Sunday, March 29, 2009

GALLIMAUFRY!


raaaaaargh monster

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Schedule for Faculty Critique

Wednesday April 1st, Drawing Studio

noon - 4:30pm

12:10 - 12:30 Kerrin
12:35 - 12:55 James
1:00 - 1:20 Lauren
1:25 - 1:45 Nadia
1:50 - 2:10 Ryan
20 minute BREAK
2:30 - 2:50 Cody
2:55 - 3:15 Anna
3:20 - 3:40 Kate
3:45 - 4:05 Michelle
4:10 - 4:30 Megan

PREP WORK FOR FACULTY CRIT

Here are a few things to consider to have the most professional presentation for critique:

1. Most professional possible presentation for faculty critique - we can ask Sarah for pedestals to use during critique. Cody and Kate both of your works may benefit from a pedestal presentation rather than putting the work on one of those dirty tables in the drawing studio. If you use pedestals, they may need to be touched up, this could be done Tuesday afternoon.

2. Kate, it might be good to do a dry run on the wall display of your weapons during critique. This would mean buying L nails or pins or some form of hanging device to install the weapons on to a wall of the drawing studio and see what they look like on display. You may want pedestal for any bombs or grenades...

3. Anna, are your paintings ready for hanging? If not please prepare them for wall hanging with wire. It's best to not just use a couple nails and put them up, but rather to prepare them as they would be professionally hung in a gallery. They need to be viewed on the wall, not on the easels.

4. Lauren, I have the same request for you, will you prepare the prints that you present for wall hanging. Perhaps you can leave a margin along the top and the bottom to use large paper lips as hanging devices or if you already know how they will be hung in the gallery can you do the same for the crit.

5. Same for Nadia, please prepare prints for best way to display.

6. Lastly, I didn't inspect how clean the walls in the studio are, it may be necessary to touch them up, if so we should do so during our regular meeting time. I'll see if paint is available, I'm not back on campus until Tuesday, can someone please take a look at the walls, particularly the central areas that will be used for display.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

PRINTING OF CATALOG

Great news from the faculty meeting today - there is money to have the catalog printed! I've looked around and prices are high, we need to keep the cost down, but the department wants 250 printed. This is the place that Sarah recommends based on price and speed:

http://www.48hourprint.com/booklet-printing.html

I was thinking 12 page small booklet would be appropriate, what do you all think? I'm posting this on the blog for discussion. We need to move fast... does anyone know inDesign or Quark?

Monday, March 9, 2009

Gallery Review II



The Vox Populi’s latest exhibitions feature members Anita Allyn, Josh Rickards, and Linda Yun. Among these three artists, painter, Josh Rickards, lets his imagination run wild in Do Unto Others Then Run Like a Mother. These recent paintings continue Rickards’ ongoing interest in people of popular culture and everyday life. Characters such as a young Bill and Hillary Clinton immediately jump out at viewers with their rosy bulbous noses, clothed in heinous 70s garb. Prominent snouts appear throughout most of Rickards’ portraits- some slightly phallic, others quite direct. Rickards explained his nose fetish at the Vox’s artist talk, as a reference to 17th century Dutch portraiture. These allusions to paintings such as Shrovetide Revellers or Pieter van der Brocke by Frans Hals, are not immediately grasped. Rickards’ paintings negate movement or tactile allure. His characters are flat and linear, embracing static stature and stillness-quite the opposite from popular Dutch bar scene subjects. In some paintings, the background becomes a separate entity- jarring colors within bold patterning or repeated geometric shapes- that compete with the characters’ presence. The characters seem to be chosen arbitrarily, though Rickards’ personal interest and technique make each painting comical, quirky, and a little disturbing. Renderings of his subjects- from the Yeti (a swamp monster legend from the Florida Everglades) to Sly Stone, from the creator of Esperanto to Bill and Hillary Clinton, are not flattering. Whether it in the characters’ bulging noses or other misshaped physical features, Rickards goal is not to create the ideal, but to highlight imperfection and the surreal- and how we as a society react to this representation.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Kate's Review #2

Melanie Smith is a multi-media artist whose work addresses, “the urban, cultural, and socio-economic realities of the sprawling megalopolis” of Mexico City. This particular exhibition, entitled Spiral Cty & Other Vicarious Pleasures is separated into two distinct groups: a number of sculptures that compose an installation that comments on the rampant commercialism of Mexico City, and a room of bleak black and white photographs and videos of the streets of the city.
Jam Side Up, Jam Side Down, a 1992 collaboration between Melanie Smith and Francis Alys, occupies the center of the MIT gallery. A plywood alley, filled with all manner of bright, bulbous vinyl objects hanging like clothing, supplies just enough room for a person to pass through, though she might still brush elbows with the objects. Latex gloves had been knotted together and clustered into giant spheres. White Styrofoam bananas hung in bunches. Inflatable rings were strung along the metal bar that so recalled a closet’s bar. This aisle, a direct critique of consumerism, is constructed to call attention to the unexamined ritual of shopping.
Smith’s piece, Orange Lush (1995), a collage of orange plastic objects on wood, echoes that critique. She adhered a garish orange wig beside floaties, a gaggle of deflating balloons, hula hoops, vinyl, bright cording coiled into a hank, and synthetic toys. Smith’s words hung beside the piece on a little plaque. It read, “Orange seemed to indicate a certain attitude I had about Mexico City at that specific time; orange was always in your face…Wherever something wanted to catch your attention it was orange—I could never separate the color from the object, and all these orange objects seemed to homogenize everything.” By using found objects to convey the feeling a color conjures up instead of, say, paint, Smith calls attention to the obsessive consumption and collection of bright and worthless objects.
Melanie Smith and Rafael Ortega’s 2002 piece, Spiral City, filled the next room with the grey network of Mexico City’s streets, viewed from a helicopter and shot in grainy black and white in a single take. This piece is a stark contrast to the popping color of the other room. Here, the viewer is sucked into an “energy drain” after being overwhelmed, and leaves the gallery as deflated as one of the balloons affixed to Orange Lush.