Thursday, November 15, 2012
Point Of View_Tutino
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Melissa Rice Johnson Museum Field Trip
1 1) For the first piece of art
we looked at was Type A: Barrier, which was a piece of work, created by Adam
Ames and Andrew Bordwin. They had set up curved blocks that looked like the
ones that could be on construction sites. They were placed in a fashion to help
instate the sense of security and it relates to one of the videos shown in
Harun Farocki’s relates to these blocks in that the video that the video that
showed the men going into the elevators to head to their work place and it was
kind of on constant repeat. I find them similar because these men are heading
down to their work place yet those blocks are already working so to say.
2) Harun
Farocki’s instillation of 11 videos helped changed the video’s original
meanings since the later decades changed in process of what the actual footage should
mean. In the last film installment it is more of a film like from a movie scene
and doesn’t really capture the postmodern factories. The installation also put
a loop in a specific part of the film it was showing to possibly show the repetitiveness
of the work force during those times.
Johnson Museum Field Trip
1. Type A: Barrier
This piece to me, is based off power and how our world is based off how power-hungry we are. The description bases a lot of it's meaning through government and male competition. This to me symbolizes male suppression and how men in society are taught to protect their wives, make lots of money, be the strongest, and be the best. Men are then unable to break this barrier and do what makes them truly happy because society makes fun of happy men, they consider them to be flamboyant and having low testosterone. These concrete sculptures are white and tough, which is what the ideal man is. They also must protect: their country, their lives, other people's lives. They are also a form of construction (changing or building something new), while everything changes around men (women empowerment, racial acceptance), men stand their ground and make sure everything is under control. This is a very powerful pice, which sums up a lot of american historical history and emphasizes that this in fact is a man's world, but I hope that it also means it doesn't always have to be that way, which is why their are spaces in between.
2. Cinemania: Harun Farocki and Holly Zausner
This piece was so much fun to watch representing the factory struggles and major industry periods in life. There are 12 televisions lined up by date. In this piece the people seem to be struggling because they all are in an economic crisis at some point/points in their lives. Their are different countries so it seems to be indicating that these struggles occur everywhere all over the place and people react the same: walking fast, into their factories with large fenced in areas or walls. In each of these videos there is a sense of barrier, they are struggling workers trapped in the economic system created by man. There are a couple videos with bikes in the indicating farther/quicker ways and routs of travels. They also portray the working women, in the earlier films the women are maids and housewives and in the later decade of films the women are shown in more business attire.
This piece to me, is based off power and how our world is based off how power-hungry we are. The description bases a lot of it's meaning through government and male competition. This to me symbolizes male suppression and how men in society are taught to protect their wives, make lots of money, be the strongest, and be the best. Men are then unable to break this barrier and do what makes them truly happy because society makes fun of happy men, they consider them to be flamboyant and having low testosterone. These concrete sculptures are white and tough, which is what the ideal man is. They also must protect: their country, their lives, other people's lives. They are also a form of construction (changing or building something new), while everything changes around men (women empowerment, racial acceptance), men stand their ground and make sure everything is under control. This is a very powerful pice, which sums up a lot of american historical history and emphasizes that this in fact is a man's world, but I hope that it also means it doesn't always have to be that way, which is why their are spaces in between.
2. Cinemania: Harun Farocki and Holly Zausner
This piece was so much fun to watch representing the factory struggles and major industry periods in life. There are 12 televisions lined up by date. In this piece the people seem to be struggling because they all are in an economic crisis at some point/points in their lives. Their are different countries so it seems to be indicating that these struggles occur everywhere all over the place and people react the same: walking fast, into their factories with large fenced in areas or walls. In each of these videos there is a sense of barrier, they are struggling workers trapped in the economic system created by man. There are a couple videos with bikes in the indicating farther/quicker ways and routs of travels. They also portray the working women, in the earlier films the women are maids and housewives and in the later decade of films the women are shown in more business attire.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Johnson Museum Response 2: Harun Farocki
Harun Farocki’s “Workers Leaving the Factory in 11 decades” is entirely composed of appropriated video. How has his installation changed the meaning of the original films? Respond in 150-200 words.
"Cinemania" at the Johnson Museum: http://museum.cornell.edu/exhibitions/cinemania-farocki-zausner.html
"Cinemania" at the Johnson Museum: http://museum.cornell.edu/exhibitions/cinemania-farocki-zausner.html
Johnson Museum Response 1: Type A
Consider the piece Barrier at the Johnson Museum and one single-channel video from the artists’ website. Identify the ideas and concepts that are similar between the pieces, and discuss how the different mediums affect the way that ideas are expressed. Your response should be 150-200 words.
Artist Website: http://www.typea.us/
Johnson Museum: Type A-Barrier
Artist Website: http://www.typea.us/
Johnson Museum: Type A-Barrier
Thursday, November 8, 2012
My Point of View- Jason
Sequence 1 from jasonraymonds426 on Vimeo
Melissa Rice Symmetry in Darkness POV
Child- Kaila's POV project
My point of view video was meant to represent a curious
child. This child is exploring his outdoor surroundings. He represents the
innocent, wondrous mind of a young boy. This video was meant to capture the
idea that children can become absorbed and intrigued in the simplest of things.
Everything is new and interesting to them. They have no stress and pressure to
distract them from some of the most fascinating things in our environments.
Young children can find beauty in something as plain as a brick wall or a muddy
puddle. Adults on the other hand would walk by these commonly seen images with
no care in the world. They are things they pass by daily and don’t acknowledge.
My goal was to open my viewer’s eyes up to the fact that there is beauty
everywhere in nature that the observant children in the world appreciate more
than the rest of us.
Frank Lawrence's By Day and By Night
Torie's perspective video project
Perspective is an aspect that always needs to be considered when creating any form of art, but for this project I wanted my viewer to see perspective as a concept more than just a point of view. The concept behind my piece is filming a very simple topic, drinking a water bottle, at many different angles. Once the angles are filmed they are arranged and overlapped in an interesting way. One the viewer sees the this simple task displayed in this way the viewer is able to understand that it is not simple at all. Nothing is ever simple when looked at through different view points.
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
self-reflection by Nathalie
My video is about self-reflection and how I see myself. It is also expressing a point of view of what is going inside my head rather than about what other people see and what I let them see of myself. I am showing the viewer how I experience myself and the world around me. The different frames represent different thoughts or trains of thought that sometimes overlap and create new images. I am torn into different directions and my mind is not always clear like a mirror, it is more puzzled than a broken mirror. I put on face-paint to show other people an image of myself that I want them to see, but in the end this is not the true personality, so the picture is broken.
To sum up, I really wanted to give the viewer an inside view of myself, an honest and not manipulated view of how I see myself and what is going on in my mind.
Hearts by Isabella- POV project
This video is a combination of different themes to create an
abstract concept. It contains different symbols of love: the hearts
drawn on post-its, the lips, the washing of the hands, and the girl looking in
the mirror. These scenes put together show the nuances of love; we see it on a
superficial level with the post-its, and we also see it on a deeper and darker
level with the slightly forced, pained smiling. The washing of the hands seems
to show someone violently cleansing themself of something, and the girl looking
in the mirror seems to be staring intently at her own appearance, perhaps
thinking that mirror will reveal something about herself. In this video, I wanted
to experiment with various visuals and symbolic images to go against the
commonplace notion that we have about love. I wanted to portray its
multifaceted nature.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Friday, November 2, 2012
Ned Film Project Rough Draft
Day and Night by Frank Lawrence
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Unedited_Beauty - Samantha Tutino
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