Write a three-page (doublespaced) paper on a collage artist, choosing from the list below. When you've selected your artist, post the artist's name in the "comments" below, along with which section of the class you're in -- morning or afternoon (and make sure no one in your section has already claimed that artist by checking out the comments before you). This is first come, first serve, so the quicker you pick and artist and comment, the wider choice you'll have.
Your paper should include some biographical background, to put the artist's work in context, and you should also choose two specific collage works by the artist, and give an aesthetic analysis of those works. You can talk about content -- what is the "meaning" of the piece, and how does the artist articulate that meaning? What sort of sources did the artist draw the collage material from, and how does that inform the meaning of the work? Also analyze its formal properties: how has the artist used color? Composition? Variation - of size, of light areas/dark areas, etc? Negative space and positive space? Rhythm? Texture? Is there a foreground and a background -- and if so, how do they relate to each other?
The central message of your paper should be a summary of the particular methods the artist uses and the effects the artist achieves through collage. You can break down the three-page structure like this:
Page 1: Central message and bio
Page 2: Analysis of one collage
Page 3: Analysis of second collage
You will be presenting your paper next Thursday. Bring a printed-out version of the paper and visual materials (the two images you've chosen, and anything else that will help in explaining your chosen artist and his/her work -- for the presentation, you can make a powerpoint and/or bring digital images to project). You will also be making a digital collage that is in some way a response to the artist's work; we will be working on that assignment for a couple classes. This is not to be a copy of any of the artist's work -- but take some principles that the artist embodies, and apply them to a work of your own making. For instance, Max Ernst used illustrations from 19th-century popular illustrated novels and science books and combined them to make a kind of disjointed story. What would a collage-story look like if it were assembled from science books of today?
So - due this coming Tuesday - the paper (which you will present), and an idea for your "artist response" collage, which you will begin working on in class next Thursday.
Use the MLA guide for citing sources for your bibliography, for the paper:
http://www.umuc.edu/library/libhow/mla_examples.cfm
Citation help:
Citation machine
Easybib
Here is the common writing rubric, which I'll be using to grade your paper:
http://www.sierranevada.edu/assets/SNC-Common-Rubric-Written-Assignments-4-columns.pdf
And here's the list of collage artists. Not all of them were primarily collage artists, but all used collage:
Jean Arp
Romare Bearden
Umberto Boccioni
Mark Bradford
Georges Braque
Joseph Cornell
James Dawe
Arthur G. Dove
Marcel Duchamp
Dan Eldon
Max Ernst
John Heartfield
Hannah Hoch
David Hockney
Lee Krasner
Kazimir Malevich
Neck Face
Man Ray
Henri Matisse
Pablo Picasso
Ad Reinhardt
Allison Renshaw
Mimmo Rotella
Kurt Schwitters
Bernie Stephanus
Jonathan Talbot
Cecil Touchon
Marnie Weber
If you are in section 2 of the class (1-3:45), please make sure to indicate that when you make your "comment" to the post with your selected artist.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Thursday assignment: Image and text project
Image and text project. You will be making two different pictures, working from the same initial image. Produce an image that can relate to text in an interesting way. Create that image either by shooting it yourself (it can be a staged image, or an image "caught on the fly"), or it can be an image that is collaged from at least three sources (if you want to make a drawing as one of your sources, that's perfectly acceptable -- otherwise you can cull images from Google images and so on).
Using that image as a base, make two seperate treatments of the image, with legible text in each.
In treatment #1, use text that has a sense of "interior monologue." It doesn't literally have to be an interior monologue, but it should have that interior quality -- as if we're listening in on the thoughts of someone -- perhaps the thoughts of someone in the picture, perhaps the thoughts of someone looking at the scene (as if we're looking at the scene through someone's eyes, and hearing their thoughts).
In treatment #2, take the same image and place text in it that has a quality of "exterior commentary" -- the type of commentary one might find in a news caption or textbook, explaining what's happening, or somehow passing judgement on the scene. It should be as if the words are coming from a source that's not participating in the scene -- but commenting upon it from some sort of remove.
Each treatment of type should be distinct, utilizing different fonts and different layout strategies. Think about how the text relates to the image both conceptually (in the manner of an idea) and formally (how it sits on the page, how the shapes of the letters relate to the imagery, etc). Try to be as radically different in your font treatments as possible. For instance, if you have one treatment where the text is all one font, horizontal, small, and in one color, the other treatment might mix different fonts, run the text vertically, large, and in various colors.
