Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Burst Transmission
Art Fair Weekend - March 6th
I took off work, on Friday, March the 6th, and drove up to New York to see as much art as I could in one day. I made it to the Met for a Pierre Bonnard exhibit, then to the Armory Show, then to Pulse, and finally to the Strand Bookstore.
At the Met: The Bonnard show was fantastic. He is my favorite colorist. I was really excited to get my hands on the catalog, so I could own some good reproductions of the paintings. Alas, the catalog's reproductions were terrible. The colors were way off. I don't know if this has to do with the gamut of the CMYK inks, or a misguided designer was "correcting" the color levels. Fortunately, there were catalogs on display beside the paintings themselves, so a comparison could be made.
I hadn't really seen Bonnard's drawings before; They are small and notational in nature. As explained by the text-on-the-wall, the drawings were his primary source material while painting, as a cue to his memory. This means that his paintings are a reconstruction of certain idealized memories. At some point, I think everyone has wished they could be transported to a happier time of which they held an image in their mind. So, yes, Bonnard's art is sentimental, but it is also great.
At the Armory Show: There were not as many people as last year, but just as much art to see. I got the fair at 2pm. Having woken up at 4:15am and already spent three-and-a-half hours in the Met, I was feeling a little ragged. Once I got in among the booths I was completely energized. My favorite thing I saw was a work by Ikeda Manabu (pictured below). He's a great example of an artist who fills their brain until the pressure creates a jewel. His work reminds me of David Macaulay and Geoff Darrow. Link to Ikeda Manabu's Tokyo gallery.
At Pulse: Pulse had a more relaxed, less commercial atmosphere. It also had more daring and youthful work.
At the Strand: I expected the Strand to be larger than Powell's in Portland, but it was less than one-half the size. This was made up for by their fantastic art book section. I picked up a Stuart Davis monograph and headed to the basement to find their computer graphics section. In the back corner of a twisting dead-end aisle I found a great book from 1967 about cross-pollination of ideas between science and art. (One chapter is entitled "The Computer Apprentice".) I haven't had a chance to read it, yet, but if the rest of the book is like the first two chapters, it will be quite the source of inspiration. The book is "The Science of Art: The Cybernetics of Creative Communication" by Robert E. Mueller.
Free stuff
I love me a scribble-machine, and this is a nice one.
Link to Golan Levin's other pieces.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Watchmen rawks!
i gotta say that the original comic/graphic novel was indeed a classic and they did cut some stuff out for the movie. So that it could be reduced to a mere 3 hours (if you include the trailers, and i do.) EVEN SO! the watchmen movie was enjoyable to watch on the big screen. to see the characters come to life. especially the anti-heroes Rorschach and "The Comedian." Dark stuff Mr.Moore!
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Monday, March 02, 2009
THE BRIEF BUT GLORIOUS LIFE OF WEB 2.0, AND WHAT COMES AFTER
A speech about WEB 2.0 presenting a metaphor for complete breakdown and transition of global systems.
Pass the duct tape and hold that turtle still.
Pass the duct tape and hold that turtle still.
We've got a web built on top of a collapsed economy. THAT's the black hole at the center of the solar system now. There's gonna be a Transition Web. Your economic system collapses: Eastern Europe, Russia, the Transition Economy, that bracing experience is for everybody now. Except it's not Communism transitioning toward capitalism. It's the whole world into transition toward something we don't even have proper words for.By Bruce Sterling
Breaking News
Artist annoys peers with melodramatic/cutesy commentary and photographs of little noses.
Link to Friderika Faye Benedict.
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