Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Sense and Sensibility

I have never seen a film with as much estrogen and crying almost entirely through the whole thing, such as this one. Don't get me wrong it was good, but I found myself laughing through some of it because the crying became so dramatic. Sense and Sensibility, the story of sisters and their mother left to unfortunate circumstances when the father passes away. Not exactly stable monetarily and affected by this when the two oldest begins searching for a husband. This story has romance and heart break leaving the practical Elinor with all that she ever wanted. When watching this movie, I kept thinking about when we talked about the women being constricted by corsets and feeling like weighted down by all of the dresses and of course emotions. It reminded me of the Impressionist era and overall it was a nice film to watch while working on my portfolio :)

Esquire's Iconic Muhammad Ali Cover

Esquire's iconic Muhammad Ali cover (page 398, Meggs) makes a visual comparison between a contemporary controversial figure and a famous image from the history of art. Describe how this approach affects the viewer by conveying a powerful philosophical statement without the use of words. Offer one contemporary example of a similar image and do a quick compare/contrast between it and the Esquire cover. (Campaign 2008 is a good stop).




This image associates Mahamad Ali with St. Sebastian. St. Sebastian as an innocent and saintly person, standing in crucifixion pose. The cover was saying "You are persecuting Mahamad for his race and religion. He is powerless. He is a victim to America, and to you. For the viewer, it is showing us how helpless and innocent he is tied up by the people of the world. All of this I can feel without even a word of text on there. 
On this cover, Janet Jackson is in a very open pose, almost contrastingly accepting the critiques and world views of her. Still, this image similarly is vulnerable and in a way presents Janet as a victim. A victim of judgement and sexual desire. 

Examining Bayer's "Great Ideas" advertisement

Compare Bayer's association of the female image with excess and corruption with contemporary treatments of women in ads. Do we still see this same association? If so, how has it changed? Is it now seen as a good thing or a bad thing? Use at least two contemporary ads.


This advertisement specifically exemplifies corruption and excess identified with the females. This ad is supposed to portray soft living. Partying too much. Female forum and the woman taken as an element expressive idea. Females were popular in Art Noveau and this specific one is embodying an idea and expression. I believe that we still have excess and corruption with contemporary treatments of women in ads. The following two adds are very degrading towards females, regarding them as just an object of sex or just a body. It may not be apparent by the topic of the ad, but the feeling when looking at these ads is that women are considered objects. They are not people but just something. The Burger King ad shows that the woman is being "put in her place" and the portray of soft living because she isn't good for anything else. The Marc Jacobs ad is more of a this girl is only good for showing her legs, because she failed at shopping. It is literally saying she shopped until she dropped, but the idea of soft living is also prevailing throughout this ad. Today, we still see the same association as Bayer's advertisement. I think it is dissappointing and not something to be proud of.



Monday, May 9, 2011

Help Alabama: Inspired by Lester Beall



“A designer…has the true responsibility to give his audiences not what they think they want, for this is almost invariably the usual, the accustomed, the obvious, and hence, the unspontaneous.  Rather, he should provide that quality of thought and intuition which rejects the ineffectual commonplace for effectual originality.”
 – Lester Beall

The Rural Electrification Administration posters of Lester Beall demonstrated visually the use of color, line, photography and design. Above, I created a Beall inspired poster for the Alabama Tornado victims (as a whole) with the eternalized theme of "helping tornado victims participates in the identity of America--that is to say helping these victims, helps the United States. Like Beall, I used red white and blue as my predominant colors throughout the image. Similar to his simple shape use, I created a large blue shape for the background with over a hundred stars fading through out the entire image. These stars not only represent the people of the United States, but more specifically the victims of the tornado. On top of the blue I also incorporated an abstract red and white basic shape to reflect the image of a flag. The stripes, line of font, and lines in the stars project the same decision from Beall as a designer, in using line. Beall also was known for taking black and white photographs and either using a part of an image or  incorporating the image in its entirety within the image. I chose a black and white photograph of the tornado damage specifically at one location. Under the flag (the most forward image) is of a turned over couch. The eternalized message and idea I had behind this photo is, Tornadoes can hit anywhere and affect anyone, it is something that damages people personally and really hits home (hence the furniture from a home). With the stars representing the victims, I wanted a more personal photograph representing an individual or family - something people can relate to. Regarding the text in the poster, I chose "Help Alabama". It is a very simple message similar to Beall's many simple messages through out his design. I Overall I really enjoyed studying Beall's work and replicating a poster with a little bit more of a present time feel. 

