Thursday 25 October 2012

Allan Kaprow - Installation art

"Installation art describes an artistic genre of three-dimensional works that are often site-specific and designed to transform the perception of a space. Generally, the term is applied to interior spaces, whereas exterior interventions are often called Land art; however, the boundaries between these terms overlap."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Installation_art

Installation art uses existing objects, instead of conventional paint and paper, to create the art. Damien Hirst famously takes once living creatures and sinks them in formaldehyde, places pigs heads with a nest of flies in a sealed plastic/glass box. 

Installation art is used to make the observer think. Its less what something looks like, and more the artists interpretation of the world, themselves, the people around them. It can be anything - one of the first, and most famous examples is Marcel Duchamp's Fountain - a urinal signed R. Mutt 1917. 
"Under the guise of an assumed name Duchamp submitted a male public convenience-type urinal as an entry for a putatively open exhibition in New York in 1917. With this work Duchamp metaphorically urinated on the bourgeois art institution and its adoration of what he referred to disparagingly as ‘retinal art’. Duchamp deliberately picked the most antiaesthetic object he could find in order to attack traditional concepts of beauty. A newspaper article—probably authored, or informed by, Duchamp—argued that Fountain was art because its maker, the fictitious R. Mutt, had declared that it was art. What is remarkable about Fountain is that what appears to have started out as a provocation became transformed into one of the most significant works of art of the twentieth century.
"The reason for this transformation, however, lies less in the intention of the artist than in subsequent interpretation. During the 1960s artists and theorists began to realise that Fountain was something of a founding gesture that pointed to the fact that just about anything could be defined as a work of art so long as it was framed by the institutional apparatus of an art gallery
"During the 1960s and 1970s we find artists attempting to defy the power of the art museum by making art that could function outside its framework. Salient instances include happenings, land art, body art, performance art, mail art and out-of-gallery situational art such as the work of Alan Kaprow, which Claire Bishop points to as one of the precursors of contemporary installation art. The pioneering work of Kaprow, Dan Graham and Hélio Oiticica in the 1960s and 1970s represent installation art before it became congealed into an institutional form. From the 1990s onwards installation art became fine art, ensconced and applauded in an established gallery environment—literally, and willingly, institutionalised." http://artintelligence.net/review/?p=29


Allan Kaprow creates 'unique' events where the viewer is part of the art. He called this art "Happenings", since they were shaped by the audience just as much as by him; they had an 'unfolding narrative' caused by interactions of the people and the objects. One influence for this John Cage, a radical musician during the 1950's, of native American origin; Cage was experimenting with moving towards theatre as an art medium.

His influence changed the perception art; art could be "anything at all, including movement, sound, and even scent"http://www.theartstory.org/artist-kaprow-allan.htm. He believed that the world was more inspiring, more interesting than any and all masterpieces he had seen. This was shown through his unconventional media and art work, for one he created large ice rectangles - and encouraged the public to touch, and smell - generally interact with the ice block.



"The action collages then became bigger, and I introduced flashing lights and thicker hunks of matter. These parts projected further and further from the wall into the room, and included more and more audible elements: sounds of ringing buzzers, bells, toys, etc., until I had accumulated nearly all the sensory elements I was to work with during the following years....I immediately saw that every visitor to the environment was part of it. And so I gave him opportunities like moving something, turning switches on -- just a few things. Increasingly during 1957 and 1958, this suggested a more 'scored' responsibility for the visitor. I offered him more and more to do until there developed the Happening.... The integration of all elements -- environment, constructed sections, time, space, and people -- has been my main technical problem ever since." Allan Kaprow 1965 
http://www.lichtensteinfoundation.org/allankaprow.htm

"Kaprow presents a contradictory portrait; an artist seeking the direct and ephemeral relations between art, the artist, and the audience achieved in the "here and now" of everyday life, and a deep and prolific thinker, teacher and writer who meticulously planned and theorized every instantiation of his work. His lifelong quest to "unart" art practice had a profound and lasting impact on his contemporaries and on artists since, paving the way for Pop artConceptual artMinimalism and new genre public art of subsequent decades. The embodied experience of the environment and the performative and real-time elements of happenings foreshadowed the Installation and Performance art common in contemporary practice, paving the way for artists like Vito AcconciSuzanne Lacy, and Marina Abramovic."
http://www.theartstory.org/artist-kaprow-allan.htm

Phobias - Research

In a recent survey, 9 out of 10 women reported preferring clean-shaven men to bearded men.Often, homeless people are forced to wear beards because they do not have access to proper facilities and materials for cleaning up and shaving. This can cause some phobic people to link lack of hygiene with the presence of a full beard. Beards and religion can be connected. The Sikh faith views the beard as a proper sign of manhood, and its followers grow beards in the belief that they are a natural part of the human body. However, each religion has their own viewpoint, and the priests of the Hindy faith prefer a clean-shaven appearance, which they regard as a sign of cleanliness http://www.fearofstuff.com/humans/fear-of-beards/


Usually, people who fear plants know something about their more harmful properties. After all, plant essences are often used in medicines, and we all know that medicines can be helpful or harmful. The surfaces of plants can also cause rashes, both mild and serious. Plants like poison ivy are just one example… Usually, people who fear plants know something about their more harmful properties. After all, plant essences are often used in medicines, and we all know that medicines can be helpful or harmful. The surfaces of plants can also cause rashes, both mild and serious. Plants like poison ivy are just one example…
http://www.fearofstuff.com/humans/fear-of-plants/



