Friday, February 29, 2008

Lucian Freud Etchings

A beautiful website from the MOMA show. As is quoted on the site, Freud says "Etching's not drawing exactly, but it's a sort of drawing." You can zoom in a great deal on the images, which is very satisfying. Freud is a very prominent British painter and printmaker.

Tara Donovan

In response to Chris Jordan/Running the Numbers, here is an artist who uses some of the same source material but transforms it entirely into something incredibly beautiful with more complex associations. Here is her gallery page at Ace, and a link for a show at the Hammer Museum in L.A.  The content of the work is entirely different, but worth comparing to Jordan's images.

Whitney Biennial

A quick preview of the new Whitney Biennial from the New York Times. Just a reminder of something everyone should see in New York if you get a chance, though not specifically related to drawing. A touchstone for contemporary artists- love it or hate it, it's all discussed and absorbed.

Running the Numbers

Check it out...even looking at the images on your computer screen will probably blow your mind. :)

Running the Numbers

An American Self-Portrait

This series looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. My hope is that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone, such as we find daily in articles and books. Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year, for example, or 2.3 million Americans in prison, or 410,000 paper cups used every fifteen minutes. This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs. The underlying desire is to emphasize the role of the individual in a society that is increasingly enormous, incomprehensible, and overwhelming.

My only caveat about this series is that the prints must be seen in person to be experienced the way they are intended. As with any large artwork, their scale carries a vital part of their substance which is lost in these little web images. Hopefully the JPEGs displayed here might be enough to arouse your curiosity to attend an exhibition, or to arrange one if you are in a position to do so. The series is a work in progress, and new images will be posted as they are completed, so please stay tuned.

~chris jordan, Seattle, 2007

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Tauba Auerbach

The blog needed some love.

Tauba Auerbach is a contemporary artist who I thought was somewhat of interest in regards to our process drawing/all-over composition assignment. Her work explores language as both a communicative and visual system. Her drawings often consist of letters, yet they forcefully and purposely deny the viewer the ability to read them or comprehend the work's meaning solely from a linguistic standpoint. Despite having words or letters, the works are strongly visual before they are legible, if at all. That being said, they are all beautifully crafted - with beautiful results - despite their heavy conceptual aspects, which I think is related to the purpose of the process/all-over assignment and, really, that type of drawing in general.


One of my favorite of her works is "Alphabetized Bible," which is well, exactly what it sounds like. Though the words are scrambled, the book is still recognizable as a Bible. There is also a strange relationship between the lists of letters and prayer.

Here is a great article from "Art in America" about Auerbach. I also encourage you all to visit her website. Aside from being visually exciting, it is conceptually intriguing in its relationship to her work in the use of both language and design to communicate to the visitor and direct him or her around. There is a good inventory of her work on the website that I really encourage you all to look at because it is all really beautiful and thought-provoking. Some more of my personal favorites that I find especially compelling:
      -Thirty Letters I
      -Uppercase Insides
      -Anagram I

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Drawing on Hands

Not only can people draw on cats but they can draw on hands. These paintings are done by
Italian artist Guido Daniele who was hired by an advertising agency to create body paintings of animals that would bring the animals to life.





Friday, February 15, 2008

Vik Muniz

Vik Muniz's work has a fun relationship to the master copy/response project. Look under "gallery" on the left hand column for the titles of his projects, and take a look at Pictures of Junk, Chocolate, Thread, Dust, Ink, etc. There is much to see on this site.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

more cats + art


So, the cats that paint seem to be a hoax, as are the cats that are painted on.  The myth got started by a very clever book called Why Paint Cats, featuring digitally altered cat pictures accompanied by slightly-too-official-sounding art jargon.  A similar book about cats that paint was written by the same author.  It's pretty funny, and the cat pictures must have taken forever to do, some might even consider them satiric art in their own right.

The Snopes article about the book is here, with pictures:

and here is some funny discussion from people who have taken it seriously:
http://www.whypaintcats.com

Jasper Johns: Gray


“To do a drawing for a painting most often means doing something very sketchy and schematic and then later making it polished...It’s done out of a different kind of energy. I love drawings, so I’ve always enjoyed making drawings that exist on their own." -Jasper Johns

Over the weekend I attended the "Jasper Johns: Gray" exhibit at the Met in NYC. It is a stirring exhibit, both in its haunting beauty and conceptual depth, and I encourage everyone to see it (it's open until May 4th). Though Johns is primarily known for his work as a painter, I think the exhibit raises a lot of issues pertinent to drawing. Many of the paintings are exhibited along with drawings and lithographs, some of which were preparatory but many of which were done after the painting, something Johns often does. Seeing the works together brings to light the "different kind of energy," as Johns mentions, as well as the different process of seeing and interpreting that distinguishes drawing from painting.

Also, the use of gray is very pertinent, since so many of the media in which we work are gray. The varying media Johns uses and the opportunity to compare them reveals how expressive gray can be in itself. I was really struck by how much color there is inherent in each work, both through the coloring of the media (be it encaustic, graphite, etc.) and through the feeling and mood of each work. There is no single "gray" color the way there is a pure pigment of red or blue; instead, every gray is made up of different colors while still being identifiable as gray. The whole spectrum of color is compressed into gray, and the subtlety of variation and expression that allows for is really conveyed in Johns's work.