The photo I used-


Monday, May 2, 2011

Rural Electric Administration: Designing for America's Future

What is the New Deal? Created in 1935, the New Deal's achievement was bringing electricity to rural areas like the TN valley. Power Companies said that farmers must pay for the energy they use and pay the power company for costs of construction. In order to avoid this... Rural Electric Administration was created.

What is the Rural Electric Admin? Sponsoring cooperatives that received low-cost government loans for developing electric power, The Rural Electrification Administration, a division of the Department of Agriculture, was developed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. It improved the nation’s rural areas as well as  reviving the post-Depression economy by providing jobs.

Why a poster campaign to convince people to have electricity in rural areas? Because the audience for these posters had limited reading skills, these simple but visually dramatic posters express their messages in primarily graphic terms. The bold colors and images made electricity very appealing and showed an improved  quality of life. Electricity would improve the standard of living and the economic competitiveness of the family farm. 

Why is it fruitful to apply techniques to Alabama tornadoes? Simple readable designs that are very powerful may have quite the impact on people and reach a broader audience across the United States. Bright colors including red white and blue exhibit patriotism and "togetherness". 

Monday, April 18, 2011

Poster Project - Original Work: Art Nouveau and the Arts and Crafts Movement

My poster describes my favorite movie at the moment, "Jeux d'enfants" or "Love Me If You Dare". It is a French film, so I thought it would be very appropriate and relative to Art Nouveau. The movie tells the love story of a couple whose relationship is surrounded by a game of truth or dare. For my poster, I decided to incorporate different images of women in very open or sensual poses as if they were saying, "I dare you to love me". Much of my inspiration came from Art Nouveau and Crafts Movement with freeing feeling of the decorative and swirling patterns and images. 




"Love Me If You Dare" is my favorite foreign film.



Here is the trailer to the movie, check out the real deal on Netflix




Quick Description

Art Nouveau: A style of art, architecture, and applied art (especially the decorative arts). This style was most popular during 1890 to 1905. The name Art Nouveau is French for "new art". It was most popular in Europe and the British Islands, but its influence was global. 

Popular Art Nouveau artists
Alphonse Mucha
Gustav Klimt
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Rene Lalique
Antonio Gaudi
Louis Comfort Tiffany

Arts and Crafts Movement: International design movement that originated in England. It flourished between 1880 and 1910. The movement brought truth to materials and traditional craftsmanship using forms that were simple and sometimes medieval.

Popular Arts and Crafts Movement Inspirations
William Morris
John Ruskin


Components within the design of Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts Movement

1. Bright color pallet: Within my poster there are many floral patterns that incorporate a lot of bright blue and green colors. There is a yellow glow amidst the entire page with hints of purple, orange, and rose pink color decoratively splashed around the work.

2. Organic Elements: There are many organic elements within this work, beginning with the shapes at the top of the page. The spirals and curls flow downward into the circular floral pattern and the nature of the piece. Organic lines are present in this work.

3. Emotion/Creative Response: The emotion and feeling found within the women characters in the poster is desire, promiscuity and carefree fantasy. The film "Love Me If You Dare" has a lot of carefree quality to it in the scenes and the story. I wanted the poster to reflect the game like "come and get me" that is portrayed in the film. 

4. Unifying Pattern: I used a circular pattern and shape repeatedly throughout the poster. For two reasons, one being it was commonly found during this period of art. Another reason I used the circular shape was to represent the ongoing story within the film. Especially the ongoing game in the film. At the end of the movie you realize the dare game that was going on throughout the entire movie never ends, like a circle. 

