Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Week Ten

When is a Reward Not a Reward?

On the night of July 28, 1994, after the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt had closed for the night, a security guard was grabbed by a masked man. A second man handcuffed him and bound his eyes with tape. The thugs pushed him into a closet and warned him to keep quiet.
They took two paintings by J. M. W. Turner, Shade and Darkness—the Evening of the Deluge and Light and Color, and a painting by Caspar David Friedrich. The Turners had been lent for an exhibition by the Tate Gallery in London. The Friedrich belonged to the Kunsthalle Hamburg.
Another guard who was unable to reach his colleague by radio set off the gallery’s alarm. The thugs ran through the delivery entrance and escaped in a stolen car.

The whole point of this article was to offer argument that offering rewards for stolen paintings may just encourage more thefts, because the thieves will then find a way to return the painting and collect a hefty reward. It has been happening in the past, and what is the point of stealing a painting you cannot popularly sell? I think the no reward idea would help deter would be thieves.




Art

Here is a picture of a drawing I have been working on quite some time, and I keep finding myself taking breaks from it. Its a...ship.


Week Nine

Thinking / Philosophy

So when the slits are not being observed, and one particle at a time is fired at them, in this case an elektron, you get counter intuitive results.

An interference pattern is created, when this should not be possible, since we are firing single particles, so they somehow form a wave, wich is an interference pattern.

This is known as Wave/Particle duality. A commonly known term, but it is just a description of the phenomenon without a real explanation.

As the vid explains, the inescapable conclusion is that the single particle is everywhere, goes through both slits and interferes with itself. This is remarkable enough on its own.
So when they measure with slit the particle actually goes through, it goes through only one of the slits, and the interference pattern is no longer there. You could say, that because of observing, the particle has to go through one of the slits, because we are looking, the wich path information is present. Because of our consciousness having acces to this this information, the wave of potential is destroyed.
This is were the skeptics come in. Now pay attention, cause this is the meat of this thread. Skeptics, to this day always claim that this is total BS, just look at some of the comments on that YT vid, that's exactly what I mean. They say the interference pattern is not destroyed because of our consciousness knowing the wich path info, but because of the physical act of measuring. Because of the interaction of the particle with the measuring device, the so called Observer Effect.

Art

 http://www.artnews.com/2011/08/15/updated-a-long-lost-leonardo-2/

A painting by Leonardo da Vinci that was lost for centuries has been authenticated by distinguished scholars in the United States and Europe and will be exhibited at London’s National Gallery as part of a Leonardo show that opens November 9, ARTnews has learned.
The painting, Salvator Mundi, or “Savior of the World,” depicts Christ with his right hand raised in blessing and his left hand holding a globe. It is painted in oil on a wood panel and measures 26 by 18 1/2 inches in size. “It’s up there with any artistic discovery of the last 100 years,” said one scholar.

The work is owned by a consortium of dealers, including Robert Simon, a specialist in Old Masters in New York and Tuxedo Park, N.Y. It was bought at an auction in the United States in 2005.
When ARTnews first broke the story of the discovery on June 22, Simon declined to comment about the painting, the price, or how it was acquired. “I’ve been asked not to discuss it,” he said.
On July 8, Simon issued a news release through a public relations company confirming the story. He stated that the study and examination of the painting by a number of scholars “resulted in an unequivocal consensus that the Salvator Mundi was painted by Leonardo da Vinci, and that it is the single original painting from which the many copies and versions depend. Individual opinions vary slightly in the matter of dating. Most place the painting at the end of Leonardo’s Milanese period in the late 1490s, contemporary with the completion of The Last Supper. Others believe it to be slightly later, painted in Florence (where Leonardo moved in 1500), contemporary with the Mona Lisa.”


