Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Bovey Lee

I came across some nice paper cuts which made me curious. This is how I discovered Bovey Lee.
She was born in Hong Kong and lives in Pittsburgh. Paper cutting is a folk art in China. The cut outs were used to decorate doors and windows. In the past every girl had to practice her cutting skills. (yigou41 2010)
Bovey Lee`s paper-cuts are extremely powerful, depicting the political situations, catastrophe survival.




        picture available at: http://lesyeuxdelalune.blogspot.co.uk/2010/06/du-papier-decoupe.html accessed 25 April 2012  


She had many exhibitions in many different places across the world. (Netfirms, 2009)


In 1995 she started to use the computer in her work. She wants to create a connection between nature, human and technology as she explains: "To do so, I create digital photographs, titled Body Garden, that transform my own body parts into landscapes and still lifes. These highly realistic, hybrid images decipher the blur between reality and deception." (artasiamerica, 2001)




   picture available at: http://lesyeuxdelalune.blogspot.co.uk/2010/06/du-papier-decoupe.html accessed 25 April 2012  


                                                                                     




   picture available at: http://lesyeuxdelalune.blogspot.co.uk/2010/06/du-papier-decoupe.html accessed 25 April 2012  



   picture available at: http://lesyeuxdelalune.blogspot.co.uk/2010/06/du-papier-decoupe.html accessed 25 April 2012  


picture available at: http://www.juxtapoz.com/Gallery/image?format=raw&id=25681&type=orig accessed 25 April 2012


Yigou41 (2010) Chinese Paper Cutting Tutorial Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkTV6enoXUY (accessed: 26 April 2012)
Netfirms (2009) Bovey Lee Bio Available at:http://boveylee.netfirms.com/rframe/about/boveyleebio.pdf (accessed: 26 April 2012)
Artasiamerica 2001, Lee, Bovey available at: http://artasiamerica.org/artist/detail/197
(accessed at 26 April 2012)

Terry Zwigoff and Art School Confidential



                   picture available at: http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/art-school-confidential/2134
                                                                          accessed 25 April 2012

The first part of this film which has more to say about the art had an interesting effect on me like a drog. I felt the missing link from my art-life was connected now. I will never be the same as I was before. I was really spinning around. Started to be very creative, as never before. Couldn`t stop myself for long hours. Many different ideas came in my mind. I recognized myself with my struggles in my studies. What the film gave to me I considered the biggest breakthrough in my thoughts related to art.

                                    Picture available at: http://www.qwipster.net/artschool.htm accessed 25 April 2012

To be brave, this is the secret for everything. To take the risk, to try out things just because of the present moment, to feel how is if I am doing this or that without being worried about the result. And being brave should be a life style of a real artist. If I am painting, drawing is common to try out different media but now  I am applying creativity in every moment of my life. I felt I am now an artist in 24 hours a day. I always liked to initiate things. This film inspires me to not worry about the outcome of my creativity just leave my creature and start something new.
Unfortunately when I watched the second part of the film I felt different. However as James Berardinelli says "Art School Confidential has a similar feel to Ghost World, although it is a self-contained story rather than a sequel." (reelviews, 2006)

Reelviews, Berardinelli, J. 2006 Art School Confidential available at:http://www.reelviews.net/movies/a/art_school.html accessed 25 April 2012

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Louise Bourgeouis

"Every day you have to abandon your past or accept it and then if you cannot accept it, you become a sculptor."  (Bourgeois, 1998, p. back cover page)

Bourgeois was born in Paris, 1911. Her family was restoring and selling tapestries.  When she got married she moved to New York.  She worked primarily in painting, drawing and printmaking.  Later she did sculpture as well. (Wye, Smith 1994 p 11)
 Her method of working recalls the free-associative "acting-out" merges with that of analyzing. Her aim is to attain both emotional release and self-awareness." (Wye, Smith 1994 p 13)

She started to write from the age of 12. She wrote diaries and notes. Her drawing went paralel with her writing.  (Bourgeois, 1998, p. 18)
She had no an easy life. Her mother died when she was 20 and her father didn`t understand her grief, she threw herself in the river. Her picture by name "La Maison d`Arcueil" represents her fear of danger but on the same time she experiments a magnetic appeal. (Wye, Smith 1994 p 65)
 picture available at: http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3AAD%3AE%3A710&page_number=108&template_id=1&sort_order=1
accessed: 24 April 2012

I found Bourgeois` method of creating art very authentic, she has the ability to became herself the  live process of creation excluding her analytical thinking on those very moments as she says:
"I want to explain why I did the piece. I don`t really see why the artist should say anything, because the work is supposed to speak for itself. So whatever the artist says about it is like an apology, it is not necessary." (Bourgeois, 1998, p. 168)
"A work of art has nothing to do with the artist, a work of art has to stand by itself, so I repeat that it is totally unnecessary to ask me what I want you to see in a piece, because you are supposed to see it by yourself."
 (Bourgeois, 1998, p. 168)

                 Available at: http://www.marlboroughfineart.com/prints-Louise-Bourgeois-114.html
                                                                 accessed 25 April 2012


                                picture available at: http://blog.frieze.com/louise_bourgeois_1911_2010/
                                                                          accessed 25 April 2012


She did self-portraits, some of them done using just pencil on paper. She says about her self-portraits "a youthful aberration...the self-portraits are not beautified: they are fairly critical." (Bourgeois, 1998, p. 294)
                                                        picture available in the book Wye, D. Smith, C. 1994


Bourgeois, L. 1998, Louise Bourgeois Deconstruction of the father Reconstruction of the father Violette Editions, London.