Louise Arnold, from Gloucester, has a pea phobia which means she cannot walk down the frozen food aisle of a supermarket. Explaining her dislike of peas, she said: "They tend to just look at me – ganging up on me. All the hairs on the back of my neck go up. I have to know where they are in the supermarket before I go in. It's just controlling my life now. I would like to be a dinner lady at my daughter's school, but I'm not even able to be in the same room as someone eating them."http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/3966710/Britains-weirdest-phobias-include-a-fear-of-peas-and-kneecaps.html


In many cases the fear of fish is often the result of not seeing the fish through murky lake or river water.  The fear might also be tied to the potential of drowning or even water. The reason this is important to note is that when fear is allowed to take up residence in your way of thinking it almost always embraces other fears. So if the original fear was the fear of water then the fear of fish might be an extension of that fear. It may be stereotypical, but we all have images of girls running away from boys who brandished frogs or snakes. This can be the same image that causes some to fear snakes, but in this case the image the phobic personality has is of a loved one who expressed profound fear of fish. This modeling caused anxiety to be present whenever fish are present. This may only extend to the actual act of fishing, but it could be extended to things found in an aquarium or even seafood. In rare cases the fear of fish may be due to actually being bitten by a fish or frightened by one in some way. This can result in memories that bring anxiety and invite fear. http://www.fearofstuff.com/animals/fear-of-fish/


It’s hard to pinpoint a single specific reason for the fear of mushrooms. It could be the hallucinogenic effects of some types of mushrooms. The individual may believe that it could be possible to consume a mushroom that could impair their thinking and cause them to lose control. For an individual with fears there tends to be significant anxiety tied to the loss of control. The fear that an individual experiences can also be the result of modeled behavior in someone they love and trust. Having a parent, grandparent, aunt, uncle or older cousin who has a fear of mushrooms can be the starting point of personal fear development. It is even possible the texture of cooked mushrooms may have been unpleasant causing an individual to obsess about the ingredient. That obsession can lead to fear. http://www.fearofstuff.com/food/mushroom-phobia/

For some individuals this fear may have a lot to do with observing vegetables in a garden. Sometimes abnormal growth on the vegetable or multiple insects crawling on or in a vegetable can instill a profound sense of fear when it comes to vegetables. There have been cases where vegetable seeds have been known to grow within the human body in places like the lungs and nose. Even though the potential is incredibly small it is possible for a person to obsess about the possibility to the degree that they are no longer comfortable eating vegetables. The fear of produce can also be the result of modeled behavior. When a trusted adult in our formative years demonstrates a fear of vegetables it can become possible for an individual to accept that the object feared by that adult is worth fearing as well.
http://www.fearofstuff.com/food/fear-of-vegetables/


http://phobias.about.com/od/phobiaslist/f/What-Is-The-Fear-Of-The-Number-8.htm
http://www.google.co.uk/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=why+fear+8&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&safe=active&redir_esc=&ei=x8tuUJjXJ4aj0QXiv4DIDQ#hl=en&safe=active&client=safari&rls=en&sclient=psy-ab&q=why+fear+numer+8&oq=why+fear+numer+8&gs_l=serp.3...16787.18065.0.18379.6.6.0.0.0.1.156.381.5j1.6.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.tzUgLop2JEI&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&fp=9ec408e5008b0434&biw=1543&bih=843






posters based on
















Tuesday 16 October 2012

Final Images

The Clock - The Pact
Awaken the Beard - Awaken the Dead


The Banana - The Collection
Day of the Houseplant - Day of the Triffids

A Bucket of Fish - A Bucket of Blood 
Return of the Pea - Return of the Terror


Monday 15 October 2012

Proposal - abstract fear


Fear is a reaction to feeling threatened - a phobia is an extreme, often completely irrational, version of this.
There are some phobias that are common - heights, swimming etc. where the person with the phobia's life may be jeopardised. Others have very little sense behind them - such as pulsophobia, the fear of peas, and cacophobia, the fear of ugliness.

For my project I would like to focus on this aspect of fear - vaguely ridiculing it, making the object of fear as unpretentious as possible, but then placing it in a poster setting and using horror movie names - changing to suit the object - such as a bucket full of blood, changed to a bucket full of fish. 


A phobia is the generally irrational fear of something. Such as fear of speaking in public - one of the few fears that are not routed in death and the unknown. The difference between fear and phobia is distinct. Phobia leads to the deliberate avoidance of the problem, fear is the reaction to the problem. Phobia is also different to dislike – you may dislike slugs, but that doesn’t mean you fear them.

Some irrational fears you can understand; some, however are funny. I would like to focus on these entertaining fears, like the fear of ‘a solitary baked bean’ and plants.

I would like to make the objects/words I use look as unassuming as possible, but not going as far as a bright lit studio - slightly ridiculing the actual fear. However, I will then twist this and turn the image in a film-esq poster, using creepy fonts and rearranging, changing existing horror film names to use on the posters, e.g. A Beard Reality, as opposed to A Darker Reality; A Smelly Man, as opposed to A Drowning Man, etc.

I am only planning to create posters, I shall not create a cinema lobby, cinema wall etc. I would like to have the posters on the windows, with the light coming through them; but if that's not possible, or doesn't work

Schedule:
wk 1: come up with ideas
wk 2: take photos/edit
wk 3: exhibit, evaluate

Resources:
camera; objects; props;
printing - use print shop





Wednesday 3 October 2012

36 images

dark
Light
 ADJECTIVES


colourful
blue

warm
 ENGLISHNESS




 ONE OBJECT

 very yellow - should have used a different white balance








cause i like it

related stuff - team of 4, all on different cameras









Portraits