Showing posts with label digital joiners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital joiners. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
Monday, 11 July 2011
Doug and Mike Starn
The Starn Twins’ artworks are “not appropriation photographs designed to deconstruct- or expose the context in which the original art was made” (Papadakis, 1989 p.61). The objects produced are “drained of its original significance” (Papadakis, 1989 p.61). Doug and Mike Starn’s work seem to be part of the so lat century, millennium burnout. The two have so “internalized post-modernism as to be virtually free of it, liberated, that is, to the exercise post modern license without being over determined or terrorized by its ideological excess” (Wheeler, 1991 p.335).
Still Life 1983
The Building 1985
They do recycle art history, like postmodernism but they offer something more positive and “more humanistic” with “richer imagery that elicit feeling and fantasy” (Wheeler, 1991 p.336). Doug and Mike Starn’s work is made up of “elaborately layered collages cobbled together with Scotch Magic Tape” (Wheeler, 1991 p.336).
Rookery 1985
Double Stark Portrait in Swirl 1985-6. Toned silver print with tape, 8'3" square.
The fragmented results are fascinating like a “photographic Cubism with the geometric patterning of the individual sheets of paper, fracturing and distancing the underlying ‘picture’ in much the same way that the lambent planes of an Analystical Cubsim jostle a representational world that supposedly lies beneath” (Papadakis, 1989, p.61).
Triple Christ toned silver print with Scotch tape, aluminium, wood, glue and glass 1986
Untitled (Large Christ) 1987, silver print, tape. film, glass, wood, 228.6 x 609.6 cm
Blue Lisa 1987, toned silver print 215.9x134.6cm
Sources:
Papadakis, (1989) New York New Art, Art & Design, Academy Editions London/New York: St. Martin’s Press
Wheeler, (1991) Art Since Mid-Century, London: Thames and Hudson
N.B. Some of the early titles seem wrong to me. I hope to research further and discover more details.
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
Project Three Presentation and Proposal
Themes and Technologies:
The third project:
–engages with the relationship between the representation of real spaces and places and their virtual equivalent
–Using software like Microsoft Silverlight and Photosynth amplifies photographic possibilities in such a way that it problematises representation
–Explores the architectural idea of deconstructivism associated with hyper architecture
–It is characterized by ideas of fragmentation, and an interest in manipulating structures.
•The final project concerns itself with the technologies that make it possible to construct photographic panoramas and auto stitch pictures to essentially create what has come to be described as auto joiners (Zelnik-Manor & Perona, 2008).
•The following images are achieved via the use of Microsoft’s Photosynth technology:
Photosynth Architectural Mutations:
Photosynthed architecture: algorithmic architecture (2011)
Key influences
•The visual artefacts
–corresponds to the mosaic of visual experiences contained within collage, and especially cubist collage and painting.
–a response to the expanding field of photography a response to Berger and Vertov’s description of a technological way of seeing:
-“the invention of the camera changed the way” we “saw…. The visible no longer presented itself” in “order to be seen. On the contrary, the visible, in continual flux, became fugitive” (1972, p.18)
-Cubism “creates these fractured, multiple images which are like shifting kaleidoscopes” (Levy, M, 1969, p.322).
-Fred Ritchin in his book After Photography, states that photography is becoming “cubist” (2010, p. 123).
-Fred Ritchin in his book After Photography, states that photography is becoming “cubist” (2010, p. 123).
-The “contradictory ‘double’ image” created by Photosynth “is cubist; reality has no single truth” (Ritchin, .F., 2010 p. 147).
-The imagery for project 3 attempts to describe in visual terms “the flickering ungovernable mobility of the gaze” (Bryson, 1983 p.121).
-The imagery for project 3 attempts to describe in visual terms “the flickering ungovernable mobility of the gaze” (Bryson, 1983 p.121).
-Uricchio in “The Algorithmic turn: photosynth, augmented reality and changing implications of the Image” (2011):
Notes the temporal slippage contained within a photosynth. Something similar to “the ‘transient, the contingent’ that Baudelaire ascribes to the modern” (Uricchio, W., 2011, p.29)
Notes the temporal slippage contained within a photosynth. Something similar to “the ‘transient, the contingent’ that Baudelaire ascribes to the modern” (Uricchio, W., 2011, p.29)
-Uricchio argues that the photosynth recalls the imagery of the early-nineteenth-century, where long time exposure often resulted in ghost figures (Uricchio, W., 2011, p.29)
-This project concerns itself with Photosynth’s “radical disjunctures” and the “unstable nature of the composite” (Uricchio, W., 2011, p.30).
-This project concerns itself with Photosynth’s “radical disjunctures” and the “unstable nature of the composite” (Uricchio, W., 2011, p.30).
Visual Influences
The photosynth is also referred to as the auto joiner (“joiner” is coined by Hockney). This term is associated with Jan Dibbetts, David Hockney, John Stezaker, Thomas Kellner and Gordon Matta-Clark .