My Art 

This is a charcoal drawing of a lion. I used several reference images to complete this.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Art, Thinking, Social Change final



This project took several weeks to complete, custom making the sky, geometry that makes up the level, the textures. The first version was lost due to errors in the modeling of the level, that were not able to be fixed, so I had to recreate it from the beginning.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Week Eight

Gloria Lamson


"Using a variety of natural and common materials I create temporary site responsive installations and interactions in nature and architectural environments.  Motivated by a desire to reconcile physical and spiritual realities, I explore ways to connect thought and action while creating visual metaphors.  I’m interested in bringing the inside out, and the outside in, both in nature and psyche.  My intention is to invoke a deeper connection to the worlds within and around us."  Artfully blending her love of photography with a passion for the outdoors, Gloria Lamson's art is, in her words "a vehicle for exploration". She incorporates fire, water, earth, chalk, survey tape, twine, flour and other materials to create temporary forms in the landscape. Many of her photographs are the result of repeated interactions with a site and involve a series of images over time marking the disintegration or alteration of a piece through natural forces. Waves wash flour forms off a beach and rearrange a kelp circle. A gunpowder flash creates a mushroom cloud of fire on a sheet of paper floated onto still waters. Gloria Lamson's art documents her experience of place and allows the rest of us to join her. Simple lines, circles and markings on the land magically activate the space around them and reveal underlying patterns and forms. Gloria Lamson began processing her own black and white photographs in 1970. Since 1975, she has published and exhibited her work extensively in Washington and California, through one-person shows, installations, group exhibitions, and slide presentations. In 1995, while living in the San Francisco Bay area, she began working in nature, exploring art making as interaction with time, place and self. She pursued the idea of the environment as her studio and human conversation as a creative model. Wanting to integrate nature and culture, art and life, solitude and community, love and work, she has evolved a unique way of working which generates singular imagery.



GMO Foods proven to alter organ function....


Monsanto's position? We shouldn't even be attentive to studying the effects of GMO foods in humans. I think its funny, mother nature has spent millions of years creating the things that keep us alive, and making the things we enjoy. We have spent millions of years adapting to what has been created for us. And a group of people think they can do better for a few bucks. Additionally, the health hazards of GM foods are mostly unknown because biotechnology companies do not allow independent researchers to publish studies done on GM seeds. In order to obtain the seeds, scientists must sign an agreement to only publish studies in peer-review journals that have been approved by the company. These companies essentially produce consumer propaganda, putting public health at risk. Thus, the health and safety risks associated with GM foods are significant enough to prevent it from becoming the solution to global problems and must be assessed.
























Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Week Seven

Mass Resignation of High Level Bankers

According to this list, there have been 81 resignations of major bankers/political figures since November 7th, 2011. More precisely, there have been 75 resignations since February 15th, 2012. This is, as of today, an average of 6.25 resignations a day.

Please notice we're not talking about small and random bankers here. We are talking about high influential figures, such as the head of the World Bank, the Romanian PM, Haiti PM, Pakistan PM, German President, and MANY CEOs of major banks. We also know that Goldman Sachs' CEO will resign somewhere this summer.

And I’m also wondering whether these mass arrests and chief executive resignations are linked to a speech that Lord James of Blackheath delivered to a practically empty House of Lords a few days ago, in which he revealed his suspicions, backed by a convincing paper trail, of  a huge fraud to the tune of  $15 trillion dollars possibly involving “a major American department agency …gone rogue and … seeking to get at least 50 billion Euros as a payoff.”




Hopefully this will cleanse the greed and help restore some stability to the financial structure of the entire world. I have to speculate that these bankers are being told to resign by someone even higher than they are, or they are trying to get out while they can, before the entire system collapses. Maybe they all know something we don't?






More Street Art



I decided to highlight another article on street art, I found a lot of stuff I have never seen on Street Art Utopia, and thought it would be nice to share it here. "In an anti-establishment movement that’s taking the art world by storm, 6 of the world’s most famous Street Artists whose work is intricately connected to the urban environment were commissioned to paint the iconic river façade of Tate Modern exterior walls with 45 foot (15 meter) high towering artworks for the first major public museum display of Street Art in London." - taken from Lifeinthefastlane.com. I could talk about specific work in the link, but you just have to see it for yourself. 








