Monday, April 13, 2015

Maps


Paula Scher
http://photos.uwishunu.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/PaulaScherParis.jpg
Mark Bradford
https://terrisportfolio.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/mark_bradford_kryptonite.jpg
Shannon Rankin
http://mentalfloss.com/sites/default/legacy/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2965100071_c36c8be08a_z-565x450.jpg
David Shrigley
http://www.creativereview.co.uk/images/uploads/2006/08/shrigley-map.jpg




Monday, March 9, 2015

James Turrell

James Turrell was born in 1943 in Los Angeles and went to Pomona College for psychology and mathematics. The artist is currently living in Arizona. He pursued art in graduate school and went to Claremont Graduate School in Claremont California, where he received his MFA. Turrell's work involves space and light, which impacts the audience’s eye, mind, and body. The artist has a fascination for light and man's place on earth. He states that he allows us to see. He has been at celestial observatory, working for the past 30 years. When viewing his art, people have greater self-awareness, meditation, and patience. He received a Mac Aruthur and Guggenheim award.

         I really enjoy Turrell's work. I noticed in all of his images, there are points of lightness and darkness. My eyes focus on the section of the photograph where there is light. My favorite image is the "Roden Crater." I like how in most of the picture you're surrounded by darkness, yet there is a brightness on the outside to capture you're attention. I found this picture interesting because it looks like the shape of a keyhole in a door. I feel like I'm looking at something from a different perspective.
http://www.art21.org/artists/james-turrell/slideshows

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Joan Jonas



Joan Jonas was born in 1936, in New York and went to Mount Holyoke College in 1958. She attended Columbia University in 1965 and received her MFA. She is currently a professor at MIT. Her work is video, installation, sculpture, drawing and is collaborative with musicians and dancers. She draws on mythic stories from cultures and texts with the politics. In some of the works, there are masks to emphasize symbols and self-awareness. The artists reflects into metaphors for the divide between the subjective and the objective vision and the loss of fixed identities. She has received various awards such as the Rockefeller Foundation in 1990, the American Film Institute's Maya Deren Award for Video in 1989, the Guggenheim Foundation in 1976 and the National Endowment for the Arts in 1974.

My favorite piece of work is the "Organic Honey's Vertical Roll" because I feel in the image like I'm an observer in the scene. The picture is taken from the back corner so it feels like I'm behind the scenes. The man is recording a woman so it shows that there is motion in the photograph. The woman's costume really caught my eye in this picture because of the tall hat. I also liked the images at the beach in the "Nova Scotia Beach Dance" because it shows motion and different actions.

http://www.art21.org/artists/joan-jonas

Robert Adams




Robert Adams was born in Orange, New Jersey, in 1937. He went to the University of Redlands in California for his undergrad and then went to the University of Southern Califortnia, where he recieved his PHD. His work is a contradiction between landscapes transformed, human presence and the beauty of light and land rendered by the camera. The photos reflect the hollowness during the nineteenth century. He received some awards such as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Award in 1994 and the Spectrum International Prize for Photography in 1995. He's had exhibits in the Yale University Art Gallery in 2002, Denver Art Museum in 1993 and the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1989.

His photographs particularly caught my attention because it was usually people departing from each other or people by themselves in an open area. My favorite piece of work is "Dead Plant, Barbed Wire, and Razor Wire, Palos Verdes, California."I like this photograph because something as simple as barb wire can look so fascinating because of the shape and the way the wire twists.The photos capture the physical traces of human life such as a clear-cut forest or a half-built house. I like how in each picture my eye is drawn to a specific section.

http://www.art21.org/artists/robert-adams?expand=1

Janine Antoni




Janine Antoni was born in 1964, in Freeport, Bahamas. Antoni received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and her MFA from Rhode Island School of Design in 1989. Her art is a blend of sculpture and performance art. Everyday activities such as bathing and sleeping are made into art. She uses her body as a primary tool for making sculptures. For example, she chiseled lard and chocolate with her teeth and used brainwave signals recorded at night for different pieces of art. She has had works displayed at the Whitney Museum of American Art,  S.I.T.E. Santa Fe, and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin. 

My favorite piece of art is the "Moor." She taught herself to make a rope out of materials donated by friends and materials. She twisted materials together to create a  life-line that unified a group of people into a whole. This piece caught my eye because of the colorful flowers in it. I really like how she creates her pieces out of various materials. I like the different things she braids together because it's unlike anything I've seen before. When looking at her different pieces of work, it seems like the ropes she creates are very long. For example, the one is stretched across the length of the entire room.


http://www.art21.org/artists/janine-antoni

Lynda Benglis




Lynda Benglis was born in 1941, in Lake Charles, Louisiana. She went to Newcomb College in 1964 and received her BFA and received her honorary doctorate from Kansas City Art Institute in 2000. Her work is the result of materials in actions such as cinched metal, dripped latex, poured latex and foam. These sculptures have bold colors, sensual lines, and references to the human body. She use foundation, lumps, knots and fans. Other materials used are lead, gold leaf, polyurethane, and glitter. Some of her works explore cultural heritages such as Indian architecture. She received awards such as the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1975 and grants for the National Endowment for the Arts in 1979. Benglis has work displayed in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Dallas Museum of Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim. 

I was particularly drawn to her work because I thought the materials that were used looked very different, such as different metals. I thought the shapes of her work were original because they were twisted around on themselves. I liked the contrastive colors she used and the way she applied them because they don't completely cover the piece of work.

http://www.art21.org/artists/lynda-benglis

Katharina Grosse








Katarina Gross was a painter that was born in 1961, in Freiburg, Germany. She uses sprayed acrylic colors on large sculptures or walls. She has an interest in imagining things big in relationship to one's surroundings. She likes exploring this thought while observing the world and being in it. She uses architecture and the natural world for juxtapositions. Her work generally has complex narratives psychedelic vistas, evocative titles, and everyday objects. She builds her work with layers of colors. She is a professor and has received awards such as the Fred-Thieler-Preis in 2003, and the Schmidt-Rottluff-Stipendium in 1993. Her exhibits were displayed in places such as Public Art Fund in 2013, Nasher Sculpture Center in 2013, MOCA Cleveland in 2012 and Mass MoCa in 2010. 

I was really interested in her arts because I loved the different layers of vibrant colors in her work. The colors she uses in the works are mesmerizing. I thought it was interesting that she created these patterns of colors large-scale sculptures, walls and floors. I liked the "Just the Two of Us" which is the piece of art outside. If I was outside, the colors would definitely capture my attention and keep my interest. I like that her sculptures usually have sharp edges but she usually paints with softer lines.

http://www.art21.org/artists/katharina-grosse