Posts Tagged Art

25 Magnificent Modern Day Movie Illustrations (Repost)

I stole this link from a friend.  It highlights modern artwork interpretations of movie posters and novelizations of some famous movies.  Check it out:

http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/25-magnificent-modern-day

Ghost Busters and The Dark Knight posters, reimagined

Ghost Busters and The Dark Knight posters, reimagined

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Twistori

Ok, I know I just posted a piece of Twitter-based web art last week. Since I discovered that, though, I’ve come across another one that I like even more. It’s inspired by We Feel Fine, which we showed you a few months ago. Twistori compiles new tweets with the words “I love,” “I hate,” “I think,” “I feel,” “I believe,” and “I wish.” You can select any of those six, and tweets will roll by. The presentation is simple and elegant. My favorite that I’ve seen so far is “I wish I were a llama in a great big llama world!!!” Check out Twistori!

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Response aka I’m back (insert swear word)<— sorry about that.

I wanted to post something I thought was cool and then saw this discussion going on about music and meaning. I’ve been reading and thinking about this lately; I’m starting to go into sociological ideas about art. So I’ll add a couple of thoughts.

Well, I think one of the problems in discussing music and meaning is that the subject (the listener) and the object (the work) are often separated. If the music is not experienced by an individual, it can be said not to exist for him/her. It would be interesting to think about a piece of music very visible in a certain society that is not experienced by some person in that society. What would that dichotomy produce? I know that since I am unfamiliar with many of the musics you guys have grown up with here in the USA, I often feel no emotional or intellectual connection when those musics are discussed in a group. I feel I am “missing out” on something.

Since I have been living with Geoff, I have listened to a lot of hip hop, and he has been nice enough to explain to me what goes on in the music. Before coming to the US, hip hop was cool beats and video clips on tv. Now it is something more, and it isn’t necessarily political or social or anything of the sort. I have experienced hip hop in a culture where  it is practiced. I have a way of understanding, of thinking about the music through labels, artist names, city names, club names. I guess it helped that the sounds interest me, but without knowledge (and I don’t mean academic labels and models) I would have tin ears – the music would be like a fascinating object I look at from a distance in a museum.

The first time, I watched Jon Stewart, I thought he was stupid. The way the person framed his work didn’t help (“it’s fake news”); his show is one of my favorites, three years later! Same reasons why that happened: watching it, understanding it, reading Stewart, talking to people about him, noticing how serious this guy is (or usually is) behind all the joking.

Another idea in an article I was reading about children’s music education is how music tends to provoke different reactions in people, some not related to music: beliefs, ideas, images. So, yes the music itself has no meaning, but that is of no use to me, like talking about a live human being only made up of a skeleton. John Dewey wrote that written/spoken language tends to dominate in society while itself not able to fully articulate other forms of perception. It is sometimes difficult to imagine how we perceive the world without putting linguistic labels on these stimuli because many of us have not been educated to do so. Nattiez’s quote from Geoff’s post says it better than I. Although I wonder what Geoff means when he writes that meaning is arbitrary in music. If it is that the same music has different meanings to different people, I agree. But I could counter and say that the musical relationships – which are meaningful because they involve agreement and disagreement, consonance and dissonance – in a fugue are intentional if I limit myself to observing the music.

Even the Threnody example… funny that you mentioned it Sam, because I remember thinking that there was no relationship to Hiroshima whatsoever the first time I heard it. Then I just convinced myself that it must have some emotional connection. On the other hand, what if it were called “A Sunny Afternoon in San Fransisco?” It wouldn’t make sense to me. It would be a joke or a comment. So there must be some direct connection between the title and the music in this case. I agree with Matt when he says that an evocative title could provide a reference (or entry) point for the listener, but I sometimes think titles coerce people into going a certain direction. So Beethoven’s 6th is all about storms and pastures because it is the Pastoral (while the first movement is an excellent example of abstract music derived from few motifs exposed at the start). On a little tangent, I have always thought if it would be possible to condition people to experience “happy” when exposed to music in a minor key.