Art for this week



Since I haven't been able to attend class for the last few meetings, and since I was unable to attend the field trip, I will share this happy little painting I did a few days ago. I rediscovered the old "The Joy of Painting" show and had pretty much all of the materials I needed to attempt it, except I used Acrylics instead of oil (which proved difficult because they dry very quickly). It turned out pretty nice, I will be doing a lot more in the future once I get some oils to work with, the paintings will be a lot softer then.










Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Week Six

Spectrum Crunch


The problem, known as the "spectrum crunch" threatens to increase the number of dropped calls, slow down data speeds and raise prices. It will also whittle down the nation's number of wireless carriers and create a deeper financial divide between those companies that have capacity and those that don't.
 Wireless spectrum is the invisible infrastructure over which all wireless transmissions travel  is a finite resource. When, exactly, we'll hit the wall is the subject of intense debate, but almost everyone in the industry agrees that a crunch is coming. The U.S. still has a slight spectrum surplus. But at the current growth rate, the surplus turns into a deficit as early as next year, according to the Federal Communications Commission's estimates.
"Network traffic is increasing," says an official at the FCC's wireless bureau. "[Carriers] can manage it for the next couple years, but demand is inevitably going to exceed the available spectrum."
By starving the successful operators of the oxygen they need--spectrum--the government is creating conditions that force a company to provide inadequate service. Everyone agrees that this is an imminent problem: The most successful operators will run out of spectrum by 2015. When that happens, the reduced download speeds and connection reliability will push customers to leave in frustration and switch to other providers. I don't use a smart phone, I mean they are appealing, but if I start dropping calls on my phone that doesn't use hardly any spectrum and the guy sitting there with his Ipad is watching a movie over it, I might be a little pissed.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Week Five

Birgit Kratzheller




Within the context of city and landscape, Birgit Kratzheller occupies herself with various kinds of spaces. Designs for squares and installations in agricultural areas alternate in her work and open a wide spectrum, interiors are confronted with processes of vegetative growth.
This piece to the left is called "Pataters" (appropriately) and the whole point of this work was to bring forth the history of potato growing in the region. At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution the land in the so-called "Wet Triangle" between the Elbe and Weser rivers was drained. During the first decade of the 20th century the farmers in this region started breeding and growing potatoes. Between Hamburg and Bremerhaven twenty-seven train stations were built to support the potato farmers. Adjacent to these stations a special type of agricultural building was created. Inside these buildings young seed potatoes were germinated. From harvest up to the start of the next planting-season they were stored in special wooden boxes to provide the best conditions of air, warmth and light. The "Stader-Kartoffel-Vorkeimhaus" building near the city of Stade was typical of the region. This is where Pataters was installed.The installation was viewed first by going through the "Dark Room" which was dedicated to the past, then the "Light Room" which represented the present. This is just an example of her work since I was unable to dig up much from her past.



Judge Napolitano Fired for this?

It seems the internet is up in arms over the Judge being "fired", but according to some people its just a coincidence. A rumor has been circulating that Judge Napolitano has been fired from his job at Fox Business, following this rant against the two party system and the main stream media, or even his rant saying Israel manipulates the United States to exploit our Military power, putting our soldiers into foreign wars for the benefit of Israel.

I don't watch Cnn, Fox, or any mainstream news, but I do occasionally come across a segment from Judge Napolitano, and I truly believe he is trying to report the truth through a corrupt news system that plays on fear and emotion that simply lies to us all. I would like to believe that he was fired for these segments he did, but I don't think it is accurate to say that. Apparently the whole lineup of shows around his were cancelled as well, due to their poor ratings and viewer numbers, I think he knew it was going to be cancelled, and seized the moment to put out two very strong segments. The first showing the fake and corrupt political system in the United States, the second showing the manipulation by Israel to drag us into foreign wars.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Week Four

