reaction
Monday, December 1, 2008
Journal Response:
Deliberative Democracy and Difference
By Mark Kann
Design by Alessandro Ceglia
The article Deliberation Democracy & Difference is a complete definition of what it means to have a deliberation of democracy. Mark Kann, the creator of the article uses the internet as his example. He demonstrates in the beginning of his article why the internet is an opportunity for citizens to communicate and deliberate in a forum free from the barriers of sexuality, race, stereo types, etc. I couldn’t help but think romanic thoughts about the opportunity the internet does create while reading Mark’s article. I do believe it to be a magical place where anything is possible. I truly feel the internet embodies America with it’s opportunities. However, I believe Mark uses it to demonstrate just how emotionally charged people are even in-spite of removing major barriers like sexuality and race.
I think Mark Kann’s main point through the article is to demonstrate how people cannot deliberate of deep rooted issues like religion and truth. People are stuck on their differences. He examines both the good and the evil that is derived from these dot.com forums. The corruption he claims is the lack of human respect. A internet forum cannot take the time to deliberate and find common ground if people are not restrained. There must be rules and respect in a discussion if the group is to reach a conclusion.
I believe there is a definite benefit that is possible if people where more serious about taking control away from formal institutions and political leaders. The dot.com sites have created the opportunity for this to become a reality but we are not rational people and I think Mark explains why.
Mark outline the exact steps that need to be taken to take back America and our rights as citizens of the world. He started by showing us how it was once, and how it could be again. However we must follow the steps if we want to deliberate about democracy, but he continues to have the reader participate in a series of exercises. What I took away from them was that these issues cannot seem to be discussed with rational thinking because the belief structure of people today is so diverse. What seems ok for one person, is a complete abomination to another. For example Mark uses gay marriage as an exercise. On one hand a believer of God would argue that it is wrong, whereas not all people believe in God or a God. It is issues like this that makes stops citizens from being able to be rational about things and issues. One feels the other is wrong. Here is the problem.
One Sentence Expression
Today's art world allows more expression than ever by offering an artist endless opportunities to express themselves through outlets like the blogging, internet text, graphic design, sound recording, painting, filming, photography, the list is endless.
Field Report Three: stop.look.listen
I chose to do a video art response based on the nature of the this assignment. I went to the Heggrity Musium today and I thought it was amazing to be in an environment that is surrounded by purposeful ideas. I really appreciated all the video installations. They all seemed to focus on very particular techniques and feelings and had an intense focus to them. They allowed me to see thorough demonstrations of specific strategies. One that stood out significantly was actually a video instillation we watched in class by Mads Lynnerup, his masterpiece, Untying A Shoe With An Erection. I love the piece because it really does cause the viewer to imagine what is happening off screen and I am interested in exploring this method and incorporating it into my own work. I believe this is a technique that is not utilized enough.
However, the two video installations that I would like to compare are Jesper Just’s Bliss and Heaven and Christian Marclay’s Telephones. On one hand you have Bliss and Heaven, a sexually charged video with a message that was extremely clear because of the cinematography. The video used symbols like an electric wire that leads to a power plant, to demonstrate a charge, a blood pumping, knock your socks off charge. The symbiotics in Just’s video also help make it the point clear, a man’s ponytail, the truck, the power plant in the background. These symbiotics are the backbone to this video. But, it is the sound of this video that completes the moment because it creates an environment . Aaron Ximm wrote an article called, “Sound, Art, Music?” In it, he encourages the exploration of sound and strongly encourages articulating the different relationships sound negotiates with its environment. So, I have been focusing on just that. I believe in Just’s video, the sound negotiates a mixture of feelings. You have the voice of the truck driver singing, what I consider to be emotionally expressing himself, the clapping of hands, the crying. These are the most profound sounds I believe in the video. The environment is a stage, empty seat surround it, and the man singing has a spotlight shining down on him. Now, just stop for a moment and consider if the video didn’t have sound....... I don’t believe the pain and excitement in Just’s video would have been as impactful, had it not been for the sound. Glen Bach has recommended me to close my eyes and listen to a film or video and contemplate what the sound does for the image. How is the experience different than just seeing the images? It is a method that defiantly works.