George Braque Soda 1911
Pablo Picasso Still Life with Chair Caning 1912
Jan Dibbets Panorama Dutch Mountain 12 x 15° Sea II A 1971
Jan Dibbets, Musée Zadkine photo collages 1994
John Stezaker Untitled (For Angus) Film Still Collage II, 2009
Gordon Matta- Clark Splitting, 1974
Chromogenic prints mounted on board
Chromogenic prints mounted on board
David Hockney Mother, Los Angeles, Dec. ‘82 1982
Thomas Kellner Houston Texas, Oil Refinery 2006
Tim Head’s Displacement installation also with similar themes.
Tim Head Displacements (installation view) 1975
Visualization
•The imagery is digitally projected
•Visually it is a mosaic of different perspectives of architecture
•The original idea draws from Tim Head’s installation: the building projected on to is the same building as the one represented within the projection.
Sources:
Baudelaire, C., (2008) The Painter of Modern Life, London: Phaidon
Berger, J., (1972) Ways of Seeing London: BBC, Penguin Books
Bryson, n., (1983) Vision and Painting: The Logic of the Gaze, New Haven: Yale University Press
Levy, M., (1969) A History of Western Art London: Thames and Hudson
Ritchin, F., After Photography London: Norton
Uricchio, W., (2011) “The Algorithmic Turn: Photosynth, Augmented Reality and the Changing Implications of the Image” Visual Studies vol 26 Issue 1pp. 25- 35
Zelnik-Manor (2007) “Mult-View Image Compositions”
http://authors.library.caltech.edu/7695/1/paper.pdf
[Last Accessed 10 May, 2011]
Zelnik-Manor & Perona (2008) ”Automating Joiners”
http://webee.technion.ac.il/~lihi/Publications/ZelnikPerona.AutoJoiners.pdf
[Last Accessed 10 May, 2011]
Baudelaire, C., (2008) The Painter of Modern Life, London: Phaidon
Berger, J., (1972) Ways of Seeing London: BBC, Penguin Books
Bryson, n., (1983) Vision and Painting: The Logic of the Gaze, New Haven: Yale University Press
Levy, M., (1969) A History of Western Art London: Thames and Hudson
Ritchin, F., After Photography London: Norton
Uricchio, W., (2011) “The Algorithmic Turn: Photosynth, Augmented Reality and the Changing Implications of the Image” Visual Studies vol 26 Issue 1pp. 25- 35
Zelnik-Manor (2007) “Mult-View Image Compositions”
http://authors.library.caltech.edu/7695/1/paper.pdf
[Last Accessed 10 May, 2011]
Zelnik-Manor & Perona (2008) ”Automating Joiners”
http://webee.technion.ac.il/~lihi/Publications/ZelnikPerona.AutoJoiners.pdf
[Last Accessed 10 May, 2011]
Thursday, 5 May 2011
David Hockney
Don and Christopher, Los Angeles, 6th March 1982
David Hockney’s work shows an infatuation with the Polaroid, which led him to “re-explore the riches of the space-time equation investigated by Braque and Picasso in Analytical Cubism” (Wheeler, 1991 p. 159).
Photographing Annie Leibovitz While She Is Photographing Me, 1982
photographic collage, 25 7/8 x 61 3/4 in.
photographic collage, 25 7/8 x 61 3/4 in.
In a conversation between David Hockney and Paul Joyce they explore the way in which technology influences the way we see:
Paul Joyce: So called reality accords with a programmed way of looking which goes back to what you were saying earlier, that the photograph has influenced the way we look. If we are presented with a photograph we say: well, that’s life. But it may not only be still photog4raphers that are responsible for that. Movies have influenced our way of seeing as well, but they are not life at all. They show a world confected, glamorized, changed.
Still Life Blue Guitar, 1982 composite polaroid, 24 1/2 x30 in.
Mother, Bradford Yorkshire 1982, composite polaroid, 56x23 1/2
David Hockney: I do think it’s true that all depictions must be stylized, what we call stylized. There is no way they can’t be. After all, they are not really reality. They are put on a flat surface as stylizations of some kind.
Listen to this [quotes from Leo Steinberg*]
Surveying Picasso’s lifelong commitment to women as solid reality - a commitment relaxed only during the cubist episode – one arrives at a disturbing conclusion. That Picasso, the great flattener of the Twentieth Century painting has had to cope within himself with the most uncompromising three dimensional; imagination that ever possessed a great painter. And that he flattened the language of painting in the years just before World War I because the traditional means of 3D rendering inherited from the past were for him too one-sided , too lamely content with the exclusive aspect in other words- not 3-D enough.
Amazing, isn’t it! Picasso shows you both front and back, and this must be about memory because…
PJ: You must retain one when you are looking at the other. Of course, when we walk around in an object, such as a jacket that’s on a peg, we are also dealing with what we expect it to be like. We have seen a jacket before and our imagination and our memory are stimulated by something already seen and known.
*Other Criteria by Leo Sternberg (Oxford University Press, 1975).
Sources:
Joyce, P., (1988) Hockney on Photography London: Jonathan Cape
Wheeler, D., (1991) Art Since Mid-Century London: Thames and Hudson
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