Artwork

Tiny Crab makes awesome art



Instead of focusing on one of the artists this week, or on a specific piece of art by an actual human being... I wanted to present this. Its a Sand Bubbler crab, and basically, they unintentionally make artwork. Its hard to explain, so here is an explanation taken from the article. "During low tide, the diminutive species, averaging less than a half-inch across, exit their burrows to scour the sand for tiny bits of organic debris in a radial motion. While eating, the crabs ball the excess sand on their heads, then discard it when it gets too big for them to see over -- leaving behind a remarkable-looking reminder which helps them keep from searching for food in the same sand twice."
The remnants of this eating activity are radial patterns that expand outward from where the crab began to eat. I find it quite amazing that the most basic, primal instinct from such a tiny creature can leave behind these amazing patterns. The question that comes to my mind is: If these are unintentional patterns, can they be considered art? If I was eating a hamburger, and just threw the wrapper on the ground, is that art? Hopefully by the end of this class I can answer those questions with confidence, because at this moment in time, I see it as a form of art.

Here is a video of the crab in action:





__________________________________________________________________________________


Ingrid Koivukangas - Environmental Artist


"Working in the land, responding to sites around the world - integrating new media & new technology - creating permanent public works,
site specific installation, intervention, ephemeral sculpture,
video, sound, web, permanent site specific sculpture, photography, printmaking, painting & drawing."

 Ingrid works mostly with trees, she began her research with writing on trees to figure out what kind of history was associated with it.  "As an environmental artist I work intuitively at sites, usually directly in response to being there. For this new work at Bois de Belle Rivière I was sent site photographs of possible locations to create a new work and asked if I could choose one. I was immediately drawn to the photo of a stand of trees in the forest. Over the coming weeks every time I looked at the photograph I kept thinking - ‘writing on trees’. I began to have dreams of walking through a forest in the Laurentians, birds flying overhead and animals peering out at me from behind trees, keeping me company as I approached a tree and began to write upon it."  Ingrid Koivukangas is an environmental artist, educator, designer, writer, Reiki Master and energy healer. She has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of British Columbia Okanagan and a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Calgary. She lives on Salt Spring Island, by the sea, surrounded with Arbutus and ancient Cedar and Douglas Fir. Eagles, hawks, ravens, hummingbirds, deer and otters are frequent visitors at her studio. Ingrid’s work as an environmental artist encompasses many mediums including site-specific ephemeral and permanent works, interventions, installation, sculpture, video, sound, web, digital, photography, painting, printmaking and drawing. She is interested in issues of identity, especially indigenous cultures including her own, the environment, technology and globalization – questioning how our identities are shaped by the land while also exploring how technology can be integrated into that understanding. Working intuitively she creates new site-specific works for each site she is invited to. Much of the work is an attempt to provide the viewer with a starting point to begin contemplating their own connections to the land.

Her blog











Current News

Ancient Lake Vostok


Vostok is the third largest freshwater lake in the world,by volume,  but it is not commonly known because of its location. It is trapped under 2 miles of ice in Russia. It was named after Vostok Station, which was named after the ship that discovered Antarctica. This lake was one of the last major geographical discoveries on the planet, and the Russian team stationed there has been drilling for twenty years, bringing up Ice-cores for research. The implications of reaching the actual liquid water trapped below is huge, now we can study anything we find in the water, such as microorganisms or sediment and oxygen levels. The Russian team plans to send a robot down to collect samples and test all ranges of chemical composition and gas levels.
It will help form a better picture of how the earth has changed over millions of years, and how it may change in the future. The article talks about how alien the environment is in Vostok, that it is comparable to Europa and a moon that orbits Saturn, and with research may help us determine if life exists in those areas of our solar system. I am very excited about this development, its been a long time since any profound discoveries have been made related to life on other planets or other bodies in our solar system, I really hope some kind of life is detected below - it may help push our governments back into funding our Space programs so we can have another space race. This time though, it would be to another planet or moon, not just our own. Hopefully ;)




Extra bit

Nano-Art



This is some really cool art I came across, but haven't had much time to look into it yet. I have no idea how its created, but it is simply amazing. Art at the nano-level..










