reason to go out and have fun with our friends.
In the end, I think the event was appreciated by everyone and it was an admission that our job can be ridiculous and silly so we might as well celebrate that. It was like a big family gathering and it was very cool to see all of these people come from out of the woodwork who all do the same thing, but aren't usually seen or acknowledge by the public. It made the handlers feel more appreciated than the doughnuts ever did. The Art Handling Olympic Champion gives a new goal and prestige to art handlers city wide and other cities like LA and London are already planning their own similar events.
If you'd like to see more... check out all the events...look at the results of this years AHO, go to....