Sunday, April 27, 2008
What did you learn?
-Shawn
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Conceptual Art.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
My Visit To The Crocker Art Museum
Monday, April 14, 2008
Two Worlds Collide
With Aziz Cucher I get a sense that his work is done to exemplify what the end of the lecture was about. Not only are the faces in dystopia not completely recognizable, but they are also distorted in a way that makes them almost ugly or scary looking. I believe that this was done as a type of movement to say that people don’t look the way they look in media…..in person. Basically it seems as if he’s smeared eyes mouths and other sections of the head to make people more uniform. Human is human basically. Ummm, I also believe that Aziz’s work has to do conformity or something like it. Everyone has a mouth eyes and ears, maybe his work has to do with bringing people down to a level that they are all now recognizable as the same life forms?
*Ok, so manipulated digital images. Who isn’t guilty of it in this generation. How many people have you met from mysapce or some other social networking site that actually look the way they do on their page? The answer for me is nearly no one. I believe that this stems from how people naturally interact and want to be perceived. I can say with not much doubt that most people want to be liked (or considered attractive). So when selecting pictures, do they select the pictures where they feel they look the best or worse? In my opinion people want to look good so they’re going to select pictures that they feel they look good in. From there, people with the know how would probably color correct the image which would be a form of digital manipulation and then begin to tweak themselves if they feel it needs it. This is hit basically head on in the lecture in that our examples (magazines, TV etc.) has been polluted with celebrities and people who don’t look how they look in their photo shoots or movies. I guess the sting of it is that newer generations are beginning to think that this is the only way…..they can’t see that it’s fake and thus not real. This is a shame because it’s leading to people seeing themselves as inadequate or not perfect the way they are now. It’s about compromise and if you can’t love yourself the way you are…..in the end your just a conformist. HAVE BIGGER BOOBS, BE SKINNY OR DIE. Basically. It’s a joke and I feel people need to spend less time with this pop culture crap and reality tv, and realize that there is more ways than just the “cool” or popular way. Bottom line these examples put up on tv etc. are changing our society to expect people to look sound and act a certain way. To me this isn’t healthy. All that being said, I’m definetly guilty of some of these things, even envious at times, but I believe that the fact that I can recognize it helps me to sort of break the trend or at least see what’s really going on rather than….OBEY or something of that nature. (sorry, this was my rough draft just to get my ideas out……could be better, my apologies)
Monday, April 7, 2008
My "Favorite" Painting

Hmmm, ok so for my “favorite painting” I decided more on an artist than on an actual painting itself. The painting pictured along with this blog post is actually my favorite of many shown at an exhibit in
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Thomas Kinkade.
However having said all that, I do not believe that Thomas Kinkade is an artist in every sense of the word. Actually I believe the only reason I still consider him to be an artist is because he paints on canvas with a brush and paint….basically he is still producing works of art. Any other medium and it would be a lot easier to discredit his artist-ness (I joke I joke). To me an artist in the truest sense of the word would always do what they wanted how they wanted regardless of how well it sold. THEY WOULD EXPRESS THEMSELVES THROUGH WHATEVER MEDIUM NECESSARY AND NEVER LOOK BACK. Artists are innovators, and Thomas Kinkade is not. Now no one can know what Mr. Kinkade is actually thinking (besides himself), but I would wager to say that after painting hundreds of landscapes and sceneries that I would be relatively bored of painting the same sort of subject with the same sort of style. Translation: The only logical reason he is creating the same thing over and over is because it works (sells). I believe that Professor Pacansky-Brock hit it dead on when she wrote that reviewing history shows us that no artist maintained the same sort of style throughout their entire career.
Which brings me to why Thomas Kinkade is the poster child for the western capitalist mindset. Basically Mr. Kinkade found (or had?) something that people wanted, and found a way to make a bunch of money off of it. Is he a fraud? Yes (selling prints that have paint applied over them?). Is he a sell out in every sense of the word(s)? Yes. The fact that he has leeched his way into becoming a household name for non-educated art collectors is absolutely despicable. Basically what I’m trying to say is that technically Kinkade is an artist, but to me he’s just another crooked executive type that define success by only one thing. MONEY!!!
Friday, February 29, 2008
Analyze That!