Wye, D., Smith, C. 1994 The Prints of Louise Bourgeois, The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Monday, 23 April 2012

Terry Zwigoff and Ghost-World

                              picture available at: http://movies.nytimes.com/person/118083/Terry-Zwigoff
                                                                              accessed: 25 April 2012
Terry Zwigoff was born in Appelton, Wisconsin, he played mandolin and chello, this way joined Crumb`s band and he had some jobs before he started to be a film director. His career started with writing a documentary about Robert Crumb. (1994) After it he got a chance to go to Hollywood but he refused.
"Was offered $10,000 to appear in a commercial campaign using hip filmmakers to endorse The Gap but turned it down, saying "I would find it a bit disingenuous after having spent 5 years of my life making a film railing against the evils of Corporate America.". (imdb 2012) This film was "Ghost World".


         Picture available at:http://www.flickr.com/photos/sapisapi/3032337636/ accessed 25 April 2012


Is a really amazing film, creates an indelible impact on our lives (if the viewer is not a ghost oneself) describes how Enid (Thora Birch) a young freshly graduated girl faces a common phenomenon - that adult people around her ignore everything that is valuable and everyone is just walking around in the city like ghosts. 
picture available at: http://www.fanpop.com/spots/thora-birch/images/7264516/title/ghost-world-interview-screencap accessed: 25 April 2012


She tries to pick up some people around her to find out more about their life, their motivation. She also wants to give motivation to people around her. She is going so far to find some real people that she "scarifies" herself and gets closer to Seymour, an older guy, wants to show him a way that he still can do something to live a happy life. She has her best friend Rebecca (Scarlett Johannson) who finally wants to live a "normal life" with a regular job in a regular apartment. In the end everyone leaves her alone. She finds herself in a "Ghost-World" where there is no way to find real friends. This film is very much depicting our society.



IMDB, 2012 Terry Zigwoff Mini Biography available at http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0959062/bio
accessed 25 April 2012
















Dinara Mirtalipova

                   picture available at: http://mirdinara.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/dinara-in-the-clouds.jpg
                                                                           Accessed 23 April 2012

Dinara Mirtalipova is a young artist and illustrator who was born in 1982 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. She lives and works in Twinsburg (OH), USA.
"I am a big dreamer who likes to imagine unimaginable things, who draws because I can`t sing and who likes telling stories through paper and pencil. I grew up on folk tales and myths and legends, there was something magical in those good old children`s books my mom used to read me." (Wiedemann, 2011 p.292) She considers herself someone who follows her dreams. She is proud of her culture and the folktales told by her mother when she was young. She would always love to live in the sky, just flying with the clowds, not having a proper home. All of her wishes with flying, traveling, dreaming can be seen in her beautiful illustrations. (Mirtalipova, 2009)
Picture available at: http://www.blogger.com/profile/14863576922751143601
Accessed 25 April 2012

Mirtalipova says she is just doodeling but I think she is living in her dream world when she is drawing. She creates her own "Wonderful life of Amelie".


                  picture available at: http://mirdinara.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/grow.html accessed 25 April 2012


                      picture available at:   http://mirdinara.blogspot.co.uk/2011/02/happy-weekend.html
                                                                         accessed 25 April 2012

Her really clear and beautifully colored pictures are giving the viewer an idea about her beautiful, pure soul. She is really able to keep the inner child inside her as pure and innocent as she was when she listened to her mother`s story.


Wiedemann, E. J. (2011) Illustration now. Koln: Taschen


Mirtalipova, D. (2009) Dinara Mirtalipova`s blog Available at: http://www.blogger.com/profile/14863576922751143601 Accessed: 25 April 2012




Sunday, 22 April 2012

modernism, postmodernism in architecture



It is not easy to summarize or compare modern and postmodern as they were born during the two most eventful centuries of human history, full of wars, revolutions and new ideas. Therefore modern and post-modern have a great reflection on all these changes which seem to be quite hectic. 
Modern art at the beginning of the 20th century tends to get rid of the traditions of the past and step by step creates the idea of clear visions. (Terra Studio, 2012)
In architecture, new trends at the turn of the 19th-20th cc. turned against “historicism”; buildings were designed so that they could meet the demands of the modern society… demands of being practical and useful, lacking traditional decorations which were supposed to be outdated. As early as in 1851, a building in London was erected signposting the way to modern architecture, the Crystal Palace in Hyde Park. The Palace was aimed to function as an exhibition hall with a simple of main structure of glass and steel. (Balla, 2000, p.187)


The inside of the Palace shows the main idea of functionalism: pureness and usefulness. What they needed was a huge function hall. 


