Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Idea Post #11: Auditory Hallucinations
Quark Star: Bungee Jumping from Simon Tarr on Vimeo.
Auditory Hallucinations or more commonly known as "hearing voices" is a false perception of hearing sounds. A person can hallucinate that they are hearing voices in their head or music. Auditory hallucinations are not just for people that are completely psychotic, many people experience auditory hallucinations in their life time. People who do experience sounds that are not occurring aren't necessarily psychotic for different reasons.Most people who experience unaided sounds are able to tell that the sound isn't really happening, the voice is generally more positive and the person has more control over hearing it or not. People that experience these sounds and have a level of psychosis differ because of the frequency of the hallucination, the voices have a greater linguistic complexity and there is a greater emotional response from the person. There is a larger difference between hearing someone's voice a few times and actually believing in the hallucination.
My work is not about auditory hallucinations. After doing some research on the topic I was surprised to learn that auditory hallucinations are more common amongst people even those who are not psychotic. So this made me think about a negative script, or a voice of yourself always talking to yourself. I've always wondered how strange it was that I thought to myself as if I was having a conversation with myself. I think many people experience life like this. We hear ourselves talk to ourselves. I just feel that sometimes my own voice is just too harsh.
"Auditory hallucinations have veridical perceptual qualities in the sense that individuals are often convinced of the objective reality of the experience. In most cases, auditory hallucinations are unintentional, intrusive, and unwanted. Affected individuals may or may not have insight into the hallucinations. A person with insight will acknowledge that the experience is abnormal and will report less interference with daily activities than a person with no insight."
- Waters
Waters, Flavie. "Auditory Hallucinations in Psychiatric Illness." PsychiatricTimes 27.03 (2010). UBM Medica LLC. UBM Medica LLC, 10 Mar. 2010. Web. 7 Dec. 2010. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/cme/display/article/10168/1534546.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Repost idea entry #10: insecurities
Definition of INSECURITY
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Alex Singh response
Monday, November 15, 2010
Alexandre Singh Q's
Repost idea blog #9: Decapitaion
Decapitation:
Internet Service Provider Broadband DSL Dial Access Hosting. Web. 23 Nov. 2010. http://www.eskimo.com/~lhowell/bcp1662/apocrypha/judith.html.
Artist Post #11: Alex Prager
Deborah, 2009
Rita, 2009
Barbara, 2009
Alex Prager
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Idea Post #10: perspective
I've been thinking about perspective in my photographs and how to differ it to create different feelings. Most of the photographs I've been taking are on the ground and my camera either in line with the characters or looking down on the characters. This week I shot images that are outdoors and from many different perspectives. I am wondering how the tilted view is helping my work. Now instead of being on the same level with the characters you are looking up at them. This puts emphasis on the characters themselves and lowers the viewer to be lower than them. I am curious about how the characters grow larger based on changing perspective. I think that its interesting to have a piece of paper loom over you. Not only that, but printed on the paper is a young girl or boy. I am interested in what I can do with this.
Simon Tarr Response
Simon Tarr's lecture was small and intimate. It was great for understanding what he did for each project. His work, Tia Mak was quite the highlight of the lecture. Tarr mixes videos as a DJ would for a party. It was the first time I've ever seen a mix of videos. Tarr said that as he was mixing Nanook of the North he noticed that there were scenes that were supposed to be weeks in between each one but the patches of snow were the same. He placed them together and overlayed these shots that were at the same time, and created the same scene with multiple things going on at once. It really reminded me of the 4th dimension. The fact that if the 4th dimension didn't exist we would run into our past selves in the places that we had already been. Our time and place wouldn't carry over. That is what I immediately saw with the overlaying of the figures in Tarr's piece Tia Mak.
One of Tarr's quotes that really resonated with me: "This is my most successful piece... Probably because its my best work... I only like it because it reminds me of being in Japan." I love this. Giri Chit was a wonderful view of Japan. I've never been there but I feel like if I went I would be drawn to the images that Tarr captured. His silent observations of everyday Japanese people was honest to me. It wasn't really being critical of a people he isn't a part of. It was just presenting the culture the way that he saw it. I was just so shocked and refreshed when he was talking about his success from this piece and his only real motivation for making it was just because he liked Japan. He just liked the piece the most because it reminds him of a place. I think that getting too attached to the idea and concept of your work can make unsuccessful. He also said that he doesn't know everything when he goes into making work. This idea of keeping your work loose is great. It just helps you be guided to places you didn't think you would go with your work.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Grad School App Proof
Simon Tarr Q's
Monday, November 8, 2010
Artist Post #10: Michel Gondry
White Stripes' Fell in Love with A Girl video directed by Gondry
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Graduate School Application
EDUCATION: BFA, Photography – Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, Jerusalem, Israel
REPRESENTED BY: Art 2 Commerce, Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York
ONE-PERSON EXHIBITIONS INCLUDE: Fifty One Fine Art Photography, Antwerp’ Photographers’ Gallery, London; Gagosian Gallery, London; Fotografie Forum, Frankfurt; Edwynn Houk Gallery
GROUP EXHIBITIONS INCLUDE: Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Brooklyn Museum; Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
PUBLICATIONS INCLUDE: The New Yorker, Photo District News, The New York Times Magazine, Newsweek, W, Details
AWARDS AND HONORS INCLUDE: Ruttenberg Award, Buhl Foundation; Friends of Photography; John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship; Infinity Award, International Center of Photography; Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture
Work:
untitled, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Midway Crit Response
- enlarge the cast of characters
- shoot more outdoor photos
- rewrite my artist statement to be less forceful and blunt
- use a lot more objects with each character
- put a personal point-of-view into my work, make it accessible to others but relating to myself
- title my works
- I need to eliminate the amount of "things" and references in my work. Its too busy and needs to be streamlined so the viewer doesn't feel overwhelmed
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Zoe Beloff response
These words shocked the whole audience. When she said earlier in her lecture that "Albert Grass and I are one in the same," I thought she was saying that she really understood him and knew the ideas he wanted to pursue. Then to realize that she actually is him was just fascinating. I looked over at my friends note page and he had written: "Where is her own work?" I think this is the exact reaction that Zoe Beloff wants to portray with the work she has created. I think that the build up to her latest work about Coney Island were the small steps to the greater work. Her work dealing what is real and what is staged for the camera? Who is hysterical and who isn't? But what difference does it really make? I think her final work was the culmination of all of these thoughts coming in really making you question what is real.
