Everyday Small Acts of Inclusion
Friday, November 19, 2010
Saturday, October 16, 2010
My Superman Remix Mash Project
This is the final cut (for now) of my Superman remix mash project. The clips come from an old WW II animated series, The Fifties TV series, The Adventures of Superman, and Superman Returns trailer. I wanted to tell the story of superman in a visual and audible, dynamically powerful way. I mean he is the man of steel. I wanted to have fun, too, technically manipulating the visuals to match the beat of the music background. The background music is from an old audio cassette I digitized and remixed. I used parts of two songs called, All I Got Is Rage, and I Am the Head and Not the Tail. They were written and performed by a band titled Paga.The band are old friends, they were never contracted or signed, so I believe they would not mind me using it
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
Sunday, September 19, 2010
The Evolution of Relational Perception and New Media
Society as a whole is acclimating itself to light speed relational interconnection through constantly evolving communication technologies. Social networking through Facebook, blogs, forums, and Twitter are happening over indiscriminate distances in real time via Smartphones, computers, internet connections, and satellites worldwide. The center of the evolution in relational perception is New Media. It is the digitized world of video and audio bits which give each user the perception of being a part of each other’s reality and world. This virtual reality has become the means one uses to continue personal relational connectedness without being in the actual presence of the other individual. The perception of the work of art in the light of mechanical reproduction, the subject of a paper by Walter Benjamin, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (1936), thoughtfully addresses how new advances in the use of photography and film, in his own day, were already changing the perceptions of art, society, and challenging its traditions.
He predicted that due to the ease of access to art in audio and visual media by the common masses, with minimal effort, revolutionary demands would formulate in the politics of art. New media would threaten the “basis in ritual and the original use value”. Ostensibly the work of art becomes a creation with entirely new functions. Painting in itself is limited to the perception of the individual artist only giving an overall image of that seen through his eyes. This can only give a semblance due to the limitation of the media, its function was to communicate what the artist saw through replication. Benjamin, points out that film and audio are able to bring the artist’s audience deeper into the reality of the artwork without their actual perception of the artist’s tools and work, film transports you beyond the camera into the reality. The perception given by a Skype call on your Mac laptop through streaming live video is that, you are there, with the other person, even more so than a cell phone( even some newer cells phones have video cams that can do this). New Media has changed the ordinary man’s perception of artistic function. Our electronic devices are the constant connection we have to art like never before, with IPods archiving hundreds of thousands of musical selections art has taken on a new perceived function. We can be entertained uninterrupted by outside distraction from the “real world” anywhere we want, whenever we want.
Benjamin’s conclusion concerning the availability of art to the masses would eventually change the criterion on which art would be judged. Everyman would become the basis for critical evaluation of new media; no longer would there be use for the expert. This has its emergence in the public creation of video on sites such as YouTube. Artists are able to post their work in an unbelievably huge art gallery to an audience limited only by its access to the worldwide web. Now the critics are everyone who visits their site and views. There are those works that held no value to the expert critic that became instant hits with all the viewers on You Tube. The Numma Numma guy lip sang himself into celebrity status with a song performed by an Eastern European band of little notoriety, until he made a video with their audio track.
The question becomes, with societies’ perception of art, its availability, and its function being radically altered by new generations of social networking on constantly evolving electronic devices, what will the social superstructure and its perception of art become in the near future, and how will it change the way each of us perceive one another and the reality around us?
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Is it art because," I say it is"?
This week I have been checking out a new (to me, not to the art world) area of creative expression and art theory called Neo-Dadaism ( audio and visual modern art with similarities to earlier Dada artworks ) Fluxus, Pop Art, and Nouveau realisme, would fit into this category. It was a movement in modern art during the 60's that continues today expressed through new media art shows and on the internet. There was some early criticism of the genre, that it was not really art, because it was too common and vulgar. One artist when asked why she thought her work could be considered art said," because I say that it is"! Historically, if one looks at the earliest forms of art, cave paintings, native folk art, and deity sculptures, hieroglyphs, music, or decorated pottery each person was not necessarily trying to create a work of art, although we might consider them so today, they were just expressing themselves visually or audibly to communicate to others in some way, and create a lasting record of their personal experiences, emotions, and perspective. This form of artistic expression gets right down to the raw everyday for us. The Facebook generation, blogging, audio/visual journalism, You Tube, these are all modern day extensions of a primal need humans have to let others know their feelings, experiences, perpectives, and express themselves artistically in a common everyday way. New Media art is art because 'everybody' is saying it is so.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
My son Josiah is part of entertaining artist forum and posts regularly to DeviantArt. My daughter Sharon blogs on The Field Barn. These are two of my favorite artistic forums to look over when I need inspiration.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Monday, August 30, 2010
The Great Adventure
I have not added to this blog for some time. Duh, not many have noticed this especially since you weren't seeing anything posted you probably stopped looking. Well that is going to stop and I am going to start regularly posting all my creative thoughts, art, designs, and the such like. For anyone's information I had a brain tumor removed last May, and I am doing wonderfully now...
for anyone's information I had a brain tumor removed last May, whoops did I already...? Just kidding folks, a little humor to lighten the seriousness. It is true, I am not kidding about the tumor.
I am turning over a new leaf on this blog. Previously I just wrote whatever silly notion "POPPED INTO MY NOGGIN" now it's going to get worse cuz I'm adding illustrations, journals, pictures, video, and audio bits! Whoo-hoo! Oh, hey!By the way, I just found out I made the Ernestine Raclin School of Fine Arts Dean's List last spring semester, No, still not kidding, I know, I am shamefully bragging for all my kids to see who are in college. Good luck, guys, "boiler up"!
for anyone's information I had a brain tumor removed last May, whoops did I already...? Just kidding folks, a little humor to lighten the seriousness. It is true, I am not kidding about the tumor.
I am turning over a new leaf on this blog. Previously I just wrote whatever silly notion "POPPED INTO MY NOGGIN" now it's going to get worse cuz I'm adding illustrations, journals, pictures, video, and audio bits! Whoo-hoo! Oh, hey!By the way, I just found out I made the Ernestine Raclin School of Fine Arts Dean's List last spring semester, No, still not kidding, I know, I am shamefully bragging for all my kids to see who are in college. Good luck, guys, "boiler up"!
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