5. Ornamented Design: This was a very popular ornate style within the Arts and Crafts Movement. The swirls and ornate flower pattern exemplify an ornamented design. Hours spent on designing and completing these patterns. 

6. Symbolism: Just as in the emotional response section, the symbolism of this piece is reflecting upon the film, "Love Me If You Dare". The circles representing the ongoing story and plot line that never really resolves, and the women pieced into the page sultry and daring. 

7. Plants and Flowers: Very popular design. This one is the most predominant in my poster, Originally taken from patterns, or posters, the floral patterns are very ornate, delicate, and colorful. It also brings a natural and organic solution to the poster. 

8. Asymmetrical: Often were the pieces left asymmetrical or not looking completely resolved. This was a part of the "new art" style. Nothing lines up with each other on my page, but every specific shape has its own specific place. The circles are off center and the women are diagonally strewn from each other. 

9. Renaissance Influence: The women in the poster are definitely influenced by the Renaissance with long hair and flowing dresses. They represent a higher power and have some type of authority when looking at them. The thicker outlines around the center woman exemplifies a more rustic and bold approach found in the Renaissance styles. 

10. Flat shape: The flat shapes within the poster are circles and the one rectangle towards the center reading, "Love Me If You Dare". These shapes are very formless on their own but with the floral patterns within them, they are brought to a new life. There is also a rectangle behind the entire project amidst the background. 

My composition included the following: (one not pictured because I couldn't find the actual photo after I had researched it again. By the time I looked for it, I had already erased it off my computer desktop) 

1. Pictured in the bottom circle: It is the floral pattern (blue/greens)


2.

3. 


4. 


5. 









Friday, April 1, 2011

I loved...



This week there was a lot of discussing between groups and with our professor about the 18th and 19th centuries predominately fixed upon the Victorian Age and the Industrial Revolution. I specifically studied the fascination of culture sharing with art between the Japanese, English, and African Americans in the Victorian Age. I also further researched information about the new forms of sciences during the Industrial Revolution.

I chose this photograph because it appears to be statuesque. When you look at it, the photograph can appear hard and soft. The picture is soft and slightly blurred, but the light within the face and clothing is sharp and contrast like. The emotion or lack there of depending on how you view it strikes a chord with me. It is a very beautiful photograph.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Converging Cultures

Japanese and African culture- the influence it had in the Victorian Age.


Americans were no real threat to British trading supremacy in the East and Britain was happy for the Americans to do all the groundwork negotiations in Japan.

British Treaty of Edo in 1858 

The Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876 was one of the series of great exhibitions in which nations displayed their industrial and artistic achievements. 

Japanese shapes certainly often display quaintness rather than grace.
At the Philadelphia Exhibit the Japanese exhibits were viewed as odd and curious in shape and decoration. "Topsy Turvy nature" 
Japanese art as being purely decorative was stressed

The display of Japanese art in the 1862 exhibition made a great impact on William Burges who believed that in contemporary Japan could be found the ideal society of the Middle Ages he was trying to recreate in Victorian Britain. 

This was key to the Arts and Crafts Movement which stressed the importance of simplicity, sincerity and a close study of nature all qualities commented on by critics discussing Japanese art. 



During the Victorian period, travellers to what is now Zimbabwe used art, especially painting, to depict some of what they saw there. This art of the colonial period took landscape as its main theme and many of the European artists were present as part of expeditions that aimed to inform the public in Europe about life in Africa. For example, Thomas Baines joined the  Zambezi expedition led by David Livingstone in 1858 and in 1861 he was one of the first to make oil paintings of Victoria Falls. John Guille Mailles spent six months of 1893 sketching and hunting in Zimbabwe.