Which brings in the article I am reading today. It mentions this anthropological theory by Gell that looks at art as an integral part of social relations. For example, when art is given as a gift, it anticipates a certain change in a social relationship, but at the same time, the object is changed in the process. Gell gives the example of a picture of a nude woman that was slashed by a feminist. Whatever the initial impetus that led to it’s painting, it’s “meaning” or “status,” what provoked her reaction, was different to the slasher. A less graphic example of how an artwork is changed is seen in Wagner’s work, used – or hijacked – by Hitler as an expression of anti-semitism. (I haven’t heard the operas, but Daniel Barenboim suggests that the Ring Cycle has no anti-semitism in it. Apparently, Wagner’s writings expose his anti-semitic views.) Even Stravinsky was dialoguing with himself and those around him at the time. True, minor chord does not equal teary face, but Stravinsky understood the world, fulfilled himself, expressed himself in musical terms. I don’t know if musical knowledge has an inherent utilitarian use, but it is a way of being and experiencing one’s surroundings. Through this process, objects become means to adapt and harmonize with the world; they acquire meaning. And so much for the myth of “original” meaning. No one can really know that. No one today can know what made Dave write his sax quartet. Heck, he might probably not know all the reasons behind his desire to write it!

There is another interesting example in the article about Gell’s theory used in today’s digital world. Hip hop beats that are popular in the US take months to get to Asia. When DJs in Asia become aware of them, they use them for the purposes of their societies, which is apparently why Asian hip hop is different. There is another article posted on Dr. Largey’s billboard about rap in China, how it adapts as an underground movement, how artists strive to use Chinese words and proverbs instead of English, how the groups stay under the government radar.

In Lebanon, I found out that Jon Stewart airs on cable tv every evening. My family watches him sometime. I wonder what it means to them? I remember watching it with my sister one night. I found out that I missed the US and hadn’t noticed how I missed the show itself after not having watched TV for a while. I knew something about the show, through experience, that my family couldn’t know. I felt that I somehow belonged to the culture of the show more than they do, even though they laughed along with Stewart. Even if the show is the same, what it means to an American, an immigrant, and a Lebanese who has never been to the US varies. And I am pretty sure that an Arabic adaptation of the show’s idea would feel different. That is how art is more visibly transformed as it is received by different people.

Now, what about older, traditional works? How are they changed with time? I’m thinking of one example, the use of period vs. modern instruments in performance and recording. Definitely, there is an ideology behind period-instrument performances, that of reproducing an “original” sound. (Heck, I could get picky even with this: how was it recorded, what venue, how many audience members, what were the acoustics like, what were the audience members wearing, what were they thinking about.) The scores are the same – or are they with all this stuff about Urtext vs. publisher/performer editions – but that doesn’t mean anything. Remember when I posted the stuff around school during my first year here, pissed off at classical musicians? I later watched the documentary about the Venezuelan Youth Orchestra and the system behind it. Criticize them all you want, but I remember thinking that I’d never post anything like that in Venezuela (nor in EL anymore. I’ve softened up a bit since). Beethoven means something different for these people there that makes them alive!

I guess what I am saying in a nutshell is that music is a part of culture and man’s activities.

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Twyric

Yes, that’s a made up word, but I didn’t make it up. The Christian Mähler at Twyric.com did. Twyric is one of many web art projects that are taking advantage of the rapid pace of the creation of new, personal content on blogs and websites like Twitter, Flickr, Tumblr, and others. Mähler’s program constantly combs through new Twitter posts in search of poems (by looking at hashtags). Then, it looks through the words of the poem, and tries to find tagged images on Flickr that it thinks pair appropriately with the poem. The results are mixed, but I kind of like that the poems and pictures don’t always make a clean connection or that either the poem or the picture (or both) might not be very good. Check it out for yourself: http://twyric.com/. It can also be your screen saver. You can even customize it to look for specific kinds of Twitter poems (like haiku) or Flickr images.

Here’s one I saw recently:

twyricshot

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Catharsis

When I visited the St. Louis Art Museum as a kid, this was always one of my favorite pieces. Now, thanks to their eMuseum, I can share it with everybody. I liked to think of Paganini sawing a way so hard and fast that his violin exploded and was somehow captured in a kind of three-dimensional photograph.

