Sunday, February 28, 2010
fooooood
Oh, and the food was amazing of course - specifically the fries with black truffle salt (yum!)
And then this morning, I visited The Duck and the Bunny - a snuggery. They must have taken some notes from our class since I found a few emulations:
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Michael Yanagisawa - Imitation
Olivia Fagon
I'm unable to load my imitation but I chose Goya's Saturn Devouring Child. This is one of my favorite painting, but it was extremely difficult to reproduce. The application of the paint was so gestural that recreating it with a pencil proved difficult. I tried however. I am not a fan of art reproductions, but I understand the value of trying to recreate an artist's piece of work. But that would exercise would have much more to with the process rather than the final product, which is just a copy. Goya's piece speaks to Benjamin's idea of aura, a quality original art has from the immediacy it's given through the context that its created in. It would be almost impossible to truly recreate Goya's Saturn because so much it stems from unstable mental state, which we see translated through color choice, and rough grotesque gestures with the paint brush. There is a uniqueness, an 'authenticity' as Benjamin describes that can not be reproduced.
5-Elsa Obus-Translation, Imitation, Emulation
06. Megan Estes. Imitation.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
04 - Chris Tyler: SIMULACRUM (?)
Carel Weight imitation
Lucy Schultz- Imitation
5. Daniel Ton - Imitation
6 - Jonah Kagan: I'm it, @ ion
Reading Benjamin's essay made me consider the place of artwork like Wilson's. Copying it gave me a sense of just how much effort and precision actually goes into a piece like this. But its purpose is to announce a concert - it is a medium designed to convey information to the viewer. However, this particular concert came and went, yet the poster is what people remembered. Even though this poster was mechanically reproduced at the time, it is now considered a more pure form of art. Is it just time that separates the two? Why aren't we grabbing posters off building walls and keeping them for ourselves? Surely someday some misguided student will think its a good idea to try to copy one of them...
Anyway, here's my dose of psychedelic for the day:
5. Dan Cary- Imitation
For my
5. Kat Yang - Emulation/Imitation
I decided to make a younger, more clean-shaven version of Paul-Eugene. Those whiskies are pretty daunting.
Allison Barker - Vermeer Copy
Monday, February 22, 2010
5. Rachel Borders: Art Changes, therefore I will Change a Piece of Art
The one phrase that really stuck out to me in Walter Benjamin's essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction was "The uniqueness of a work of art is inseparable from its being imbedded in the fabric of tradition. This tradition itself is thoroughly alive and extremely changeable" (IV). Although it has little to do with my recreation, I think that it speaks very true to the nature of art. Art has changed over the years and what people find to be art naturally has changed with it. Art is alive. And I think the nature of art is its ability to morph with time because if it didn't it would become irrelevant. Art could be considered on of the world’s oldest traditions.
For my reproduction I told a picture copy of a spread of the 2003 Vogue featuring Cameron Diaz (for all you fans out there). My goal is not just to recreate the picture of Diaz, but the whole spread as if I have copied a two-page spread of a magazine. So hopefully my final image will look like the image I have inserted above, but with a few changes. If all goes well it will be a commentary on Western Cultures idealized version of beauty. There will probably be some word changing and other surprises. I guess you will just have to wait to see.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Dan Cary - Live action animation without rotoscoping
I starting trying to make this effect a week or two into the semester. It's really started to come along and is now resembling something that's pretty cool. I used junky footage of my suitemate Jon (I actually just walked over with an old digital camera while he was working on a song) which is why the lighting is so bad. With good lighting, a good camera, and possibly a green screen, I think I can put together a really cool effect. The bad lighting leads to reflections which is why the face isn't well defined.
I plan on using this for my final project combined with still frames so people walk up to what appears to be a painting and it the person it's of moves every once in a while before becoming a painting again.
4. Challah "holla" Bread
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Do you Like Green Eggs and Ham?
Monday, February 15, 2010
Gourmet or Grotesque? A Gluttonous Explosion of the Conventional Chocolate Chip Cookie
VISA0100 Cooking Project
Group: Lucy S, Lucy BC, Chris, and Allison
Title:
Abstract:
We conducted this experiment in order to better understand the idea of the monster cookie; a cookie made up of so many different delicious foods, that it may or may not actually be appetizing. Having concocted a basic cookie batter, we went on to add ingredient after ingredient, which though they individually encompass deliciousness, combined together to become an inevitably disgusting monsterous cookie. Our experiment resulted in 44 small cookies made at the time each ingredient was added, and a monster cookie made up of 4 different batters. In the end, we found that these exaggerated "garbage cookies" were nothing short of, well, garbage.
Introduction:
This project was born of the idea of a monster cookie, of sensory confusion surrounding food. It is common to hear, “Believe me, I know it looks gross but it tastes really good!”, or “eww it looks better than it tastes” as we often ignore smell or sight in favor of taste or our misguided when we try to do the opposite. For this project we wanted to push the idea of monster cookie (inspired by Meeting Street), to look for the place where appetizing becomes disgusting. We went through many different thoughts, considered making “spring cleaning” cookies which questioned the idea of age of food by adding all sorts of contradictory cues in the form of conflicting holiday candies like candy corn ostensibly from Halloween with peeps from Easter and Hanukkah gummies. Or a break-up cake which we would dramatically drop a beautiful cake on the floor. We ultimately settled on the theme of evolution and family tree to explore these issues. We wanted to start with all of the same ingredients, have the same palette and then let ourselves loose with the batter, taking a cookie “snapshot” at each step along the way to document the mutant cookie strains.
Materials and Methods
Gather 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, 1 tsp. baking soda, 1 tsp. salt, 1 cup (2 sticks) butter (softened), 3/4 cup granulated sugar, 3/4 cup packed brown sugar, 1 tsp. vanilla extract, and 2 large eggs. Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees F. Combine flour, baking soda, and salt in small bowl. Beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and vanilla extract in large bowl until creamy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in morsels and other bits (i.e. Butterfingers, Oreos, M&Ms, Oats, Snickers, Sprinkles, Marshmallows, Reese's Pieces, jelly beans...). Drop by rounded tablespoon onto ungreased backing sheets. Bake for 9 to 11 minutes or until golden brown. Cool on baking sheets for 2 minutes; remove to wire racks to cool completely.
Results:
Discussion:
4. Surprise!
Not A Warning!
Ground 0 of the Cross Contamination