Sunday, October 31, 2010

Zoe Beloff Questions/Response

Artist Lecture: Zoe Beloff
Questions: October 31, 2010

1) You work with such an extensive array of mediums (performance, film, photography, drawings, etc). It seems most of your work has to do with state of mind and the connection between mindsets, do you try and keep a similar theme throughout each medium you use?

2) I think something that stands out the most from your website, besides your work of course, is the fact that you have information up about your family. It is so interesting that you have photos and information about your specific family members. Do you have this information available because you want us to know something about them, because they fit into the themes of your work, or simply because of their support as your family? Whatever the reason, I haven't seen a family page like that before and I love it.


Zoe Beloff Response

It was hard to get a quote from Zoe Beloff because she read so perfectly from her notes. My favorite off-the-fly comments she made were probably:

"I went to visit these little people, who have finally made it to London, and they didn't even remember me!!"

"I like to think about these movies as psychoanalytic materials."

"I think of this as my contribution to the history of dreams." (This one is my favorite because I know she is being sincere. I was moved by her passion for what she was talking about and the genuine hope she had that her work was changing history. History of dreams anyway.)

"Being Albert Grass gave me opportunities that I wouldn't normally have had."


Three words to describe Zoe and her work would probably be: melodramatic, narrative, and blurry fabrication.


It is easy to name the most interesting thing I learned during this lecture. I learned that I was fooled! I was completely duped and I think everyone else in the room was too! Her lecture was not a lecture at all- it was an informative performance. She gave an entire speech about this man, Arthur Glass. She showed us his picture, talked about the ties he had to Coney Island, the sketches he made for his amusement park idea, the oddities of his being, his personal dreams, his personal diaries, the comic books he made, the things he struggled with, etc. We learned about intimate details about the life of this man and his roles in the society she was working with on Coney Island... I had no doubt that she had studied this man and his accomplishments and his personal habits for her Coney Island exhibit. And she drops the bomb on us at the end of his fabrication? This was not only the most interesting aspect of her lecture, but also the piece I found most compelling. Because it's a trick! Her performance was flawless. No one doubted her until she revealed herself at the end. I am still thoroughly confused about who hired her for the Coney Island exhibit if that Psychoanalytical Society she talked about doesn't really exist. It was also so interesting because we learned SO much about Zoe as an artist and as a person because she became this alternate figure. And it was great to see her genuine excitement when she so calmly admitted her secret at the end of the lecture.


My original questions about the medium were answered twice. She said medium doesn't concern her, she thinks about what she is doing and how she can best do it and the medium fits in afterward. The question about her family was not addressed, but upon further investigation of her website, I think it is obvious that her family means a great deal to her and effects her work constantly.

Artist Post #9

Artist Post #9
November 1, 2010

Shepard Fairey



Relation: I have finally started to find some artists that really relate to what I'm trying to do. Through various works and through various mediums, Shepard Fairey has successfully spread messages. He has began "experiments" that took off in a huge way and became giant public art pieces run by individual people. His art, sometimes called "street art" is based on the idea that a message can take off outside of gallery walls. I am newly excited by his work and the amount of success he had with it outside the art world. One of the slogans (borrowed from Marshall McLuhan) that Fairey uses frequently is "The Medium is the Message."



Biography: Shepard Fairey is a graphic designer and an illustrator. He grew up in Charleston, South Carolina and attended the Idyllwild Arts Academy as well as the Rhode Island School of Design with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration. He began placing drawings on Tshirts and skateboards and sending them out into the skateboarding community. He became most well-known for his "Andre the Giant Has a Posse" (OBEY) sticker campaign. In this campaign he appropriated images from supermarket tabloids and the stickers took off around the world. The more recent Barak Obama "HOPE" poster made Institute of Contemporary Art call him "one of today's best known and most influential street artists."


Quotes:
"When I started to see reactions and consider the sociological forces at work surrounding the use of public space and the insertion of a very eye-catching but ambiguous image, I began to think there was the potential to create a phenomenon."

"I became obsessed with the idea of spreading the image further and was surprised by how many people were willing to spread the stickers to other cities based on the template established in Providence or an explanation of the concept."

Source for both:
Fairey, Shepard. Intervew by Stephen Heller. 04 Jun 2004. AIGA. Web. 31 Oct 2010. .




Links:
Interview
Artist Website
Gallery

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Sumbissions to Contests/Exhibitions

Submission and Acceptance to Cary Street Gym Art Space
September 29, 2010



Eight pieces were accepted. My dancer series is on display downstairs in the Cary St Gym and my panoramic series is on display upstairs.


Work on the Cary St Gym Website: http://vcurecsports.wordpress.com/2010/10/25/cary-street-gym-art-space/

Submission to PDNedu Student Competition:
October 30th, 2010


Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Idea Post #7

Idea Post #7
Thursday October 28, 2010

Public Art



Quotes:
“Public art brings variety, energy and life to our public spaces. The One Percent for Art Program compliments this town's thriving art community and it serves as a testimonial to our elected officials' dedication to the city's cultural heritage and vision for the future.”
-Porter Arneill
Source:
ThinkExist.com Quotations. “Porter Arneill quotes”. ThinkExist.com Quotations Online 1 Sep. 2010. 27 Oct. 2010


"I wished to go completely outside and to make a symbolic start for my enterprise of regenerating the life of humankind within the body of society and to prepare a positive future in this context."

-Joseph Beuys
Source: "Inspirtational Art Quotes and Fine Artists." Art Quotes. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Oct 2010. .


Annotated Bibliography:
Knight, Cher. Public Art. City: Wiley-Blackwell, 2008.
This book will provide you with a nice overview of the history and development of public art in the United States. It features the most famous and well-known examples of public art in the country and talks about the use of public art in commercial instances as well as fine art purposes.