Art for this week:

I did a recreation on a smaller level of what deforestation looks like, I wish I had a better camera, the picture quality didn't turn out too well.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Week Three

Art

Street Art Utopia

Street art utopia is a website where people can post images and links to amazing works of art done in the street. My favorite are the illusions of giant caves or cliffs in the middle of the street. Overhead of the image, it just looks like random color or designs, but when you walk or drive up to it from a distance, at a certain point, the image comes to life and makes sense. I have seen them with my own eyes before, and it reminded me of another type of street art, the garbage bags. Walking by a vent or air duct, it appears as just a pile of trash, but when heat or pressure is released, it fills the bag and becomes an amazing sculpture held up by only air. Soon, I will be trying to create my own street illusion using chalk, I will post pictures of it, assuming it is successful. I will view more images from Street Art Utopia before I venture out and attempt, and I hope it can be of some use or inspiration to anyone reading this.



Social Issue


Mystery Illness

I came across this story a few weeks ago when preliminary reports of multiple children coming down with a mystery sickness. Their symptoms were seizure-like and resembled tourettes syndrome. Recently, famed environmental activist Erin Brokovich has attempted to obtain soil samples from around the school to test and determine what the illness could be, however, her team has met stiff resistance to the proposal, and the school grounds were closed. I have also read that around the time the school was under construction, a train derailment contaminated a large area of ground near where the school was constructed, and some of it may have been relocated to the foundation of the school. None of this has been confirmed, but given the circumstances, it doesn't seem out of the scope of possibility. The issue with the entire story is that there has been no testing done, at least to public knowledge. If it was a local outbreak from contact between the teens, or even if it was released by the soil, something needs to be done to prevent this from happening to more kids in the area. Stonewalling and trying to cover it up by the school and county officials only digs a deeper hole for the entire situation.

Thinking

Nassim Haramein


I've been familiar with Nassim for many years now, and have off and on, followed his work. He is a researcher trying to find a fundamental pattern in physics. Instead of searching for smaller particles, he has been looking for a pattern between the division of space. He talks through his education while he was growing up, all the way to his current research, how he has reached his current conclusions and ideas. I am very interested in understanding what makes us exist, what holds everything together, and the Universe in general. Nassim was a doorway for me back in high school, and inspired me to research Sacred Geometry and metaphysics myself, and how it has incorporated art over the brief history of mankind. His work has been met with a lot of criticism because he does not have a physics degree, but I don't believe having a title means you are not qualified to talk about advanced subjects such as metaphysics or astronomy. I think he is brilliant and his ideas deserve more credit and need to be looked into by mainstream science, but swaying the current system has been difficult to do so far.


Artwork


This is a piece of work I did in high school, not very recent, but I really wanted to share it. A lot of people hate doing stippling because it is so tedious, but I have been working more on this kind of art which I will share later.










Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Week Two

Art

Gibbs Rounsavall, a local artist



One of my favorite artists in the Louisville area, Gibbs Rounsavall. I had the privilege of having Gibbs as a mentor and teacher during my high school days and have been following his work since I met him. His work is mostly abstract, focusing on line and color, but he has quite a bit of drawings too. He has had many group exhibitions, one recently I was able to attend at the Zephyr Gallery where I met his parents (who were quite lively and extremely encouraging of Gibbs' profession). The work he displayed there was mesmerizing, his paintings have a way of pulling at you, and giving you some weird feeling of tunnel vision. His drawings are quite remarkable too, my favorite one, called Be Idle in the Face of Nature (title picture) has so many interpretations, check it out!