Another great example of modern architecture is the “Bauhaus” in Germany, designed by Walter Gropius in 1926. It became a symbol of modern studies. (Balla, 2000, p.187)

                        Picture available at: http://www.zakros.com/mica/emacF03/garde.html
                                                                            accessed 22 April 2012

The inventions of the modern industry: such as steel, plate glass and plastic were inserted into the modern designers’ work.
These materials allowed unique buildings to be created, where the walls were not supposed to carry heavy loads any more, and they were the skyscrapers. (All about the skyscrapers, 2012)
The first skyscraper was designed by William le Baron Jenney (1883-1885), the Home Insurance Building in Chicago in 1895.

                             Picture available at: http://www.allaboutskyscrapers.com/construction/introduction
                                                                            accessed 22 April 2012

Shortly after that, dozens of skyscrapers were erected all over in Chicago due to the work of these radical designers. (Balla, 2000 p.188)

In the1930s, a Swiss architect, Le Corbusier (1887-1965) introduced a new idea of “high rise” buildings as a possible solution to the overpopulated cities and became a leading designer of the modern architecture meeting the new challenges of the new world. (Balla, 2000 p.189)



However, all these grey and tall building turned out to be boring for the society, people were hungry for something new, colourful and alive. Functionalism started to harm the historical features and atmosphere of cities.
This hunger for humanism, warmness and liveable environment is reflected in the postmodern architecture.
At the end of 1950s, Le Corbusier designed a chapel in Ronchamp, France, which became a courier of the new trend.

                                                                          accessed 22 April 2012


Some architects believed that they should return to the roots of their national culture, to its basic symbols, using its language of symbolical meanings, e.g. a window refers to human eye in many cultures. (Balla, 2000 p.190)

One of the greatest followers of this postmodern organic architecture is Imre Makovecz.
He designed more than one hundred buildings with different functions using wood-structures, creating warm and environment friendly solutions.


       Picture available at: http://kulturport.hu/tart/cikk/f/0/109334/1/kultura/Elhunyt_Makovecz_Imre_epitesz
                                                                              accessed 22 April 2012

"I believe that the original intention of our architecture was to create an architectural connection between the sky and the earth, a connection which enlightens an expresses man's movement and position, to create a magic, weaving an invisible spell on its surroundings.
We try to summon up the architecture of a mythical era. Our aim is to counteract the subsensible spell of technical civilization using supersensible imaginative power." Imre Makovecz 1985 (zenth, 2012)



Reference list:

Balla G., Martin Annable (2000) A Tudas Faja, Marshall Cavendish Magyarorszag, Budapest, pp189-192

Terra Studio, Available at: http://terrastudio.hu/posztmodern/index.php Accessed 22 April 2012
All about the skycrapers, 2012, available at: www.allaboutskyscrapers.com (accessed 22 April 2012)
Taylor, V.E.,Winquist C.E (2001) Encyclopedia of Postmodernism,Routledge, London
Zenth design for print and web Available at: http://www.zenth.dk/research/ Accessed 22 April 2012


Saturday, 21 April 2012

Laurence Hyde


Picture available at: http://www.springfieldnewssun.com/hp/content/oh/story/entertainment/2008/07/24/sns072408lifeberona.html
accessed 22 April 2012


Laurence Hyde was born near London. He immigrated with his family to Canada in 1926...During his life he produced many pan-and-ink illustration, wood engravings and linocuts for illustrated books.

He contributed in 2 unfinished series of prints, Discovery and Macbeth. 
picture available at: http://www.glenbow.org/collections/art/research/hyde.cfm
accessed 22 April 2012

Southern Cross is a wordless novel, told in 118 wood engravings about Americans testing the atomic bomb in the South Pacific following the II. World War. Hyde explained his fury with the United States. He depicts people from the island how happy they lived their life till the American sailors appeared and evacuated them from their home. (Berona, 2008 p. 214)


                                picture available at: http://www.montrealmirror.com/2007/112207/books1.html
accessed 22 April 2012


              picture available at: http://voiceseducation.org/category/tag/southern-cross-novel-south-seas
accessed 22 April 2012


A family with a child remains on the island after the father kills a sailor. They sadly become victims of the bomb test. The child has to witness to how the parents die. (Berona, 2008 p. 215)

Hyde expresses his pacifist feelings, he is playing around with black and white, using more white space when everything is nice and happy and when the American soldiers arrive everything turns in dark. (Berona, 2008 p. 216)
As Juliet Water explains "Wood engraving is so labour intensive, it’s difficult to tell a story without making generous use of negative space.". Montreal Mirror (2007) Creating negative space requires lots of cutting. Looking at his book one can recognize the power of the lines and strong contrasts. Each picture could be a separate picture on the wall but all together creates an indelible impact on our lives.


Glenbow Museum, 2012 Laurence Hyde Available at: http://www.glenbow.org/collections/art/research/hyde.cfm Accessed 22 April 2012

Berona, D. A. (2008) Wordless Book The original graphic novels. Abram, New York