Thursday, April 26, 2012

Toys-To-Tech Final

"Toys To Tech"

I began this project by searching for pictures regarding technology and toys depicting technology.  I found two pictures of flickr.com; one of a laptop and the other, a laptop made of Lego's.  I manipulated each image so they were both identical in size, and then began blending the two images together.  These two images together are meant to represent how as a child is given toys that represent technological items or devices that are relevant to daily interactions for adults.  It's as if we are preparing children for what they will encounter in the future.  I decided that this would be an appropriate and interesting depiction of how children are inundated with items as a child that will grow to a greater importance as an adult.

-Robert Ervin

Toys-To-Tech

I'm probably not going to continue this, but it's all I had at the moment.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Assignment #2 Proposal

I believe that I would like to create a piece that incorporates old photos of people using technology familiar to the time period and incorporate a more contemporary form of the technology to express change over time.  I plan to use pictures that are found in public domain so that I will have no issues with copyrights, and the artists that influenced my concept is John Heartfield and Barbara Kruger.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Copyrights & Art Summary

In the article "Copyrights & Art," Sharon McHugh talks about different forms of copyrighted material as well as information and guidelines regarding each form of copyrighted material.  The different forms of copyrighted material include freeware, which is material or photographs that are copyrighted but are offered for free under certain stipulations;  also, another form is actual copyrighted material for which you will have pay a fee, often being over $100; and lastly, another form is material considered to be within the public domain, which is material that is not copyrighted, free and results in much more creative work by the artist.  McHugh seems to be urging others to use material in the public domain so that they may avoid costliness of their work as well as any legality issues that may come up in the process of the piece or even after the piece has been completed and viewed.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Assignment 1: "Untitled" (Final)


"Untitled"
Assignment 1

I began this piece by uploading 25 pictures of places and things I interact with on a daily basis.  I placed them in separate layers according to their importance or relevance to my every day life.  Then I began to alter each photo's opacity and fill along with the use of layer masks to create a landscape, in which I portray a very vital part of who I am.  Being a Capricorn, I am bound to earthy ideas and actions which keep me in what some would consider a grounded reality.  This is why I chose to create a landscape that is somewhat generic, but original to the relevance to myself.  

My composition is intended to make the viewer feel at ease, but also confused or inquisitive.  The ease is portrayed by the sheer captivation of the landscape, and the confusion and inquisitiveness is represented by the fog separating the viewer from some of the visual aspects of the work that they may be able to see otherwise.  The piece also portrays who I am, who I want to be, and parts of me I'm working to improve, which in totality shows my pride, my struggle for self-improvement, and my final goal of who I want to become.  This goal is to be the best I can be while being flexible to others and my surroundings, while attaining true happiness within myself and my environment.

               -Robert Ervin

Monday, April 9, 2012

George Rush's Opening Reception: "Darker with the Day"

In Pearl Conard Art Gallery, George Rush's exhibition, "Darker with the Day," was composed of five recent works.  George Rush's work expresses trait that are correspondent to the Romantic style and time period and works similar to that of Caspar David Friedrich. 

The exhibition showed five paintings in all; three being interior sill life, which shows tables, chairs, dairy jugs and various other containers, and the other two being paintings of windows, which shows either curtains or abstract forms of what lies beyond or inside the glass.  Each work was placed on a wall that had been painted grey and darker grey lines representing what seemed to be tree branches of sorts winding and spreading across the wall where the piece was hung. 

The two paintings of windows were placed on two corresponding walls, so that it felt as if you were still looking through or looking at the same window, but from a different vantage point.  All five pieces were done in grey scale and painted in oil based acrylics on canvas.  The pieces represented accurate forms, a wide array of line types and styles and it was visible that the paint was applied moderately throughout the entire piece so that the viewer can see the medium that was used for the works.  The exhibition works well the the pieces, because you have several different options of how to view the concept that Rush is trying to point out, which is that the views of the "outside" that are inside are more abstract, while the actual windows in the gallery act as a more realistic view of what lies beyond, or inside the glass.

The meaning of the work is that it was intended to give the viewer different options for viewpoints of the outside or inside depending on how you see the window or the space.  It makes the viewer sense that the windows are no longer on a flat canvas, but are more tangible.  Because the paintings of the windows are placed on corresponding walls, the viewer feels as if it is the same window and the canvas and wall are no longer a wall but both act together as a window through to different spaces.  Behind these works is a grey wall with dark grey lines representing what seem to tree branches or some sort of natural or abstract form of nature, so regardless if the view is into a still life or into a dark window, there is some sort of feeling of the outdoors that dominates the viewers surrounding.  Another significant factor is light; where the light comes from, how it reflects of other objects to make other objects more visible.  Light makes the painting visible, just as light makes everything visible, and without it there would be nothing, so Rush experiments with the ideas of light sources and how light brings things into reality.

1.) What was the significance of the items you chose to paint on the table in your still life works?
2.) Is there any reason why there were two painting of windows and three still life works?  Why?
3.) What does the negative space within the one window represent, if anything?


Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Optimism

-Optimism

Pessimism

-Pessimism

Christiane Paul Digital Art

Charles Csuri - an American artist who used digital image creation and output to create landscapes in more of a dynamic mathematical style that people can relate to abstraction.
              - This stood out to me because the form of digital work is characterized as the beginning of such media.

Lillian Schwartz - an artist who used other works of art by well known artists such as Matisse, Picasso and DaVinci on a computer to break them down to basic compositional elements to get an in depth analysis of the works.
              - This stood out to because I find in interesting that Schwartz isn't satisfied by the finished products, but wants to break them down into their most basic compositional attributes.

Robert Rauschenberg - and artist who used digital image manipulation to create collages, which erase the original boundaries of photos, paintings and other works to create a new space in which several aspects of several pieces interact with one another to create new ideas or meanings.
              - This artist stands out to me because I like how her appropriates works and cuts them apart to create something new out of found materials to express something that is crucial to himself.