Thinking

Quantum Communication




Quantum Communication is a video I came across a few months ago. I have always been interested in understanding the world around us, the Universe, why we exist and all of that good stuff. The video offered an alternative explanation to everything I understand about it, and thats what makes me want to share it with you all. Whether you believe in a God, a flying spaghetti monster or nothing it all, this documentary by David Sereda attempts to explain how communication works all the way from the quantum level, and what it has to do with the Laws of Attraction. Overall it was a very enlightening film for me, and maybe it can open some new doors of thinking for you too.



Social Issue

Unarmed People Killed by Police: Who's keeping Count?


This link focuses on stats and statistics of how many police officers that were killed in 2011, noting that it was up 13% from the previous year, however I wanted to cover the drastic rise in fatalities caused by police officers on unarmed people. Who is keeping track of that? What is being done to prevent this? The truth is, the data probably does not even exist, but we hear about it in the news almost all the time. Unarmed suspects killed.  The International Chiefs of Police, a police organization, tried in the 1980's to collect such information, but "the figures were very embarrassing to a lot of police departments," said James Fyfe, a professor of criminal justice at Temple University who is a former New York City police lieutenant. Why is this data not made available to better our police forces?











Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Week One


Social Issue





Recently, amid all of the current tensions with Iran, a nuclear scientist (Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan) was assassinated by a small explosive device placed on his vehicle in Tehran. The blast also injured two other people, the driver of the vehicle died later of injuries sustained in the blast. TIME cites an unnamed source that Israel's Mossad was behind the assassination, and has been performing these types of murders out for two years now. The reason I chose this for my social/political issue, was because this eventually may affect us all. Our economy is crippled already, and as tensions between the United States and Iran escalate, I fear it will erupt into the third world war. Russia has openly stated that any attack on Tehran (Iran), will be viewed as an attack on Moscow. The implications of that are very severe, and I admire Russian officials for trying to deter the escalation by such a bold statement. An interesting point to think about is that absolutely no US presidents have lost a secondary election during war time, and I view this whole Iran situation as a larger agenda. How far will the United States and Israel push Iran until a war breaks out? As far is it takes, but hopefully I am wrong. The US cannot afford any more wars, its time to take a back seat for a while and rebuild our own nation from the inside out. Maybe people have too much pride for that to happen, but pushing ourselves to the brink of collapse is not a better alternative.



Current Art Scene


Elfwood



Elfwood was something I happen to come across a few years ago while browsing the web. Its a website dedicated to fantasy and science fiction art, something I enjoy creating from time to time. The site is full of inspiring and creative material contributed from people just like you and me, just looking for a place for feedback and criticism. It was founded by Thomas Abrahamsson in 2007, and although the website DeviantArt.com is more popular and well known, Elfwood is an excellent alternative, or you could use both as I do. The website itself isn't the most advanced by any means, and is sometimes confusing to navigate, but once you figure it out, it can become a valuable tool in your development as an artist. I mainly use it for inspiration and themes other artists present. The website has over four hundred thousand works, and over thirty thousand members, and is growing every day. Its free to join and easy to use, and hopefully some of you will find some use out of it in your career's as artists.


Ethical Issue


Flouridation of Tap Water



 

Have you ever thought twice about fluoride? We know its in most of our drinking water, and in toothpaste, but why? It prevents tooth decay, but are there any side effects we should be concerned about? Fluoride is considered a level 4 poison by the CDC, defined by their rating chart as “life-threatening; major or permanent damage may result from single or repeated exposure”. Based on this very basic data about fluoride, do you think its right to force citizens to drink fluoride with their water? I think we should have a choice of the water we drink. While most of us do have a choice because we can buy filtration systems or buy bottled water, but what about those who cannot afford these alternatives? Another source of fluoride is toothpaste, but you're not constantly ingesting toothpaste. I don't deny fluoride doesn't have positive effects for your teeth, but to jump from having it in toothpaste that you are meant to spit out, to just dumping it in our water supply is not at all ethical in my opinion. People of all socioeconomic backgrounds deserve a choice of the water they drink, and what that includes, even if it is provided for free or from the government. I don't believe water, an essential part of our lives, should be laced with a poisonous substance in the guise of preventing tooth decay.