Three words that come to mind when thinking of Beloff's work: reality, technology, history.
These are my original questions:
You have a vast knowledge of art history and the history of photography and film. You also use new techniques and technologies to create your work. How does one influence the other? How do you combine the past with the current to speak to your ideas? Which influences you more: history and past or technology and current?
What are the connections for you between a set stage and history? Are you making a point about how history isn't all that we think it to be? That we are setting the stage for an era when retelling a point in history? Or is there little connection there?
I think she answers all of them.
She says that with her knowledge and research of history drives her to make different works. She then thinks of how she can use the technology of our time to create the work she wants to create. I think that history drives an influences her more than technology.
Beloff talked about a lot that in history or at least dealing with old medical practices, of having a hard time to understand the difference between reality of the illness and staging of the illness for the camera. I think in life that we all play roles and having a disease can give us a part to play in this world. I think that all of history is telling a story.
Monday, November 1, 2010
Zoe Beloff Q's
What are the connections for you between a set stage and history? Are you making a point about how history isn't all that we think it to be? That we are setting the stage for an era when retelling a point in history? Or is there little connection there?
Artist Post #9: Sue de Beer
C-print
29 1/2 x 40 inches
Gina V. d'Orio (Cabin), 2006
C-print
40 x 29 1/2 inches
Still from Black Sun, House, 2004-2005
C-print mounted on aluminum
30 x 40 inches
Still from Black Sun, Lena Herrgesell (reading magazine), 2004-2005
C-print mounted on aluminum
40 x 30 inches
Sue de Beer
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Idea Post #8: Fantasy
Fantasy
Monday, October 25, 2010
Artist Post #8: Seung Woo Back
RW01-044, 2006, 127x169 cm, Digital print
RW01-042, 2006, 127x169cm, Digital print
RW01-001, 2004, 127x169 cm, Digital print
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Idea Post #7: Scale
Scale Model
Monday, October 18, 2010
Artist Post #7: Jeff Wall
TRANSPARENCY IN LIGHT BOX
72 X 89 5/8 X 10 1/4 IN. ( 182.88 X 227.65 X 26.04 CM )
OVERPASS, 2001
CIBACHROME TRANSPARENCY, ALUMINUM LIGHTBOX, FLUORESCENT BULBS
90 1/2 X 118 1/8 X 10 1/4 IN. ( 229.87 X 300.04 X 26.04 CM )
Jeff Wall
"Jeff Wall studied art history at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and at the Courtauld Institute, London. His work has been exhibited in numerous international exhibitions, including a touring solo retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Art Institute of Chicago, and the San Francisco Museum of Art, in 2007. He has been the recipient of numerous prizes, including The Paul de Hueck and Norman Walford Career Achievement Award for Art Photography (2001); Ontario Arts Council, Canada; Erna and Victor Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (2002); and the Roswitha Haftmann Prize for the Visual Arts (2003).”
-Marian Goodman Gallery
Jeff Wall for many decades now has worked with tableaux photography. He creates and sets and sets up situations with actors and photographs them. This relation to what is real and what is not is something that I think about everyday when I think about photography. To me it is interesting is the shift from what really happened and what Wall creates from his memory of what happened. Wall also deals with being a “painter of modern life” and considers himself as a painter. He sees being a painter as a maker of art. I read being a painter of modern life is more using modern technology to create art as painters of earlier age would use painting to depict the same situations. Photography is a medium that can be used to paint ideas together. Instead of putting paintbrush to canvas, Wall and other photographers, take pieces of photographs and stitch them together. Wall also takes memories and literary sets them up as a painter would start a painting of their memory. I see no difference in what painters do and what photographers since the 70's do. I think of work that I do as sketching or finally painting to create the image. There is an act of making that art is concerned about.
"There’s no one way to come into this relationship with reportage. I think that’s what people in the 70s and 80s really worked on: not to deny the validity of documentary photography, but to investigate potentials that were blocked before, blocked by a kind of orthodoxy about what photography really was.”
-Jeff Wall via interview with Museo Magazine
"Wall encourages us to accept and enjoy the illusion of his realism”
-Sheena Wagstaff
LINKS:
Gallery: http://www.mariangoodman.com/ (they have a lot of good artists... I should make a trip!)
Interview: http://www.museomagazine.com/issue-0/jeff-wall
Website: http://www.mariangoodman.com/artists/jeff-wall/
"Jeff Wall | Museo Magazine." Interview by David Shapiro.Issues | Museo Magazine. Museo Publications, LLC. Web. 18 Oct. 2010. http://www.museomagazine.com/issue-0/jeff-wall.
"Jeff Wall - November 16, 2002 - January 4, 2003." Marian Goodman Gallery. Web. 18 Oct. 2010. http://www.mariangoodman.com/exhibitions/2002-11-16_jeff-wall/.
Wagstaff, Sheena. Jeff Wall Photographs 1978-2004. London: Tate Enterprises, 2005. Print.