Posts

Showing posts from April, 2023

M04

Image
This week we went over photography and the different types. Fine art portraiture portrays emotion or creative motivation through imagery. Conceptual photography can resemble fine art portraits and can express ideas and concepts to create abstract visions. Still-life photography is a grey area between fine art and documentary-style photography, made of inanimate subject matter. Nature and landscape photography is a setting that cannot be controlled entirely. It captures the beauty of nature and the outdoors. Architectural photography captures photos of buildings anywhere from homes, to churches, to government buildings. Street photography makes the person think or bring up a feeling, story, or idea. Product photography is photos taken to help drive sales of a product or service. Different tools used by photographers include a darkroom. A darkroom allows the process of light-sensitive of photos. Which includes film and photo materials. Center for Creative Photography is of the world...

M03

Image
The Principles of design arrange the elements of art into a composition. They all work together to create artwork. Starting with movement, balance, unity, variety, rhythm, pattern, scale, proportion, emphasis, and value contrast. The artist for this week used nontraditional media, which is what makes art so amazing, being able to use anything. Erwin Redl uses LEDs as a form of medium. The "Matrix Paris" was a light installation with red and blue LEDs. Letting the visitors walk into a maze over two floors to view the artwork. John F. Simon Jr. writes digital software to create art. Jeffrey Shaw used a stationary bicycle and created a simulated city to ride through. However, instead of buildings, there are three-dimensional letters forming words and sentences. One of my favorite digital tools to use is a tablet. As much as I love my IMac and MacBook, I do a lot of my work on my Ipad. All my artwork and animation start on my tablet, then sent over to my computer to do finis...

M02

Image
For this week, we got to take a Virtual field trip to The National Museum of Computing in Bletchley Park, England. The museum was really interesting, especially how different it was from the last museum. I enjoyed seeing the evolution of technology and the history along with it. The Color Field painters were an interesting concept, being that color itself is enough on its own. Not by trying to take you to another place or represent the outside world. It emphasised that you were looking at a painting. Then Trompe L'oeil is almost the opposite. Creating an illusion that can trick our eyes. Emphasising on depth and form to create the art. In any form of art knowing the copyright laws is extremely important. Copyright can include text, graphics, sound, video, animations, and more. It's important to always cite and or get permission. The idea of the copywrite laws was carefully made to make sure it wasn't limiting but promoting creativity. Public domain is open to anyone to...

M01

Image
The 1990s was the beginning of the digital revolution. However, decades before, there were experiments with using digital as a form of Art. Digital Art is Art made in a digital form. Using data to create Art is still a form of Art not taken as seriously as traditional Art. In 1967 artist Tony Pritchett created a two-minute animation of a centipede on a computer. Going from that to the TeamLab Borderless Museum in Japan. Taking a simple concept and finding ways to mold it and evolve it into a whole new level of Art. Art evolution has always been a scandalous topic. Dada used his Art as a radical literary movement against the culture that supported the First World War. Art has always been about shocking and taking it to the next level. To help keep evolving it. Fluxus was a group of Avant Garde artists that formed a community in the 1960s to 1970s. They created a "culture." Pushing the boundaries of what is expected and acceptable. Using radical Art, strange performances, and ...