Paganinis Soul

Paganini's Soul

Paganini’s Soul
1979
Arman
American (born France), born 1928
charred violin in plastic

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The Big Chart

I still remember learning about axioms in geometry class when I was a freshman in high school. Axioms are things that are so obviously true that they don’t require proof. I’m sure they are useful to mathematicians everywhere, but I don’t really like the idea of taking things for granted. It seems like a cop out. I think there are some architects at El Dorado, Inc. in Kansas City, Missouri that would agree with me. Generally, we accept as axiomatic that things that are as different as an apple and an orange (which are really not that different at all) are incomparable. We even have an English idiom based on the idea. The good people at El Dorado, Inc. think that you can compare not only apples and oranges, but really any two things that your mind has the capacity to consider.

They put together this humorous video called “The Big Chart.” The Big Chart is a organizational device that the Counter-Intuitive Comparison Institute of North America (C.I.C.I.N.A.) uses to compare things. Which is better: apples or oranges? seahorses or English people? C.I.C.I.N.A. and the Big Chart have the answer. The video is an elaborate and hilarious joke, but they take their counter-intuitive comparison seriously at El Dorado, Inc.

They like to compare their projects, mostly buildings, with things that seem to have little in common with buildings, like comparing a barn to a camel, or a parking structure to a Def Leppard album. In another video on the El Dorado, Inc. website, the architects discuss their methods of counter-intuitive comparison that they seem to consider a serious (if slightly silly) part of their work. The outcome is not important (usually their projects lose). What is important is the process of deliberation. By comparing a barn and a camel, one determines criteria for comparison, and in doing so, is forced to think about the barn and the camel differently. They both store things. the barn can store more, but the camel’s storage is mobile and can be converted into energy. With the help of another camel, the camel can reproduce and make more camels; the barn cannot make more barns. By thinking about barns and other buildings in new ways, the architects and designers at El Dorado, Inc. expand their creative vocabulary.

The Big Chart is here.

The other (long) video about using the counter-intuitive comparison process on El Dorado’s projects is here.

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The Wall Project (part 1)

The Wall Project is one of my many goofy ideas, but unlike most of my goofy ideas, this one has actually grown in to a cool, collaborative piece of art.

I’ve always enjoyed doodling, and I think a lot of my visual art is really a slightly grown-up form of doodles. One day during an idle office hour (redundant?), I began doodling on some 3×5.5-inch scraps of paper that I had leftover from printing scores for a saxophone piece the night before. I kind of liked my doodle, but I was running out of room on the small card. So, I grabbed another card and continued my doodle onto it. I ended up liking my doodle so much that I decided to tape it to the wall of the office that I shared with 9 other music theory teaching assistants. Later that week, a couple of other TAs grabbed cards and continued my doodles in interesting and unexpected ways. I thought, “How cool is that? We should do another one.” So, with the same scraps of paper and armed with some colored pencils, I started a collaborative art piece that I now call either the Wall Project (as it was originally sticking cards to the wall here at the Guidonian Hand Executive Office Suite) or the Big Board (as it is now sticking cards to a big piece of foam board).

The piece has grown beyond what I ever expected it could, and the board only has room for about ten or so more cards (as of this writing). People that have contributed are mostly composers and musicians, and none of us have any formal training in art. They are friends and acquaintances from all over the place that have just so happened to be in the same room as the big board and were in a creative mood. I like to take the board to parties and invite people to add to it. Some of my friends like it so much that they have added four, five, or even six cards to the project.

I’m starting a series about the Wall Project here on the blog. Each post will include a photo of an individual card, and then that card with the other cards that were on the board when it was added (moving more-or-less in chronological order).

Here’s the inaugural card of the Wall Project, created by yours truly:

Wall Project: Card 1 (David MacDonald)

Wall Project: Card 1 (David MacDonald)

It’s intended to be rather non-descript. I didn’t want to impose myself on the work at the beginning, but I needed to start with something. I tried to start a trend of initialling and dating each card (bottom right conrner), but that never really caught on. Stay RSS-fed for the next installment, and keep your eye on that blue squiggly thing. I think of it as a river viewed from above, but I wonder what other artists are going to do with that…

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We Feel Fine

A while back, I posted a YouTube video called The Machine is Us/ing Us. It was an interesting and creative expression of the way the modern internet is changing the way we think about many different things, including art. In this spirit, I’d like to share with you a very cool piece of web art called We Feel Fine by Jonathan Harris and Sep Kamvar. The artists describe the piece as “an exploration of human emotions, in six movements.” Harris is interested in collecting stories, and this piece is constantly mining the internet for new ones. Every two or three minutes, We Feel Fine searches through all newly posted blog entries for sentences that begin with “I feel…” or “I am feeling…” It takes those sentences and as much data about the author as it can figure out, then displays them in a number of ways. Check it out here (http://www.wefeelfine.org).