Now please consider the video “Telephones” by Christian Marclay. It uses sound in a similar way to Bliss and Heaven because the sound conveys a meaning to a image that is somewhat ambiguous. In telephones the image is continually changing due to the design of the video. She edited together clips from many films that span across many years. What ties each piece together is the sound. It would be extremely less effective to not have sound in this video because the environment is never exactly the same, but the similarity is everyone is talking on phones. So, you could argue that the images are tied together due to this, but it is the sound of the people talking that take us on a journey through time. To hear the different voices and their pitch, the variation of it and the words that come out, are interesting. I think that without the sound the pictures of movie stars holding a phone would be boring. I would argue that we are more interested in what is said vs. what is seen in this video. Also, the sound creates a more intimate feeling between the viewer and the images. This confirms the environment
The images in both videos depend on sound to convey their meaning. In Bliss and Heaven, it is the sound that establishes a feeling of pain. The image of a man singing is too vague, and I considered it one dimensional, but when we hear his voice it changes the message being sent. In the video Telephones, the viewer could interpret several different meanings, but because of sound, the image of people on telephones creates a place in time, a complete environment.
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Vector Journal Response
“Welcome to the real world!” people say. I am not sure who originated the organization of those words, but I do know people always seem to say it with animosity. The words are said with a tone of failed expectations. Everyone has experienced an expectation not being met. It feels terrible. The faith is gone and met by doubt. The dreams and expectations of the world are built by movies, tv, radio, internet, journals, magazines, newspapers, billboards. The media is selling us a more complex version of life than needed. Our society in 2008 is faced with the reality. We are all being, “welcomed to the real world” whether you want it or not. Nine eleven, Iraq, and Hurricane Katrina are devastating. Imagine, your friend or relative, husband or wife, son or daughter being burned alive, shot to death, or suffocating as they submerged and breath in the ocean water. It is sad. I would argue all we need is love because our time on earth is short.
The Vectors Journal
I found two article/projects that are interestingly composed. They are not simply written. The articles have been manufactured to be interactive, which fits the theme of Vectors Journal. The article, Blue Velvet, by David Theo Goldberg and Stefka Hristova is written in the journal to be about, “Re-dressing New Orleans in Katrina’s wake.” It is a compelling article because you are faced with disturbing graphic animation. It demonstrates a part of the world that is not kind, and why it is not. The article causes you to navigate through it by clicking your mouse. It is not composed like the text you are reading now. You click on meaningful words, like race, civility, and disinvestment. You are clicking on these words and they animatedly plunge into a raging water were they sink to the bottom of the city. It is there the site argues the answers will be found. A paragraph or two populates and describes and educates the user about the issues surrounding Hurricane Katrina. The whole time haunting music is being played. It does not evoke a sense of security but of nightmare.
The second article/project from the Vectors journal that I want to talk about is called Killer Entertainment from Jennifer Terry. Killer Entertainment displays guns being fired in a war like environment. I couldn't help but think of the Iraq war while viewing the site.
I picked both projects to write about because I wanted to connect some very important structural methods the Vectors journal uses to make the content more effective. Blue Velvet and Killer Entertainment share the same outlet, the internet. Also, they both take represent their articles as projects, which is a charged word meaning work in progress. They don't just write their ideas using text for the viewer to interact with, but they alter the interaction of the user to generate different effects on the viewer. The project is connected to Blue Velvet based on aspects of content presentation.
Field Report: Act/React
The Milwaukee Art Museum's exhibit Act/React is technology based art. The artists associating with the Act/React exhibit express their ideas differently than conventional artists do. I consider conventional artist to be sculptors and painters When the word art is muttered from a mouth today. It is no longer just embodies those conventional outlets. Art in 2008 is expressed through the most diverse standards ever. However, the diversity has created many art impersonators. Is a hairstylist an artist? I believe art is a representation of an idea created totally free from influence. It is a new idea, not recycled ones. It is an idea that is not connected to this world yet, but a revelation from another place that is given birth through artistic methods.Janet Cardiff has a piece of art called To Touch. You enter a dark room in the exhibit where a light shines softly on a barbaric looking table. The table is built with thick pieces of wood. The surface of the table is rough, nicks and cuts break through the tarnished finish. Before I even touched the table; I felt a very intimacy from looking at it, but when I touched the table I felt the moment increase in meaning. When I touched the table sounds started to come from speakers placed around the entire room. A soft voice of a woman sternly expressing her thoughts, "touch my breast," was one. Also, sounds of telephones ringing and squeals of car tires as they scream loudly to a halt. The sounds changed based on the way I interacted with the table. When I placed my hands on it and wiped them across the table, the sounds increased in dark variation and tempo. My presence and interaction brought the artwork to life.
