Sunday, November 23, 2008

Sunday post 11/23/2008

Doug Aitken
- Artist Biography and brief explanation of work (can use quotes from critics or galleries)

Doug Aitken's complex multi media installations address the elaborate inter-relationships between man, media, industry and landscape and the nature and perception of time. The viewer's experience of his installations is as much a process of discovery as the making of the pieces was for the artist. Aitken draws us in as the narratives reveal themselves in intricate spirals in which the viewer is forced to actively engage, both physically by passing through the exhibition space to see the various projections and mentally as the multiple images prevent a single linear interpretation.
- 4 images and / or video/sound clips of artwork






- a link to an interview with the artist or a review
http://www.indexmagazine.com/interviews/werner_herzog.shtml
- link to gallery representing artist
www.303gallery.com
- artist website
http://www.dougaitkenworkshop.com/

Friday, November 21, 2008

Reggie Watts: Out Of Control

Thursday post 11/20/08 Thoughts of interest – Week in review

* Did anyone critique your work this week? If so, what were their impressions?
I had a meeting with Sonali this week and we took a look at what I've been testing out which is applying jumpcuts instead of disolves in my work. Its not working. Jumpcuts become too abrasive to the body which isn't what I am looking for which is a more meditative feeling. I feel like meditative is the wrong word for what I want to convey but I feel the act of shaving is a meditative action. It's just that at the end, the meditation is no no avail.
* What was the most motivational or creative moment of the past week?
Going to see the scanner lecture. He is the man who composed sound for Steve McQueen's Gravesend. It was a great lecture.
* What do you want to achieve in next week's studio practice?
Shoot one more run through on the shaving bit and edit edit edit
* What did you achieve in your studio this past week?
I found a new way to play with footage that is totally usless to me right now. Other than that just editing up a storm, assisting others. Appplying to the VMFA and other stuff.
* What has been an artistic failure this week?
Being really strapped for time, so much that the stress began to overshadow everything.
* What was the most profound thought in relation to your practice this week?
Happy people make better classmates, better classmates make more productive artist.
* If there was a visiting artist this week, what is your impression of their work and process in relation to your own?
NA
- Post 1 picture, video, etc. of your choice

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Complete

Paul Thulin has read your blog up to this point/entry. Your blog is currently up to date and complete.

for Paul


Alexander Brener....

Sunday post 11/16/2008

1. Sunday Entry: Bruce Nauman

Highlight an artist of interest that relates to your work. Provide the following information:

- Artist Biography and brief explanation of work (can use quotes from critics or galleries)
Born in 1941 in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Bruce Nauman has been recognized since the early 1970s as one of the most innovative and provocative of America’s contemporary artists. Nauman finds inspiration in the activities, speech, and materials of everyday life. Confronted with “What to do?” in his studio soon after graduating from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1964 with a BFA, and then the University of California, Davis in 1966 with an MFA, Nauman had the simple but profound realization that “If I was an artist and I was in the studio, then whatever I was doing in the studio must be art. At this point art became more of an activity and less of a product.” Working in the diverse mediums of sculpture, video, film, printmaking, performance, and installation, Nauman concentrates less on the development of a characteristic style and more on the way in which a process or activity can transform or become a work of art. A survey of his diverse output demonstrates the alternately political, prosaic, spiritual, and crass methods by which Nauman examines life in all its gory details, mapping the human arc between life and death. The text from an early neon work proclaims: “The true artist helps the world by revealing mystic truths.” Whether or not we—or even Nauman—agree with this statement, the underlying subtext of the piece emphasizes the way in which the audience, artist, and culture at large are involved in the resonance a work of art will ultimately have. Nauman lives in New Mexico.
- 4 images and / or video/sound clips of artwork






- a link to an interview with the artist or a review
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/nauman/clip1.html
- link to gallery representing artist
http://www.speronewestwater.com/cgi-bin/iowa/index.html
- artist website

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Thursday post 11/13/08

* Did anyone critique your work this week? If so, what were their impressions?
Stephen Vitello did. He thought my sound was interesting and engaging- as it pulled and eluded at his attention. The two images he wished were separated. He found the pairing good and found the tension between the two good but we agreed that subtly trying to engergizing both sides a little more might be a good thing. Drew a comparison to Bruce nauman. On the whole he brought up similar but very different concerns and most of all different reads. His sound system is better and let my soundtrack really come through.

* What was the most motivational or creative moment of the past week?
Listening to the binaural recording I made of a midnight parade on election night.
* What do you want to achieve in next week's studio practice?
Figure out all the FINAL CUT export problems and have something that looks even better….oh yeah and shot some more…..and edit….anything else? Maybe. Just feel productive.
* What did you achieve in your studio this past week?
Re shot new sequence in video successfully tried to edit based on a suggestion- jumpcuts instead of smooth transitions.

* What has been an artistic failure this week?
1.Jumpcuts didn’t work the way I feel they should with the piece.
2. Computer can’t handel all of this

* What was the most profound thought in relation to your practice this week?
Finished Election night piece.

* If there was a visiting artist this week, what is your impression of their work and process in relation to your own?
NA
- Post 1 picture, video, etc. of your choice

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Sunday post 11/09/2008

Sanford Biggers

- Artist Biography and brief explanation of work (can use quotes from critics or galleries)

A native of Los angeles, California and a resident of New York, Sanford Biggers creates multi-disciplinary artworks that integrate film/video installation, sculpture, music and performance. Influenced by his experiences living throughout the United States, Europe and Japan, and by Buddhism, hip-hop and urban culture, Biggers’ work is known for its combination of meditative rigor and improvisatory edge.

