Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Lookin' goooood, Michael. ^^;

Ahhh yes, here we are. The original drawing I chose to rework for the obstruction project. It's me as Marty McFly from Back to the Future! :D Normal enough, right? Oh baby, but just you wait. IT'S OBSTRUCTION TIME!

..................*awkward drum roll*.......

BAM! The remade drawing! Rules were it had to be in color. Check. Drawn from observation. Check. And the two obstructions I chose. Marty McFly dressed as me. Ch...check.... And all in 80s colors. Basically I took that as bright, vibrant, almost-neon colors. Luckily, my clothes/bedspread really are those colors. Booyah.
Poor Michael. I apologize, Mr. Fox. I really do. -_-;;;

Thursday, January 20, 2011

What is art? Anybody know for sure?

"The point is, that every piece of art changes your whole perception of the rest of the world for the rest of your life. And it's not a joke! And if it doesn't, then it's not art, it's a commodity."

- Lawrence Weiner responding to a question from Liam Gillick in "Between Artists"
pg. 20

This quote confuses me a bit, because I have always found commodities to be a form of artwork themselves, however more functional and utilitarian they appear to be. Their purpose is slightly different, but they are essentially trying to do the same thing as Weiner’s explanation of art: changing perception of the world, although in commodities’ case, changing perception in order to promote or advertise. Commodities must appeal to the masses in order to be successful and well-liked, just as artwork must appeal to the senses in order to produce the best possible viewing experience (whether it evokes positive or negative feelings).  A great amount of problem-solving and design work goes into the making of commodities, so isn't a commodity definitively artful as well?