Saturday, November 22, 2008

Olafur Eliasson





Bio
  • 1967- Born in Copenhagen.
  • 1989 - 1995, Studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen.
  • Lives in Copenhagen and Berlin.
  • " He has participated in numerous exhibitions worldwide and his work is represented in public and private collections including the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum, New York, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the Deste Foundation, Athens and Tate. Recently he has had major solo exhibitions at Kunsthaus Bregenz, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and ZKM (Center for Art and Media), Karlsruhe and represented Denmark in the 2003 Venice Biennale."
His Work
  • "The basic elements of the weather – water, light, temperature, pressure – are the materials that Olafur Eliasson has used throughout his career. His installations regularly feature elements appropriated from nature – billowing steam replicating a water geyser, glistening rainbows or fog-filled rooms. By introducing ‘natural’ phenomena, such as water, mist or light, into an un specifically cultivated setting, be it a city street or an art gallery, the artist encourages the viewer to reflect upon their understanding and perception of the physical world that surrounds them. This moment of perception, when the viewer pauses to consider what they are experiencing, has been described by Eliasson as ‘seeing yourself sensing’.

    Many of Eliasson’s works explore the relationship between the spectator and object. In Your Sun Machine (1997) viewers entered a room which was empty apart from a large circular hole punctured in the roof. Each morning, sunlight streamed into the space through this aperture, at first creating an elliptical, then a circular outline on the walls and floor. The beam of light shifted across the room as the day progressed. The movement of the ‘sun’ across the room was apparently the central focus of the work, but in observing this, the viewer was reminded of his or her own position as an object, located on earth, spinning through space around the real sun.

    For The Mediated Motion at the Kunsthaus Bregenz in Austria (2001), Eliasson created a sequence of spaces filled with natural materials including water, fog, earth, wood, fungus and duckweed. During their journey through the exhibition, visitors were confronted by a variety of sensory experiences – sights, smells, and textures – which had been precisely articulated by the artist. Eliasson also modified the dominant orthogonal character of the building, including the insertion of a subtly slanting floor, which made visitors become more conscious of the act of movement through space." -Tate Modern


Thursday, November 20, 2008

Environmental






www.greenmuseum.org

This article examines an artist who works with the Solar Living Center in Hopland, California, to create alternatives to living technology.  Baile Oakes began by designing a yearly solar calendar.  As a sculptor and author, Oakes created a calendar that is described as "a gently sloping plaza and gathering space at the entrance of the main building with a sunset activated spiral fountain.  A six foot tall brass staff fits into holes along the basin and records the weekly location of sunrises and sunsets. Stone monuments mark the position of the sun on Equinoxes and Solstices reminding visitors of the passing of time on a planetary scale. Both environment and timepiece, the Solar Calendar helps reconnect us with our place in the universe."  Many of Oakes' artworks highlight natural phenomena such as the solar calendar, desert landscapes, and the importance of water. His mission is to "Baile Oakes is on a mission to "use our visual language to help bring our culture to a fuller understanding of our place within the living systems of the Earth."
I think that this relates to what I am doing, because I have been trying to figure out how to create a successful presentation for my final, and his work is mainly about the interactions between the art and the people.  I really need to find a way to make my art more involved.  This has made me consider placing my images in nature and re-photographing them, to make it seem more like an experience than just presented images.  

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Scott McFarland





Bio
  • Born in 1975 in Canada
  • Received his Bachelor of Fine Arts, 1997 from the University of British Columbia
  • The artist lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.
  • Recent exhibitions include: 2008 New Works, Monte Clark Gallery, Toronto, Canada; 2008
    Garden of Eden, Statdtische Galerie, Bietigheim-Bissingen, Germany;  2007
    Works on Paper; Monte Clark Gallery, Vancouver and Toronto, Canada Regen Projects, Los Angeles, and Union Gallery, London, England;  2005 Another Photography, Regan Projects, Los Angeles Analyzing Trapping Inspecting, Union Gallery, London, England;  2004 Gardens, Monte Clark Gallery, Vancouver/Toronto, Canada
About the work
  • "Scott McFarland's vision has evolved out of a familiarity with the particular environments he photographs. To date he has created several bodies of work exploring such traditional regional subjects as gardens and their maintenance, a friend's cabin and boathouse, as well as the space of photography itself, the darkroom. Regardless of the subject matter, a personal consideration is present in which the artist attempts to reconcile a 'true' notion of the real with the limited one which is captured by the camera lens. McFarland's photographs, which employ subtle digital alteration, return the image as much as possible to its orginal appearance seen by the eye. This alteration includes both exposure and accurate colour correction."
  • "McFarland's work thus represents iconic ideas about the local, linking them to the history of photography while using technology as a new way of representation, as a means of accessing the purity of our original experience. Often exhibited as large colour photographs, they have also appeared in magazine works as well as book projects."

