Sunday, November 2, 2008
Documentary Production List
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Documentary: 1st Draft
What is the significance of a fountain? Do fountains merely serve as space fillers, or are they more meaningful? And if so, why and how are they meaningful?
In today’s world, the definition of art is very broad, difficult to determine and inconsistent. People share different definitions of it and many disagree about what constitutes a work of art. The viewer of a work may deem it of artistic caliber if it is aesthetically pleasing and if it evokes emotion, or involves deeper meaning. A structure that fulfills both these requirements is the fountain. Although to some, a fountain is just simply a piece of landscape decoration, truly it functions as something much more. A fountain is a piece of artwork, because of its contents.
The main element of a fountain is water. The placement and movement of the water in fountains may differ, yet the factor it brings is almost always the same. Water has always had a calming and comforting affect of the human mind. Moving water is even more appealing to the human senses. The sound, look, touch and even smell of rippling, cascading, rushing, dripping water has a powerful affect on human beings. The sound of moving water is a popular and effective means of calming infants, many people own waterfalls or mini fountains in their homes, to add a sense of Zen-like tranquility to their spaces. Fountains enable their visitors to experience the delight and peace of flowing water. The appearance of water not only provides beauty, it produces reflection. It is a known fact that water is a reflective substance, and the presence of reflection is powerful in of itself. Fountains capture this characteristic of water seamlessly as they create reflections of the world around them and their visitors.
Fountains are ever changing, because the appearance of their contents, water, mirrors the world around it. This reflecting ability of fountains makes them intriguing and appealing to look at. "...Happy in all that ragged, loose collapse of water, the fountain, its effortless descent and flatteries of spray... "
Richard Wilbur "A baroque wall fountain in the Villa Sciarra" “Look within. Within is the fountain of good, and it will ever bubble up, if thou wilt ever dig.”-Marcus Aurelius. This quote describes this reflective ability of fountains on a deeper level. The presence of reflection provokes a visitor to look within themselves. A fountain’s pool mirrors the image of its viewers and while doing so creates an atmosphere for inner reflection and meditation.
Fountains are meaningful pieces of art, for they provide reflection on two levels. Primarily a fountain’s contents mirror the images present around them, yet through their peaceful and powerful element, they induce their viewers to reflect inwardly at the images present inside themselves.
IMAGES:
-photos of fountains:
-Frick Fine Arts
-Cathedral?
-Carnegie Museum
-Point Park?
-sounds:
-record rushing water
-voiceover: myself reading my “script”
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Peasant Shoes by Vincent van Gogh
The piece of artwork “Peasant Shoes”, painted by the famous Vincent van Gogh, depicts a pair of shoes that belong to a person of the lower class. The state of the shoes suggests that this is a person who works very hard and has little money. Yet, the manner in which the painting is created is also critical to its meaning.
Van Gogh has used short, messy brushstrokes to give the painting a feeling of movement and of life. Van Gogh’s presence as the artist and creator of the piece is apparent each stroke of the brush can be seen, especially in the background. The colors he uses are also very significant. Van Gogh chooses rustic and earthy tones to render the image, therefore supporting the theme of peasantry and a rustic, simple lifestyle.
Through the rendering of this image, Van Gogh creates a backdrop into a realistic life of a hardworking peasant. The viewer receives a dynamic picture of every hardship and toil the wearer of the shoe has experienced. The wear and tear of the boots is significant, because it corresponds to the wear and tear of the peasant. The viewer can be connected to the peasant through the object of his shoes, a valuable, personal piece of the person.
The image Van Gogh has created is quite realistic; the shoes he has painted look very similar to actual, real boots in which a peasant would have worn. Yet, this painting is more than simply a reproduction of the real thing. Van Gogh has added his own feelings towards the poor community and the viewer adds their own interpretation to the piece as well.
Diamond Dust Shoes by Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol’s “Diamond Dust Shoes” is produced in an intriguing way, a way which enables the viewer to understand the painting critically. Andy Warhol uses a photograph of women’s shoes, then silk-screens them on to canvas, painting over with polymer paint, and lastly he covers the surface with “diamond dust”. Warhol combines the everyday, cheap, commercial way of production, silk screening, with the fantastical, expensive, rare “diamond dust” coating. Warhol blows a negative black and white image of women’s shoes, a tribute to his past, onto his canvas, then saturates his image with black and colored polymer and acrylic paint, through the silk screening process. This method of engendering the image comes from Warhol’s days in advertising and his love for fashion.
The silk screening process is one mainly used to transfer an image onto t-shirts and fabric. It creates an image that is easily remade and very inexpensive to create, a prime example of mass-reproduction. This is also a form of creation that separates the artist from their piece it transforms the artist into a manufacturer. This is the type of relationship Warhol promoted in his works, he wished to be “a machine” and subtract his own human presence from the art. Therefore, “Diamond Dust Shoes” expresses these two ideas of mass-reproduction and disassociation with the artist, through being a silk screen. Yet, Warhol then adds his own glamorous touch to the piece, by dusting it with glass shavings, or “diamond dust”. In a sense this transforms the piece into a self-portrait, a combination of commercialism and the manufactured with a glitzy, larger-than-life touch, a perfect image of Warhol himself.
Monday, September 22, 2008
Methodology/Interpretation:Barthes and Gander
In Barthes’s piece, “From Work to Text”, he describes the definition of text in many ways. One distinct way in which he describes text is by portraying text as a process of demonstration, a dynamic expression. Barthes creates an image of text in which the meaning is found through the progress, rather than in the result. This idea can also be linked to the work of the London-based, conceptual artist, Ryan Gander. As an artist, Gander focuses on the thought and idea behind each of his pieces, and the process of making his art, rather than the end products he forms. The meaning of the piece comes from each step and sequential action Gander takes in bringing to life his intended idea. A very clear and strong example of this method can be found in Gander’s Alchemy Boxes. These consist of wooden boxes, which Gander has constructed, and inside each are the placed the ingredients, or materials of a work of art. Then beside the box is placed a plaque, which describes the contents pf each box. These works of art emphasize the materials and steps of the process in which an artist takes part in to create a piece of work. Gander has created toolkits for art, in which each box holds the complete and broken down experience of the creation of a piece of artwork.
Gander’s Alchemy Boxes give voice to his emphasis on the demonstration over the display. This is the same emphasis in which Barthes upholds. It is the concept that the intention, idea and thoughts behind art are what give it is meaning and each stage in the formation of a piece is significant and valuable.