Relation:
I am beginning to consider my chalk drawings public art. I hadn't thought of it this way in the past, but I am realizing that this particular aspect of the Future Campaign has an air of public art to it. It is a public piece purposefully placed in a place where it will be seen by people outside of a gallery. I think the term "public art" relates to my work more and more as I work on spreading the word through chalk text. The other facets of this project won't necessarily be "public art," but this type of art is definitely similar to my chalk drawings.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Artist Post #8

Artist Post #8
October 25, 2010

David Harding

Background:
Finding information about David Harding is very difficult, but he is really necessary for me to feature here. David Harding worked mostly between the 60s and the 70s and believes in the importance of public art. He is a Scottish artist and his work stays primarily around Scotland, England, and Wales. He is concerned with the history and development of public art as it's social context. He is a professor at the infamous Glasglow School of Art and then became the director of sculpture there. He prides himself on being able to discover how this practice can be spread through education.


Relation:
David Harding's work uses text in public areas, as my current work does. He uses text in stone, sidewalks, and walls, and even has children install text-altered bricks into brick walls. He even did some collaborations with poets in Scotland to create walkways with text embedded inside. He considers himself a "town-artist" and has written several books about his adventures through Scotland spreading his art and his messages. This is exactly what I want to do. I want to use text in both public and private spaces to spread an idea. Work like this that is so similar and so successful gives me confidence that a system of "spreading the word" like this can work.


Quotes:
"For me, the base of art was broadened and democratized with the recognition that there should be cultural democracy, which means lots of cultures existing side by side."

"Mainly what has happened in Britain is that the social development and recreation sections of city councils have employed artists. There must be, I think, some 20 or so towns in the U.K. that employ artists in ways other than for, say, graphics and exhibitions. These artists are employed mainly to contribute to social and cultural development."

Source:
David Harding. Community Arts Network. The Reading Room. Interview by Moira Roth. Spring 1986. Web. Oct 2010.


Links:
Artist Website
Interview
Representation

Note: These pieces were made in the 60s and 70s and documentation of the work is very difficult to track down. The artist's website has tons of information about the work and the artist, but not one image.

Artist Post #7

Artist Post #7
October 18, 2010

Jenny Holzer




Relation:

Jenny Holzer's work relates to my senior portfolio project on the issue of text. Holzer uses text and writing in public spaces to spread an idea. She began with posters and LED lighted signs and then began using a wide array of mediums like bronze plaques, painted signs, stone benches, stickers, T-shirts, etc. Between 1977 and 2001, she used self-written texts. In 1993, she began using texts written by others. She has also turned to texts from important documents recently. For example she has been using de-classified US Army documents from the Iraq War. Her main goal in using text is to enlighten the public on issues that are usually kept quiet. This also relates to my work. The idea in my project isn't something that is kept "hidden" like in Holzer's work, but it is a topic that people seem to turn a blind eye to.


Biography:


Jenny Holzer was born in Ohio and mainly fits under the category of "American conceptual artist." As far as schooling is concerned, she first attended Ohio University, then the Rhode Island School of Design, and then completed an Independent Study through the Whitney Museum of American Art. She originally worked mainly with abstract art and then moved into text as her main concept. Her work now focuses on heavy topics such as violence, oppression, power, war, and death.


Quotes:

"I’ve spent a fair amount of time alone, on my work, and so it’s with real joy that I go to other people to make something larger than I could have done solo."
Source:
Holzer, Jenny. Art:21Intervew. PBS. Web. 14 Oct 2010. .


"Listening has become my habit because hopefully, by the end of the day, I can make the artwork more fitted."
Source:
Holzer, Jenny. The Poetry Foundation. Intervew by John Yau and Shelley Jackson . 07 Jun 2006. Web. 14 Oct 2010. .



Links:
Gallery Rep #1
Gallery Rep #2
Artist Website
Interview


Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Idea Post #6

Idea Post #6

October 14, 2010


Advertising


Considering advertising is a pretty broad topic, I figured I should chose quotes from the Ad Legends for my advertising experts:



Quotes:


“I have a theory that the best ads come from personal experience. Some of the good ones I have done have really come out of the real experience of my life, and somehow this has come over as true and valid and persuasive.
David Ogilvy


Source:

"David Ogilvy." BrainyQuote.com. Xplore Inc, 2010. 14 October. 2010. http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/d/david_ogilvy.html



“It is insight into human nature that is the key to the communicator's skill. For whereas the writer is concerned with what he puts into his writings, the communicator is concerned with what the reader gets out of it. He therefore becomes a student of how people read or listen.”
William Bernbach


Source: "William Bernbach." BrainyQuote.com. Xplore Inc, 2010. 14 October. 2010. http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/w/william_bernbach.html



Annotated Bibliography:


Sullivan, Luke. Hey, Whipple, Squeeze This!. New York: Wiley, 2008.

I know this book well. We are reading this book in my advertising class and to be honest, it’s brilliant. It’s an easy read written in a comical, whitty way and it teaches you the ins and outs on how to get your message to the consumer. It does not give you the history of advertising, but for my project, this book works perfectly. For what I’m doing I don’t need the history, I need to know the facts… the details on how to reach a target audience with a specific message. This book is great for that.



Relation:


When trying to think about what word or topic relates to my work this week, I was getting a little stumped because my tactic hasn’t changed in the last few weeks. But if I really think about what I am doing with this project, the main tactic I am using is simply advertising. In my opinion, all advertising is is spreading a message to an audience in a creative way. Isn’t that exactly what I’m doing? Maybe looking more into tactics used to spread advertising to the target audience will help me think of different ways to distribute my message.