We Feel Fine

We Feel Fine

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The Arrogance of Creation

Every Friday afternoon at 2:30, all the student composers here at Michigan State get together to discuss music. Sometimes it’s our music; sometimes it’s somebody else’s. Sometimes it’s fun; sometimes it’s excruciating; sometimes it’s both. We call it composition studio class, and it has been known to instigate some rather heated debates.

To be a composer, you have to have strong enough opinions about music (and a high enough opinion of yourself) that you think people should spend their valuable time listening to your music. Not only should they listen to you instead of your colleagues, but also instead of Beethoven, Bach, Prokofiev, Coltrane, and the Beatles. And not only should they listen to you instead of all those people, but they should listen to you instead of doing literally anything else at all!

I call this “the arrogance of creation,” because it is certainly not limited to composers. Performers are taking part in the arrogance of making music. Artists, actors, poets, filmmakers, and dancers all demand your attention for a certain amount of time to receive their art. This is not to say, however, that artists have disdain for their audience (though, of course, some do). On the contrary, the arrogance of creation is balanced by a respect for the audience. In fact, a creator’s respect for his or her audience is often directly proportional to their creative arrogance. The struggle to balance these two ideas is the cause of a great deal of insecurity and neurosis in the artistic community. If you haven’t met a neurotic, insecure singer or actor, then you probably haven’t met any singers or actors.

Composer Johannes Brahms was famously struck with a horrible bout of insecurity after having been deemed the intellectual and cultural heir of Beethoven. Robert Schumann said that he would be the next great composer, in the tradition of Beethoven. Brahms basically went crazy trying to live up to this impossible standard.* I think this was the result of his respect for his audience, who all new and loved Beethoven’s music, outgrowing his arrogance. Eventually, Brahms did, by most accounts, become the next great composer. Thankfully for all of us, though, he was not the last great composer. Since his time, musicians and artists have continued to struggle with the balance of arrogance and respect.

What do you think? Is there an inherent arrogance in the act of creation?

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* Brahms, however, had the last laugh. He was known to be quite fond of Schumann’s wife, and historians are divided as to how that all played out…

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Trying New Things

abstraction-no-1

Abstraction

Sometimes I joke that I collect hobbies. I think this comes from my passion for learning about new things. Some of them, like music, have stuck around and remain a large part of my life. Others, like the stop-motion animations I used to make with my Dad’s first digital camera, have been left behind in earlier parts of my life. When I think about picking up a new hobby to add to my collection, one of my concerns is the cost. Picking up golf would cost me hundreds of dollars or more, but picking up disc golf (as I did a few years back) only cost about ten or fifteen bucks. What, then, is the value of collecting these hobbies?

The wide variety of hobbies gets me thinking about things differently, like having your whole iPod on shuffle. Listening to Bartok, then Ellington, then Berio, then the Beatles will cause you to think about Bartok, Ellington, Berio, and the Beatles differently.

The last hobby added to my collection (aside from this blog, anyway), was art. Last summer, I picked up a basic acrylic paint set to occupy the hours not taken up by class. Never having taken an art class, I really didn’t know what I was getting into. Everything I was doing was an experiment. I learned what kinds of paper held the paint effectively, how paints behaved differently on canvases, and what interesting things I could mix into the paints to create different textures. It was just as exciting to me as learning about the basics of composition, instrumentation, and chord voicings; or learning about basic concepts in electronics or literature. Buried so mind-numbingly deep in studying music, I had forgotten that feeling of discovery, and painting helped me regain it. I think Matt might say the same thing about quantum physics

All too often, fear keeps us from trying new things. Fear of failure may be reasonable in, say, a Wild West-type pistols-at-dawn duel. But most of the time, trying something new isn’t as risky as that. Create something new, I think you’ll find that it’s worth it.

What new things have you tried recently? How have they changed the way you think about other parts of your life?

Emerging Orange

Emerging Orange

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