Monday, March 28, 2011

What first comes to mind when reflecting on the 19th Century?
Industrial Revolution
Hoop Skirts
Constricted Clothing
Moving to Cities
Romantics
Artist Communes
Camera

Bridge to the 20th Century
New type-industrialism makes it easy to do so
The Poster
Photography- interplay of textures and lines
Overlap of 19th century painting styles
Goethe "The Sorrows of Young Werther"
Matthew Brady- Civil War photographerPublish Post


Extra Credit
Hatch Show Print- take pics on phone
Sense and Sensibility- short synopsis

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Comparison and Contrast Project

- Comparison of books before and after the advent of printing in Europe

Before the Printing Press


Celtic Design – “Celtic design is abstract and extremely complex; geometric linear patterns weave, twist, and fill a space with thick visual textures, and bright, pure colors are used in close juxtaposition.” (Meggs 44)

The Book of Durrow

The Book of Durrow, Irish Scribes, A.D. 680, British Isles

Written and designed around A.D. 680- “the earliest and fully designed and ornamented Celtic book”, these manuscripts were believed to come from the British Isles and made by Irish scribes. Because the printing press was not yet invented, countless hours were spent upon single pages. Meaning that every design whether it it was a twist, weaves, texture, and color were all done by hand. For these same reasons, the Book of Durrow and any Celtic book is very diverse from the monastic scriptorium.
 One difficulty the designers ran into was the integration of the large initial with the rest of the text. They couldn’t easily highlight their fonts and quickly change from 12 pt. to 32 pt. font, like we can. It took a long time to figure out the layout let alone the design. Thankfully, the monks came up with a graphic principle called diminuendo – “decreasing scale of graphic information”(Meggs 46), which created a harmonious design. 

Book of Kells 

Book of Kells, scriptorium, A.D. 800, Island Monastery Iona, Ireland

Created around A.D. 800 at the island monastery Iona. “Book of Kells is composed of shimmering color and intricate, convoluted form blossoming over a whole page.” (Meggs 46) It is notably the culmination of Celtic illuminaton with generous margins and huge initial letters. This book has more full-page illustrations than any other Celtic manuscript. Just like the Book of Durrow, there was a prominent usage of diminuendo and turba scriptorium.

This book surpasses any other Insular Gospel books in extravagance and complexity. Insular art is also known as Hiberno-Saxon art, a style of art produced in the post-Roman history of Ireland and Great Britian. The term derives from “insula” or meaning, “island”. This period of time, Britian and Ireland shared a common style different from the rest of Europe. The book is comprised of 340 folios and the manuscript takes its name from the Abbey of Kells which was its home for centuries.



Contd. Info

“Aside from Celtic pattern-making tradition, book design and illumination had sunk to a low ebb in most of Europe.” (Meggs 49) Writing and design was left in the hands of poorly trained scribes, creating work that was impossible to read. Charlemagne (king of the franks) at the time decided a “turba scriptorium” was in need. A large group of scribes were brought together to prepare and copy by hand the important religious texts. This was their form of the printing press. Just imagine how much easier and quicker it would have been if it had been readily available. But since it was not, scribes and books were dispatched amongst Europe in order to spread the reforms. A new alphabet (The Caroline minuscule) was also created in order to restore legibility. Along with a new alphabet, a radical design innovation in Celtic manuscripts enabled readers to separate the string of letters into words more quickly. “The half-uncial script journeyed to Ireland with the early missionaries and was subtly redesigned into the scriptura scottica or insular script, to suit the local visual traditions.” (Meggs 46)

After the Printing Press

Psalter in Latin

Psalter in Latin, Fust and Schoeffer, August 14, 1957, Rome

Fust and Schoeffer published a psalter born on August 14, 1957.  According to Meggs this book was monumental because it had large red and blue initials printed from two-part metal blocks that were inked separately, reassembled, and then printed with one press impression. These red and blue initials  are the earliest example of color printing in Europe. This was a major innovation. “The psalter in Latin was also the first book to bear a printer’s trademark and imprint, printed date of publication, and colophon.” (Meggs 73) This piece would not have been fashioned if it weren’t for the invetion of printing and stamping. It was brought to completion as a worship of God.