Janet Cardiff decided to express her artistic vision using sound technology, sensory technology, and lighting. It is the technology of her art that allows for spectator interaction to become possible, and it is the interaction the spectator has with the artwork, that in this case completes Cardriff's piece. The technology involved with her piece caused a much different reaction than if she would have used a different medium like, painting or sculpting. I personally feel that because she expressed her idea using technology. It provided me with a dynamic experience that made be feel the both past and present.
In the room next to Cardiff's exhibit was another exhibit by Danial Rozin. He uses technology to create his artwork too. Although, the interaction with his piece is different than Cardriff's. I interacted with Rozin's piece by standing in front of a clear screen. It reflected my image in the technology produced falling snow, and when I moved around my image became blurred. I feel it was when I was standing completely still that I appreciated the piece the most. My experience with the two piece of artwork were very different based upon the way I was suppose to interact with it.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Two Make Art or Individual Death
Art takes two. Everyone is making art. You probably made art today without even knowing it. This is reflecting upon Marcel Duchamp’s written work, The Creative Act. It articulates how the art process is not created and completed by the artist alone, but the spectator assists by qualifying the art which completes the creative act. Therefore, art takes two.
The spectator determines the social value of the artist’s work. If artwork is not considered valuable to society, then it is just considered bad art, but it is still art. In light of this, we must consider what is believed to be art today. The definition of art is broad. It could be a movie on the big screen or make-up on a face. It can be both big or small, known or unknown. It seems anyone has the potential to be an artist and since Duchamp believes the spectator to contribute to art by viewing it, then everyone actually is an artist by these standards. In my mind, the qualifications of an artist are different.
I believe that art is independent from every idea, memory, or association with the artist’s existence. It is an invention of something that is not yet known. A general notion of our society is that everything has already been invented and we as humans are just recyclers of the past. We are re-inventors. We take what is in the world and modify it, or re-invent it, as a new idea. However, it is not a new idea, but an idea that has been influenced by the ideas of others. The idea only exists because we are continually looking into the past for answers. What if we forgot about the past and erased everything from our memories? We would all be innovators. However, we cannot erase it or not be influenced by our experiences. Since I cannot erase these influences, I try to disconnect myself from everything I know and open my mind. I discovered that to think independently means to think without any limitations. An open mind cannot be restricted to guidelines. A child is taught that coloring in the lines is good and socially excepted, but when we take away those limitations and personal intentions, then the possibility of an artistic moment might occur. If a person wants to experience something outside of what he knows, he must disconnect himself from everything but the idea. It is dangerous work to be a real artist.
I have viewed the work of several visual productions this month and although I enjoyed them, I don’t believe their works are art. My beliefs do not make them unsuccessful or diminish the accomplishments of their ideas. For example, Charles Burnett’s work, Killing of Sheep 1979, is designed with his viewer in mind. Burnett films African American life in the ghetto, leaving most of the film open ended with little unity. Brunett used the influence of his experience to capture moments of African American life. Paul Chan’s Waiting for Godot in New Orleans is another example, but he uses surroundings to educate and inform an audience. Although both works are beautiful and creative, I don’t consider them art because their ideas are based on past experiences.
Robert Schaller is what I believe to be closer to an artist then most. I plan to attend a week long field trip with Schaller this July. He will take individuals into the Colorado wilderness who are interested in finding artistic moments. He has created several pieces of film from similar excursions where he let himself become available to independent thought. The work he does mirrors independent thought and art. I have never seen film emulsion before being introduced to Schaller. After screening some of his work at a public event there was a discussion. He said what he likes about making hand made film is that you never have complete control. I feel this is exactly what an artist should embrace, because art is unpredictable. It cannot be leashed.
Contrary to general American belief, once a spectator sees a piece of art, it is destroyed. The creative act begins and ends with the artist. What the spectators see is whatever they want; it is completely separate from what the piece of art is. The spectator ruins art. They project there own understanding. They place conditions. The artist should not be concerned with expressing his or her idea to the spectator while developing it, because if it is true art, there can be no expectation. It cannot be compared or valued by anyone but the artist. The artist can’t control what art is or isn’t. They are at the mercy of individual enlightenment.
