Monday, April 12, 2010
response to readings
Sunday, March 14, 2010
TDR-sound art project
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Reading response
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Final First Video
I based my video off of the piece ‘Four Colors, Four Words’ by Joseph Kosuth which is being featured at the Hirshorn Museum in Downtown DC. Anyone who sees the piece will notice that the artist’s strategy is to make obvious the connection between the visual and the verbal. By making all the words different colors you dually, see what Kosuth is representing visually as well as being able to read it. It makes the viewer wonder what made them notice the significance first, the visual or verbal stimulation. I took this strategy and applied it to gender among my roommates. In a similar way you can see which roommate is male or female visually, as well as read the sign AND hear their declaration of gender. I decided to turn it into a statement about identity at the end by switching up what many would assume to be a boy sign with a “George” sign. This is intended to relate the fact that you can’t judge him off the bat, while everyone expects him to hold up his boy sign, instead the George one is thrust in front of him. It is also meant to demonstrate the fact that when you get rid of the context or the girls, his only option is not just to be a guy, even deeper than that he’s George, and no one has the right to label him anything else.
For the original inspiration piece by Joseph Kosuth: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sixteen-miles/4177314269/
Thursday, January 21, 2010
krauss response
1/17/10
Krauss Response
Overall I found this article very difficult to follow because of its
complex structure and use of artistic vocabulary. However one section
of the article that had an impact on my was when Krauss was talking
about Richard Serra’s video called Boomerang, featuring Nancy Holt. In
the video Nancy is hooked up with a pair of headphones that are
repeating exactly what she’s saying with a minor delay. She describes
a world in her head where she is surrounded by her words and thoughts
and literally by herself. In Krauss’s article she details, “the prison
Holt both describes and enacts, from which there is no escape, could
be called the prison of a collapsed present, that is, a present time
which completely severed from a sense of its own past” (53). This was
fascinated because as describes, “the prison” makes one question what
is real and what is false or simply repeated or replicated for the
viewer(s). In that way it relates to daily television where one has to
wonder whether they are being reflected in the TV characters and their
lives or whether the characters are reflected within us.
Another fascinating subject that Krauss touched on was Johns American
Flag. I loved the thinking about the notion of a painting versus
simply an object hanging on the wall. Due to the piece not having
margins, it looked more like a flag or object hanging on the wall
rather than a painting. This is interesting because it makes one
question whether its being featured as a painting diminishes the
symbolism of the flag. Is the flag still a flag and the symbol of the
United States if it is no longer a flag but a painting? These are
fascinating questions being evoked by Johns work.