Peregrinationes in Montem Syon (Travels in Mount Syon)

Peregrinationes in Montem Syon, Berardus de Breidenbach, Erhard Reuwich, 1486, Italy

This book was printed with Schoeefer’s types in 1486. Bernardus de Breidenbach was the author of this book that brought along Erhard Reuwich to illustrate their travels. “The published volume featured wood blocks cut from Reuwich’s drawings. He was a careful observer of nature who introduced cross hatch illustration in his volume. His drawings were very unlike the Celtic designers or illustrator who “careful observation of nature was not required of..” (Meggs 45) Reuwich’s illustrations included buildings, cities, and maps. 

Nuremberg Chronicle

Nuremberg Chronicle, Hartmann Schedel, 1493, Germany

It is a masterpiece of the incunabula-period graphic design, (not hand drawn or written). With 1,809 woodcut illustrations, this book if complex and carefully designed. “The exemplars for the Nuremberg Chronicle are the work of several “sketch artists” and numerous scribes, whose lettering in the exemplar has the same character count as they type.” (Meggs 83)


Contd. Info

Printing spread rapidly. “By 1480 twenty-three northern European towers, thirty-one Italian towns, seven French towns, six Spanish and Portuguese towns, and one English town had presses. By 1500 printing was practiced in over 140 towns. (Meggs 79) Once printing picked up in popularity, things became readily and easily available to the public. Pamphlets, broadsides, and tracts were produced and distributed for free or sale. Amongst the new talk of printing, some people were against it and forbid it in their towns. Pope Julius II ordered scribes to hand-letter a copy of a typographic book for his library. The shortage of books that occurred turned into an abundance of books because of printing reducing a book’s price. The innovation of typographic printing “played a pivotal role in the social, economic, and religious upheavals that occurred during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.” (Meggs 78) The Renaissance innovators brought text and painting into one piece of work. With the printing of Bibles, people began to formulate their own interpretations instead of relying on religious leaders as truth.  This occurrence led to the Reformation. Durer at age twenty seven became renown through out Europe for his Latin and German editions of The Apocalypse. An example of spreading work from the printing press, “Martin Luther (c. 1483-1546) posted his Ninety-five Theses for debate on the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg, Saxony, on 31 October 1517, his friends passed copies to printers. By December his proclamation had spread throughout central Europe. “(Meggs 85) A loyal friend to Luther, Lucas Cranach the Elder operated a printing office, bookshop, and a paper mill.” (Meggs 97) He turned his considerable energy to the Reformation by portraying the Reformers and their cause in books and broadsides.” (Meggs 89) Typography and printing encouraged the Protestant movement of the Reformation era.








Monday, March 21, 2011

Enlightenment

Enlightenment & Science-
Age of Reason
Creation of Scientific Societies
Shift from geo-centric to heliocentric from Capricus
Displacement
Isaac Newton
Taxonomy
Calculus
Encyclopedias
Universities and Academies

Enlightenment-
When? mid 17th, start
Institutions
Arguing and Discussing in coffee houses, salons
Social and political issues
Print Culture
Competing Philosophies

Enlightenment Politics-
Liberty
Freedom of Thought
International Taste
Framework for US + FR revelations
War
Modern Novel!
Domestic Utopia
Men internal state/ men in society

Monday, February 21, 2011

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Celtic Inspired..

I looked into jewelry with Celtic inspired design and came up with this! You can see the knots and twists in these two pictures of jewelry inspired by Celtic Illumiations.

Celtic Illuminations



Thursday, January 27, 2011



Drawing on the walls.

Designs and art today can be inspired by cave paintings from the early ages. Cave paintings were the first visual evidence of people and culture from a past and today they are considered a type of written language. Often commonly found on the cave walls were pictures of large wild animals, abstract patterns, or images of humans depicting a story over time. I chose the images below because both have some type of influence by early cave paintings. Bon Iver's poster below, signifies the "giant wild beast" that was featured in many cave paintings. The colors and texture also represent an older feel with focus on the elephant. The advertisement/billboard under clearly shows abstract patterns and symbols, also including images of people depicting a story. Both of these advertisements whether for a band or for a drink both display something that was commonly painted on the walls many many years ago.

Inspired by Cave Paintings... but you don't realize