-Shawn
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Watch the magic
For this assignment I decided to use an object with complimentary colors (green/red) that could express light differences with the simplest of change. The object used is a mask that I’ve kept since I was a kid (of Raphael from the Ninja Turtles). I placed it in between two boards of a fence and snapped away. The reason I chose to display it on a fence was quite simple. The fence is aged and brown which to me has a more somber or depressing value when held up against a bright animated “toy” that perfectly resembles a child-like feeling (for me the value is different because than most because I remember playing with anything and everything Ninja Turtles).
The first picture was taken at approximately
The second picture was taken around
My favorite word for the first picture would be sterile because to me the picture has more cool colors and leaves me feeling stagnant, without a connection to my past. I guess this wouldn't make sense to most since my value of the mask is obviously different from yours. My favorite word for the second picture would be synchronicity because it resonates a youthful memory within a mature (real) setting.….it fills the void that separates me from adult to child.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Line & Space.
Monday, February 4, 2008
Controversial Art
Would the world be a better place if all art conformed to predetermined standards? Absolutely not. If this happened all art would end up looking and feeling the same for the most part (if not immediately, then soon after). Art to me is about completely free expression. The minute you start putting rules on art, it is no longer your work of art. From there it becomes art that you made, but with restrictions placed by others. This doesn't mean that if someone tells you to paint a tree that it is no longer your art. But if someone says that the trees leaves must be green, then they've just taken away your perspective, or YOUR art. I believe that conforming art to predetermined standards is almost impossible, it just depends on how obscure you want to go. For instance if you said all paintings must be done on solid objects, that would cover your majority of paintings, but not all. Either way I would never agree with this communist way of thinking.
From this weeks content I've actually learned a lot about myself. I like to consider myself an artist even though the only "artsy" things I really do are make music and photoshop now and again. That being said I like a lot of things that other people don't. I've always enjoyed viewing art and being the one that thinks that basically everything (in life that someone does) is art. However I did find myself a bit uncomfortable with some of the Maplethorpe work. Now I am not homophobic nor do I really have a problem with nudity, but seeing this did evoke some prehensile notion that it was "not good to look at the genetaliea." I believe that this has to do with one's outlook on society and personal insecurities, but when I saw those images I can't say that my first instinct was to not look at the genitals.
-Shawn
Monday, January 28, 2008
Week 2 Reflections
I enjoyed chapter 1 learning about artisits that I had never heard before and enjoyed learning the terms to use when critiquing art in chapter 2. I think something that a lot of people enjoy getting out of this class is the combined intrest in learning about technology and art at the same time. Professor Packansky-Brock does a great job at integrating the two and basically forcing us to dive in head first......I was resistant at first but now I'm totally embracing how well the technology is integrated into this class, it's great!
Also most everything is making sense.....I also really like the book that has been selected for this course. One of the better that I've had out of my 2 years with Sierra College.
-Shawn
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Getting Critical About Art

For this assignment I've decided to analyze Andy Warhol's Race Riot. This piece was created with acrylics on four panels of canvas utilizing the silk screen process. It has been put together in the classic Warhol style of one picture repeated a total of four times, two by two. The picture depicted is one from 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama of civil rights demonstrators being attacked by police. According to the book, police commissioner Bull Connor used attack dogs and fire hoses against these peaceful demonstrators.
This work of art has been divided into four identical but separate pictures. Each picture (with the exception of two) have been colored differently. The top two are white (black and white) and blue (think black and white but with blue instead of white). The bottom two however are red (once again think black and white with red instead of white). In the picture you see two male officers (both Caucasian) with dogs on leashes that are attacking an African American man. The man is running away while in the background you see a line of other African American demonstrators. The pictures are all fairly grainy and look a bit aged. They also have a hint of overexposure.
In each picture there are four vital, visual aspects. The first is how the man running away seems helpless. He looks like an older man. The second is the facial expression of the police officers. The first looks full of hate as he instructs the dog to attack the running man. The third vital visual aspect would be the actual colors themselves. To me it looks like they have been arranged in a way that communicates discrimination while showing diversity. On the top you have white and blue equally separated. However on the bottom you have twice as much blue and white represented in the color of red. Red could communicate simply a different color dominating the other two, or could also possibly communicate evil or hate. From my point of view, the white and blue pictures represent a livable environment and the pictures look more lacks, where as the red looks almost evil and dark.
To me this question asks whether or not America was correct in a time when discrimination was allowed. Although this work was produced during the same time the picture was actually taken, I think it serves as a snapshot back into what we were and where we've come from. It also represent growth to me. America becomes more and more diversified day by day with different nationalities mixing all the time.