You will have class time to work on this project on Thursday. But come prepared with an idea, and with your text and images already selected.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Tuesday's assignment
There's a short reading and response due for Tuesday's class -- "To Thine Own Selves Be True, A Review of Sherry Turkle’s Life on the Screen." Write two short paragraphs in response -- print out your response and bring it to class. We will be discussing the article. Though the article is of a book that's "old" in terms of the development of the internet, I think it brings up some insights and issues that are still relevant (and the author of the book under review, Sherry Turkle, is still writing about contemporary digital culture). The article is partly about the way people negotiate or change their identity in terms of online or "digital" culture, and since we're creating a digital self-portrait, I thought it would be interesting food for thought. There are a series of questions at the end of the article you could address yourself to; I'm most interested in your position on the "ominous" scenario and the "positive" scenario -- which do you think is closer to the truth?
http://www.emcp.com/intro_pc/reading16.htm
Here is a scanner animation we'll look at on Tuesday's class:
Otters Making Music - Elements of Time from David C. Montgomery on Vimeo.
Saturday, August 16, 2014
Welcome - and some links
Hi there -- and welcome to the blog for the Digital Darkroom Class.
For next class :
Assemble personal materials for scanning to create a digital self-portrait -- be sure NOT to include photos or other images of your physical self. Give some thought to objects and textures that somehow say something about you, your identity, your sense of self. Make sure to bring at least three seperate things (all of them have to be able to be placed on a scanning bed, of course).
Please remember to acquire a jump drive, if you don't already have one -- it would be good to have it for Thursday.
And here are some links to some of the artists whose work I showed in class:
Jill Greenberg
Flickr "Brushes" gallery
Chris Jordan
Alberto Seveso
Andrea Innocent
Emily Eibel (Tomby Illustration)
eBoy Pixel Art
12:31 and the Visible Human project
Visible Human Project source:
Finding Paths through the world's photos:
The Most Photographed Barn in America
Links to syllabi:
Section 1 (10:00-12:45)
Section 2 (1-3:45)
For next class :
Assemble personal materials for scanning to create a digital self-portrait -- be sure NOT to include photos or other images of your physical self. Give some thought to objects and textures that somehow say something about you, your identity, your sense of self. Make sure to bring at least three seperate things (all of them have to be able to be placed on a scanning bed, of course).
Please remember to acquire a jump drive, if you don't already have one -- it would be good to have it for Thursday.
And here are some links to some of the artists whose work I showed in class:
Jill Greenberg
Flickr "Brushes" gallery
Chris Jordan
Alberto Seveso
Andrea Innocent
Emily Eibel (Tomby Illustration)
eBoy Pixel Art
12:31 and the Visible Human project
Visible Human Project source:
Finding Paths through the world's photos:
The Most Photographed Barn in America
Links to syllabi:
Section 1 (10:00-12:45)
Section 2 (1-3:45)
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Some Final Details
First thing – please fill out the class survey forms for your class. I do read these, and find them genuinely helpful. Don't forget to fill out the "comments" section at the end.
Section 1 (morning class)
Section 2 (afternoon class)
FOR THURSDAY: We are going to the Nevada Museum of Art. Please show up at 10 am (if you're in the morning class) or 1pm (if you're in the afternoon class) ON TIME - so you have plenty of time to get in your cars and get down to Reno.
Here are the drivers for the two classes:
Section 1 (morning class)
Felipe
Evan
Jesse
Annie
Section 2 (afternoon class)
Jamie
Shafer
Peter
(Alexa as a backup)
Here are Google directions to the museum (click on the blue "Nevada Museum of Art" link below to open full directions in a new window):
View Nevada Museum of Art in a larger map
TIMES FOR THE FINAL
Section 1 (morning class)
Friday the 13th
9am
Section 2 (afternoon class)
Wednesday the 11th
11:30am
1. Digital self-portrait, from three scans:
01-lastname-selfportrait
2. Text/image combo project (at least two versions)
02-lastname-textimage-A
02-lastname-textimage-B
3. The response to the collage artist
03-lastname-collageresponse
4. The "composite" project (something small made large, or something large made small)
04-lastname-composite
5. The "fake news" project
05-lastname-fakenews
6. The Fair Use Project
06-lastname-fairuse
7. The Brushes Project
07-lastname-brushes
8. The Illustrator Landscape or Portrait Project
08-lastname-illustrator
9. Lulu Book Project (six interior pages)
09-lastname-lulu-A
09-lastname-lulu-B
09-lastname-lulu-C
09-lastname-lulu-D
09-lastname-lulu-E
09-lastname-lulu-F
10. Lulu Book Cover
10-lastname-lulucover
11. Sierra Nevada Review Cover
11-lastname-snrcover
12. Multiple you project
12-lastname-multiple
In a folder called "Writing," you should have:
1. A short reaction to "To Thine Own Selves Be True."
01-lastname-selves
2. A three-page response paper to a collage artist.
02-lastname-collagepaper
3. Fair Use - one page defense of your fair use project
03-lastname-fairuse
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Assignment for Tues, 11/19
At the start of Tuesday's class, you must have two things:
1. Your finished six pages. This is of utmost importance, because if you flub this assignment, it will take a chunk out of your final grade.