Sanford Biggers’ installations, videos, and performances have appeared in venues worldwide including the Tate Modern, London, Whitney Museum, New York, Studio Museum, Harlem, and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, as well as institutions in China, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Poland and Russia. He has had solo exhibitions at Grand Arts, Kansas City, Mary Goldman Gallery, Los Angeles, Triple Candie, New York, Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, Matrix/Univ.of Berkeley Museum, Berkeley, and Zamek Ujazdowski, Warsaw. He is the recipient of awards and grants from the Creative Capital Foundation, New York Percent for the Arts, Lambent Fellowship in the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, Tanne Foundation, and the Rema Hort Mann Foundation, among others.

Biggers is presently an Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Expanded Media at Virginia Commonwealth University, and is represented by Mary Goldman Gallery, Los Angeles.

- 4 images and / or video/sound clips of artwork






- a link to an interview with the artist or a review
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1248/is_1_93/ai_n8591035/pg_1

- link to gallery representing artist
http://mariangoodman.com/mg/nyc.html

- artist website
http://www.sanfordbiggers.com

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Thursday post 11/06/08



* Did anyone critique your work this week? If so, what were their impressions?
no
* What was the most motivational or creative moment of the past week?
It would seem that an election that sends millions of people into the streets may qualify
* What do you want to achieve in next week's studio practice?
More work- more shooting-get feedback-start th cycle over again until I get it right.
* What did you achieve in your studio this past week?
New footage for present project, new sound for new project
* What has been an artistic failure this week?
John McCain
* What was the most profound thought in relation to your practice this week?
that I just need to concentrate on making this one thing better.
* If there was a visiting artist this week, what is your impression of their work and process in relation to your own?
NA
- Post 1 picture, video, etc. of your choice

new documentation




Production shots from the new and improved video

Grad Research Artist Statement and New Semester Work Documentation

My art practice is rooted in the concept of perpetual human struggle. By staging performative actions that give rise to issues of repetitive, restless tasking without distinct resolution, I attempt to use my body as a metaphor to explore the emotional alienation and struggle that occurs in every day life.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Pitts Grad Research Assignment: Discussion Questions on Article or Essay



How does shock art get reinterpreted by those who once championed it?
It seems that shock art is very much the haven for the young, but not always...But it does seems like the way that young people gravitate to it and older people tend to gravitate away from it as it becomes childish or passe. Does this mean shock art is not dead? It seems that as long as there is an established hireaarchy of anything shock will be viable. Of course the method and the execution will still always be critiqued, but as Bremer illustrated-you don't have to call it art for it to be shocking.

In a secondary realm, the discussion of consent and context seems like just a convienent way of justifying the punked nature of being called over the hill. Is there anytime that under the justification of shock art one can say off limits, or "just not now?"
I feel that if shock is where your heart is that no moment is off limit, no subject to shy away from. It is an oppositional attitude to take but it has its place in time and uses as Barhtes would say to disorganize and to destroy. Everything deserves to get shaken up.

Pitts Grad Research Assignment: Discussion Questions on Article or Essay

In the conversation between Doug Aitken and Robert Altman they discuss the concept of collaberation or at least what goes into making one of his films since he is a larger budget film maker. I am interested in at what point a project becomes a point of us/our and mine. It seems like there are a lot of people who get lots of credit for movies, films and art in general where they may not be the "creative force behind" the bang or the zing of the final project. But at the same time they may have been the one who thought of the idea with out which the house falls apart. Is it simply a parlayance of the word "collaboration" when two artist mutually agree to try out a partnership? I think that perhapse a simple acknolwledgement is enough. Or perhapse a creation of a collaborative name or collective so that the individual names become secondary to the work created or the aims of the project.

Later in that same conversation Robert Altman talks about the concept of improvasation in perticular dialog. He says he is not overly concerned with what the characters are saying with specific words rather what they are saying more interms of conveying atmosphere. Do you think a geneal audience of art seekes are more inclined to think along these lines with mediums such as painting and sculpture than with say film, video or sound? I feel like with sound art that often times confronts language or subverts language it is very hard for many listeners to fully invest in projects that deviate from the standard listening practice. Video and film, especially in the exerimental realm is very hard to grasp. But when either separately or together attempt to define or shape an emotion, or emotional space, the spectators have the same sort of hurdle to hop as there are two elements that they aren't used to justifying. The run of the mill western art lover has a hard time justifying anything frivolous. Frivolity seems to be attached to art except when an established authority has spoken for it. So that your Michelangelo's and Cezanne's are perfectly legitament for people to justify a little time, but to sit in a dark space and watch projections of the sunlight reflected off of glass structures whith a soundtrack meant for calm and meditation is harder to sit through. Robert altman points out that being able to experince a thing first hand is the most visceral of experinces so it makes it doubly hard when the aim is to take a primary experience, say of light reflecting, and then bring it inside where it can be then expereinces for the first time with the inclusion of sound and have people sit with it. What is it about the inabilty to concentrate and therefore contemplate the here and now that people get frustrated by having to sit through something new? Looking for something new is all I ever want to find.

Aitken, Doug. Broken screen expanding the image, breaking the narrative 26 conversations with doug aitkin. New York, NY: D.A.P/ Distributed Art, Inc., 2006. 26-37.

Sunday post 11/01/2008

Name-
Björn Melhus
Bio-
Born in 1966 in Germany; '85-'86 Filmschule, Stuttgart; '85-'87 Adolf-Lazi-Schule, private professional college for photography and audiovision, Stuttgart; '88 free art at the Hochschule der Bildenden Künste, Braunschweig; works mainly in film, video and video installations; lives in Berlin.
- 4 images and / or video/sound clips of artwork





- a link to an interview with the artist or a review
http://jemly-thesisproto.blogspot.com/2007_02_01_archive.html
- link to gallery representing artist
Galerie Anita Beckers: www.galerie-beckers.de
- artist website
http://www.melhus.de/