Scott McFarland
Interview

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Andy Cooperman Lecture 11/17





Andy Cooperman is a metal smith, jeweler, and teacher working and living in Seattle, Washington.  As stated in his lecture, what excites Cooperman the most about what he does is making things, he considers himself "a maker."  He has created all different types of jewelry such as rings, pendants and brooches.  Some pendants and brooches have been specifically requested to be made for holding ashes of his clients' loved ones.  He spends a great amount of time on every piece, they are well thought out and have a very personal style.
Andy Cooperman gets a great deal of his inspiration from natural objects, growing up perusing books and videos with organic elements and things from nature.  He said that it was important to show where his inspiration came from, but to create his own take on it.  His work is characterized, not replicated. His ideas are expressed through form, gesture and surface.  He titles all of his pieces, which is an extremely important part of the work to him because it helps to describe his through processes on these abstracted pieces.

  

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Directorial


"Photography is a small voice, at best, but sometimes one photograph, or a group of them, can lure our sense of awareness.”- W. Eugene Smith


"DIRECTORIAL MODE: A. D. Coleman's article of this name (in Artforum [September 1976]) identified an approach to photography in which the photographer was more like a film director or theatre designer than a traditional photographer. Emphasis was put on making, rather than taking photographs. To some extent, the principle is akin to auteur theory."

Critical Attitudes toward Overtly Manipulated Photography in the 20th Century
Patricia D. Leighten
Art Journal, Vol. 37, No. 2 (Winter, 1977-1978), pp. 133-138 (article consists of 6 pages)
Published by: College Art Association

This essay explains that every photograph in manipulated in some way. Placement of the camera, and the planes direction are human acts which determine the outcome. Emphasis of manipulation is usually based on the outcome rather than the process, but manipulation of photographs is both a conscious and subconscious act. I am working with planned out images, consciously making decisions on image placement, color, exposure etc. Although, while I am shooting, I choose the angles at which I shoot, I choose the time of day to photograph knowing the lighting effects. I am molding every aspect of my photographs, taking them beyond their original context and setting.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Jeff Wall





Bio
  • Canadian artist Jeff Wall was born in Vancouver in 1946. He received his B.A. degree from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver in 1968 and his M.A. degree from the same institution in 1970. From 1970-1973, Wall studied art history at the Courtauld Institute in London. He was an Associate Professor at the Center for the Arts, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver,1976-1987. He received the Hasselblad Award in 2002.


About his work
  • "His photographs are often carefully staged like a scene in a film, with full control of all details. Their composition is always well thought through, and often borrows from classical painters like Edouard Manet. Many of his images are large (typically 2x2 meters) transparencies placed in back-lit boxes; Wall says he got the idea during a bus trip between Spain and London where he saw large back-lit advertisements at bus stops. The themes are social and political, such as urban violence, racism, poverty, gender and class conflicts.A typical image of Jeff Wall is Mimic from 1982. It is a colour transparency, 198 cm by 229 cm. In it, we see three people, a couple and a man, walking towards the camera on a side walk. The street looks like a suburb in a North American town, residential area mixed with light industry. The couple, to the right in the picture, is white, and the single man to the left is of asian origin. The woman is wearing red shorts and a white top displaying her bellybutton. Her boyfriend (I assume, he's holding her hand) is wearing a denim vest, has a full beard and unkempt hair; they give the impression of working class. The asian man is dressed smarter, with a collared shirt; he gives impression of being middle class. The two men exchange glances. The asian man has his head pointing forward but his eyes look hard left at the couple. The white man has turned his head toward the other man, chin a bit down, looking straight at the Asian, right hand clenched to a fist with the middle extended, pointing to his eye."

Jeff Wall

New




“As I hold the future well-being of photography very dear I must see to it that these forces which militate against it be opposed and destroyed.” - Alfred Stieglitz

"This Year’s Models: Searching for Fresh Approaches in Photography"
New York Times
By MARTHA SCHWENDENER
Published: November 26, 2007

This article is about a show called "New Photography 2007" at the MoMa where contemporary photographers are expressing their interests in the ideas and methods of photographers such as Eadweard Muybridge, Alfred Stieglitz, and Clarence White.  The article describes the "new photography" as recycling, and somewhat of a let down.  These emerging photographers are expected to show something new and fresh, and the closest they see to new is from the work of  Tanyth Berkeley, whos images which involve a lot of "social engineering."  Among other photographers mentioned were Scott McFarland who worked with Jeff Wall, coincidentally his work follows his same methods.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Philip-Lorca diCorcia






Biography

1951 Born in Hartford, Connecticut, USA
1975 School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Diploma
1976 School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Post Graduate Certificate
1979 Yale University, New Haven, M.F.A.
*Currently lives and works in New York

Recent Exhibitions

2008 ‘Philip-Lorca diCorcia’, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California, USA. (solo)
2008 ‘Photographie : détrônera la peinture’, Musée de la photographie, Chalonsur-Saône, France (solo)
2008 Baby. De ideale mens verbeeld 1840- heden, Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam
2008 diCorcia - Epstein - Shore, Galerie Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels

"diCorcia alternates between informal snapshots and iconic quality staged compositions that often have a baroque theatricality.[2] Using a carefully planned staging, he takes everyday occurrences beyond the realm of banality, trying to inspire in his picture's spectators an awareness of the psychology and emotion contained in real-life situations.[3] His work could be described as documentary photography mixed with the fictional world of cinema and advertising, which creates a powerful link between reality, fantasy and desire.[4" -source: Wikipedia
.. More