2. A sketch, any any necessary preparatory work, for your cover image.
The titles, if anyone needs a reminder, are:
For section one (the morning), believe it or not:
Moobs
For section two (the afternoon), believe it or not:
Ben's First Tea Bag
1. Your finished six pages. This is of utmost importance, because if you flub this assignment, it will take a chunk out of your final grade.
2. A sketch, any any necessary preparatory work, for your cover image.
The titles, if anyone needs a reminder, are:
For section one (the morning), believe it or not:
Moobs
For section two (the afternoon), believe it or not:
Ben's First Tea Bag
Friday, November 1, 2013
Assignment for Tuesday (11/5)
Next Tuesday will be a work period for your six-page sequence, so come prepared with whatever raw materials you need (images, ideas) to use the work period profitably. A portion of your grade will be your initial proposal for the sequence, which is due at the beginning of Tuesday's class – you need to have at least a basic sketch (drawn out on paper, or cobbled together in Photoshop) of your general idea for the sequence, or a one-page write-up of your idea.
Here are the specs for the images in your "sequence" project -- the one we're printing up through lulu.com. You should have the images you need at the start of the class, so you can just jump into it when class starts.
Dimensions for Lulu book project
You will have 6 pages to fill in an art book we're publishing through Lulu.com. One page is like an intro page for yourself and your work, which should include your name. It can be a sort of "artist's statement," or it can otherwise set the stage for the images to follow. The following five pages should be a series of images that somehow work together as a sequence.
The dimensions at which you should create the work are:
Final page size will be 7.5" x 7.5" at 300 dpi.
The pages need a 1/8" bleed all the way around, so you'll create your photoshop files at 7.75" x 7.75" (at 300 dpi, this comes out to 2325 pixels by 2325 pixels).
Keep in mind, as you're designing the sequence, that you will have three "two page spreads," where the image on the lefthand page will be facing the image on the righthand page. Think about how the images on those facing pages will affect each other, in terms of content, color, composition, and so on.
If you're still chewing through what a "sequence" is, remember that a potential starting place could be:
1. Time changes through a fixed location. What is a single place, that goes through changes as time passes, and how are those changes made visible?
2. Spatial changes with a fixed subject. Is there a character, or object, that travels through different spaces?
3. Transformations of a character or object. Think of Klinger's "glove" etching. Is there a common image that goes through a variety of changes of scale, of stature, of meaning?
4. Different aspects of a single thing. Think Hokusai's Mount Fuji series. Is there a thing, a person or a place that can be looked at through a variety of lenses -- the lens of history, of myth, of geology, etc?
5. Formal variation and rhythm. Remember that abstracts images can function in sequence, riffing on common formal elements throughout the multiple images.
6. Storytelling. Any sequence tells a story of some sort. Is there some sort of narrative that could occur through the five images? Think of Hogarth's "Harlot's Progess," or the comics examples I showed.
And you should "own" your artwork in this project -- you can shoot your own images, or draw your own images. You can use stock images (free or purchased).
Here are the specs for the images in your "sequence" project -- the one we're printing up through lulu.com. You should have the images you need at the start of the class, so you can just jump into it when class starts.
Dimensions for Lulu book project
You will have 6 pages to fill in an art book we're publishing through Lulu.com. One page is like an intro page for yourself and your work, which should include your name. It can be a sort of "artist's statement," or it can otherwise set the stage for the images to follow. The following five pages should be a series of images that somehow work together as a sequence.
The dimensions at which you should create the work are:
Final page size will be 7.5" x 7.5" at 300 dpi.
The pages need a 1/8" bleed all the way around, so you'll create your photoshop files at 7.75" x 7.75" (at 300 dpi, this comes out to 2325 pixels by 2325 pixels).
Keep in mind, as you're designing the sequence, that you will have three "two page spreads," where the image on the lefthand page will be facing the image on the righthand page. Think about how the images on those facing pages will affect each other, in terms of content, color, composition, and so on.
If you're still chewing through what a "sequence" is, remember that a potential starting place could be:
1. Time changes through a fixed location. What is a single place, that goes through changes as time passes, and how are those changes made visible?
2. Spatial changes with a fixed subject. Is there a character, or object, that travels through different spaces?
3. Transformations of a character or object. Think of Klinger's "glove" etching. Is there a common image that goes through a variety of changes of scale, of stature, of meaning?
4. Different aspects of a single thing. Think Hokusai's Mount Fuji series. Is there a thing, a person or a place that can be looked at through a variety of lenses -- the lens of history, of myth, of geology, etc?
5. Formal variation and rhythm. Remember that abstracts images can function in sequence, riffing on common formal elements throughout the multiple images.
6. Storytelling. Any sequence tells a story of some sort. Is there some sort of narrative that could occur through the five images? Think of Hogarth's "Harlot's Progess," or the comics examples I showed.
And you should "own" your artwork in this project -- you can shoot your own images, or draw your own images. You can use stock images (free or purchased).
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