All in all, art is the death. The artist must be willing to give up normalcy in the world to reach a place were an idea is free, true, and pure. There is a romantic idea of the type of life an artist leads, but the reality of a true artist’s life is to be considered odd, freakish, and crazy. Would you cut of your ear to express your idea? Would you create and speak a language that is not considered a language? Could you emotionally cope with people continually pointing at you, persecuting you, calling you crazy? Could you sacrifice your social life on earth to create art? A single perspective can’t be harnessed to art, and the domino effect or chain reaction or circle of life does not embody art. Art is everything separate from that. It is independent of everyone except the artist, and that’s why the creative act begins and ends with the artist.
The spectator determines the social value of the artist’s work. If artwork is not considered valuable to society, then it is just considered bad art, but it is still art. In light of this, we must consider what is believed to be art today. The definition of art is broad. It could be a movie on the big screen or make-up on a face. It can be both big or small, known or unknown. It seems anyone has the potential to be an artist and since Duchamp believes the spectator to contribute to art by viewing it, then everyone actually is an artist by these standards. In my mind, the qualifications of an artist are different.
I believe that art is independent from every idea, memory, or association with the artist’s existence. It is an invention of something that is not yet known. A general notion of our society is that everything has already been invented and we as humans are just recyclers of the past. We are re-inventors. We take what is in the world and modify it, or re-invent it, as a new idea. However, it is not a new idea, but an idea that has been influenced by the ideas of others. The idea only exists because we are continually looking into the past for answers. What if we forgot about the past and erased everything from our memories? We would all be innovators. However, we cannot erase it or not be influenced by our experiences. Since I cannot erase these influences, I try to disconnect myself from everything I know and open my mind. I discovered that to think independently means to think without any limitations. An open mind cannot be restricted to guidelines. A child is taught that coloring in the lines is good and socially excepted, but when we take away those limitations and personal intentions, then the possibility of an artistic moment might occur. If a person wants to experience something outside of what he knows, he must disconnect himself from everything but the idea. It is dangerous work to be a real artist.
I have viewed the work of several visual productions this month and although I enjoyed them, I don’t believe their works are art. My beliefs do not make them unsuccessful or diminish the accomplishments of their ideas. For example, Charles Burnett’s work, Killing of Sheep 1979, is designed with his viewer in mind. Burnett films African American life in the ghetto, leaving most of the film open ended with little unity. Brunett used the influence of his experience to capture moments of African American life. Paul Chan’s Waiting for Godot in New Orleans is another example, but he uses surroundings to educate and inform an audience. Although both works are beautiful and creative, I don’t consider them art because their ideas are based on past experiences.
Robert Schaller is what I believe to be closer to an artist then most. I plan to attend a week long field trip with Schaller this July. He will take individuals into the Colorado wilderness who are interested in finding artistic moments. He has created several pieces of film from similar excursions where he let himself become available to independent thought. The work he does mirrors independent thought and art. I have never seen film emulsion before being introduced to Schaller. After screening some of his work at a public event there was a discussion. He said what he likes about making hand made film is that you never have complete control. I feel this is exactly what an artist should embrace, because art is unpredictable. It cannot be leashed.
Contrary to general American belief, once a spectator sees a piece of art, it is destroyed. The creative act begins and ends with the artist. What the spectators see is whatever they want; it is completely separate from what the piece of art is. The spectator ruins art. They project there own understanding. They place conditions. The artist should not be concerned with expressing his or her idea to the spectator while developing it, because if it is true art, there can be no expectation. It cannot be compared or valued by anyone but the artist. The artist can’t control what art is or isn’t. They are at the mercy of individual enlightenment.
All in all, art is the death. The artist must be willing to give up normalcy in the world to reach a place were an idea is free, true, and pure. There is a romantic idea of the type of life an artist leads, but the reality of a true artist’s life is to be considered odd, freakish, and crazy. Would you cut of your ear to express your idea? Would you create and speak a language that is not considered a language? Could you emotionally cope with people continually pointing at you, persecuting you, calling you crazy? Could you sacrifice your social life on earth to create art? A single perspective can’t be harnessed to art, and the domino effect or chain reaction or circle of life does not embody art. Art is everything separate from that. It is independent of everyone except the artist, and that’s why the creative act begins and ends with the artist.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Journal
Hello reader,
I will be following a Journal for the couple of months. I decided to do this because I want to become more involved with new media ideas and standpoints. The Vectors Journal at http://www.vectorsjournal.org is from the University of Southern California. I chose to follow this journal based on the substantial information on creative media arts. I also decided upon this journal because it was a reputable resource. I will post periodic comments on the content of the journal. I will talk about it's ideas and standpoints on media and art.
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