Edit: If anyone is especially interested in Jasper Johns's drawings, there is a corollary exhibit of his drawings at the Matthew Marks Gallery.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Science and Art

I just finished a book that deals with connections between art and science, and I thought I would share it. Its called An Anthropologist on Mars and its by Oliver Sacks who is a neurologist. It is a group of seven case studies dealing with how neurological disorders can affect creativity. One of the case studies is of a painter and how he loses his sight after a car crash. It touches on how it changes his art and his perception of the world. What is interesting is that the man's visual memory changes to the point where he can't imagine te world in color but only in different shades of gray. It talks a lot about how much color infiltrates art, even in the undertones of black and white works, and how color is sort of taken for granted. Another story is about an accomplished child artist who has autism. This story touches on the idea that different neurological disorders produce their own unique type of art. The book is a really easy read and I would suggest it to anyone that is curious about how the brain, and its disorders, affect the concept of art.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

the journey is the destination

This is a link to one of my favorite books. It's a compilation of Dan Eldon's journals which are filled of collages. He was a photo journalist in many African countries and was killed by the people he was trying to help at age 22. His mom (and sister?) compiled this book using Dan's journals. It inspires me to make art when I'm out of ideas.

Saturday, February 9, 2008


Here are some images from the Comic Abstraction Show I mentioned in class, I'll return the book tomorrow, so check it out if you're interested. The last image is by Janet Fish, who Sarah mentioned.




Friday, February 8, 2008

The Artist's Survival Kit

During the conversation we had at the end of class today, I decided that Keri Smith's Artist's Survival Kit would be a really fantastic thing to share with you all. A friend showed it to me sometime in high school--it's a really great set of PDFs you print out and cut up into little cards/notes/whatever. There are "What to do When You're Stuck" cards, a "Permission to Make Mistakes" card, and a "How to Feel Miserable as an Artist" card, among others. I like the rest of Smith's website, too (particularly her 100 ideas and her collage experiment).

Perspective types and the science of representation

An interesting collection of images and descriptions of perspective techniques from an MIT class taught by Fredo Durand at the lab for computer science.  Here is a link to the main page for the class- looks amazing.

Cyborg Bodies

Found this interesting link to altered bodies in art- go backwards also to the main Cyborg Bodies page.

Robert Lazzarini

Anamorphic sculptures. 
This information from an exhibition he had at Pierogi gallery in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, is helpful, as is this page from the Deitch Projects gallery. These have an interesting relationship to still life and to drawing, even though they are three-dimensional works. 

Mark Tansey

Anamorphic Painting- look at this from a 45 degree angle.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Marla Olmstead, Child Artist

The child painter from upstate New York. It turns out that there is a documentary that came out this past fall called My Kid Could Paint That. Wikipedia explains the drama.

Painting Apparatus

And for a Wesleyan made painting machine:

Artists mentioned in class

Tracy mentioned this artist, Molly Springfield. Her drawings are multi-layered in their point of reference- a drawing of a book which contains of a reproduction of a photocopy of a report, drawings of index cards with information obliterated, etc. Can anyone find a good piece of text about her?

I also mentioned Amy Adler, who takes photographs of drawings and then destroys the original.This is an article you may find helpful, though there are others on her site which I didn't read.

Janine Antoni is the artist who visited Wes last year. Her piece Loving Care is pictured here- we mentioned that she mopped or painted the floor using her hair dipped in dye.

Emma mentioned a show she saw in Boston at the MFA, Drawing: a Broader Definition. This exhibition includes works from the museum's collection which relate to drawing- mostly historical objects such as plates and vessels. The show is actually up until May 4th.

Andy Warhol book

Alex asked for a reminder of the Andy Warhol book we were discussing. It is The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (from A to B and Back Again.)

Dale Chihuly, glass sculptor

Dale Chihuly
Glass sculptor from Seattle that we were discussing

Article about the copyright lawsuit involving Chihuly and assistants who went on to make similar work.

Chihuly also founded an excellent school and residency program for glass, art and crafts in Washington called Pilchuck, which has a summer program you might be interested in.

Rauchenberg's Erased Dekooning drawing

Robert Rauchenberg's erased Dekooning drawing
After Clicking "start program," look for the link "What's the Big Idea?" That link has a good mini-film of Rauchenberg- he explains how he made the piece.

Painting Elephants and Cats

Painting Elephants
Amazing!

Painting Cats
Insane. Is this for real? My brother found this and thinks it is a hoax, but I'm not sure. This page doubts the reality of the cat artists, and links to some classic cat-making-art pages.

Drawing Bots

Drawing Bots

This is the HOAP2 robot, which has been written to draw- this page helps explain the visual analysis algorithm.

Beautiful little junk robots- take a look at the other things on his main page, including "Simple Drawing Insturments"

Art Robots made by Tim Anderson on YouTube. The artist discusses how the robot's "fake" intelligence, rather than real intelligence- getting a little bit into the difference between art made by a conscious entity and that made by a machine.
Something amazing about these.. they are from 1993.

Man Drawing vs. Robot Drawing


Little dancing robot Keepon

Our Blog!

Greetings! I did it- hurrah. Not the coolest name for the blog, but it works. If you have a better idea, let me know.  I'm going to post links for various things we touched upon on Friday, and I'd love for you to add anything else of interest to you. I'm wondering, do we open comments to people outside of the class? I look forward to your feedback.