Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Appropriating

This piece of art is an example of a work that is appropriating. Appropriating means taking something for ones own use or using borrowed elements in one owns art work. I remember when Colleen Pendry spoke to us about her materials, she mentioned that she used copies of her mothers letters physically in her work. But, she also seemed to appropriate some of the imagery she found in the asylum. For example, the cube or box life form, as well as physical objects she took for her own use, like the paint chips and peelings she has found there. Colleen's choice of materials is what connects this piece to the idea of appropriating.


Thursday, March 22, 2012

Expressionism and Me


My work as a whole definitely fits most smoothly into the expressionism theory of art. I do not work to replicate or imitate reality, therefore, realism is ruled out. Meanwhile, I most certainly do have a subject matter and meaning in my work, so formalism is not my cup of tea either. I create artwork to express my emotions and imagination at any given time. I use art as a way to take a snap shot of a specific time in my life, which serves to document my thoughts and curiosities.

The piece below is a piece I created last year out of wire, yarn, wood and wax. When I created this piece, I was very interested in the senses that are employed and aroused during physical interaction between two individuals, namely sex. It is not just a tactile stimulation, but rather, smell, sound, sight, and taste are also induced. This piece is an abstract representation of the varying levels to which each sense is activated, its concave and convex fluctuation are representative of the varying levels of the senses, as they fluctuate during the time of physical interaction. From left to right it is to read as a narrative, much like a graph. I felt that the yarn would be interesting to use as it is very appealing to they eyes, and much softer than harsh wire. I also chose to work with wax directly on bare wood because there is something about wood that reminds me of being naked; it is simple, natural and unveiled. The wax ended up working well because the material itself stimulated the senses. It provided raised areas, inviting the viewer to come and touch, but also had a distinctive smell. My exploration through my stream of thought, and my expression of it is this piece is why I consider myself an expressionistic artist.





Final Project Proposal



For the final project I am choosing to approach my theme by selecting the studio option and creating work inspired by my theme and the research I have done over the course of the semester.  My theme is the relationship between human sexuality and what is considered grotesque or unusual, whether that be through imagery or the artist’s choice of materials. I will be creating and finishing three or more pieces that have some correlation with this theme. A lot of the artists I have explored and researched for this project have very sexually explicit work, wherein the body of work I am creating for this project is not as obviously and overtly sexual. I plan to incorporate inspiration I have gathered from some of the artists I have chosen and researched. In order to relate to my theme, I am making a couple of pieces that comprise of gross, or seemingly grotesque materials that are to be worn directly on the body, accentuating sexuality, and at least one other piece that uses a “normal” medium, with sexual imagery.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Supporting Evidence For Theme!


Debi Oulu:

“My story is all of our stories because if there is one thing that we all have in common, cross gender, cross race, cross world, it is our obsessive pre-occupation with our sexuality.” These are words from the artist, Debi Oulu from an interview she did with “Erotikos Film Festival”. Much of her work is highly erotic, and this in combination with its blatant, shocking, approach to depicting sexual organs comes across as almost crude and somewhat gross. In a critique of her work titled, “An Artist without Borders” by Dr. Dalia Hakker-Orion, Art Critic , it is written, “After what she calls, ‘the year of the teddy bears’, she began to create art mainly of male genitalia and to represent the attraction between the sexes, seduction through sculpture, video art and multimedia.” These two sources make it evident that her work is all about sexuality and seduction, and it is her material choice and bizarre application of the erotic imagery (think the “human climbing wall”) that she fits my theme.



Monica Cook:

In a review of Monica Cook’s work it is said, “Cook’s nude women continue to be engaged with gorgeously rendered erotic food in scenes that elicit a range of emotion in the viewer from mesmerized hilarity to horror.” In another critique of her work I read, “Monica Cook paints beautiful and disturbing portraits of women.” I interpreted her paintings as erotic because of the way she incorporated food, much like a painted version of another artist I am interested in, Victoria Gaitan, she juxtaposes food with nude females. She uses the food as a vehicle to induce seduction and suggest eroticism by using it to cover the women. Aesthetically, the skin of the women looks slimy and grossly covered In food, but still maintains a link to eroticism. This is why her wok relates so heavily to my theme.




Sri Whipple:

I found the following notes from a review of Sri Whipple’s work in The Salt Lake Tribune. “The truth is, little of Whipple's work shows graphic nudity. Hanging on the walls, for instance, there's maybe one nipple and a phallic cartoon garden hose. Still, there's no denying his colorful voluptuous figures seem inspired by a demented balloon twister. Some of his hyper erotic canvases appear to writhe with legs, thighs, rumps and high heels.”

I found the article very interesting because it is true, there is nothing blatantly disgusting or alarming in the pop art inspired paintings he creates. Rather I think it is that slight and subtle connection or allusion to eroticism that shocks the audience. He seems to combine balloons and softly modeled forms with sexual imagery to hint at sexual acts and organs. While some find his work alarming and disgusting, I think his technical modeling of the paint is beautiful, and I like the shock value of discovering these phallic balloons or nipples.


Kim Joon:

I found this from a review of two of his works, by Christies, titled, “Stay”. Here is what the critic had to say: “…its innocence overturned on the bare skin of a submissively seated female, reluctant yet subtly tempted by the erotically crimson hand, parallel to the wicked mother's poisonous red apple.”

I interpreted the red hand reaching out to the girl as some sort of biblical or fantastical symbol possibly relating to sin and sexuality. It is said that the female is “subtly tempted by the erotically crimson hand...” I learned that yes, the hand universally has an erotic quality. At the same time, I think it is still very creepy and gross looking. It looks almost sickeningly seductive, like an unwanted attack or some sort of harassment. This is clearly related to my theme of the grotesque and unusual suggesting sexuality and eroticism.


Georg Herold:

I found the following in a review at a site called “Sculpture News” : “Georg Herold, who belongs to the same generation as Sigmar Polke, offers two enormous colorful nudes (one purple, the other an eye-scorching coral), like voluptuous paper cut-outs by Matisse given volume and then stretched almost to snapping point. In the manner of Expressionist art, the effect is strained, tense and somewhat unsettling - but in a good way.”

His work is described as both “voluptuous” and “unsettling”. The image of the two forms I chose for this project are angular women with their legs spread in seemingly suggestedly erotic positions. This review of herold’s work backs up my interpretation by calling it unsettling, because that adds to my correlation between the bizarre or unusal and the sexual.



Cj Jilek:

I found this information on her work in a brief bio of her on the Carbondale Clay Center website: “Through her work she questions ideas of beauty, attraction, eroticism, adaptation and desire.”

CJ’s work related to my theme of eroticism and while it is not necessarily bizarre or gross, it is unusual. I am inspired by her cross over between the plant world and human world, and their similarities in reproduction and life processes. Her work is incredibly, technically rendered, and formally, looks flawless. Her ability to link plants and their pollination and reproduction abilities to homo sapien sex is strikingly unusual but works well because of her attention to detail. She exemplifies my theme because of this stretch she forces from those two separate worlds.



Patrick Veillet:

The pieces I had found from the artist Patrick Veillet were sculptural accessories, much like jewelry but wit a lot of fine arts emphasis. To much of my surprise, he is actually a perfume and fashion designer. And furthermore, I have had a lot of trouble finding information about him because he is French and his entire website is French as well as most of the interviews and critiques of his work. I did find an interesting interview that was in a magazine that was titled, “The extreme beauty of the inside”. Here is what he had to say:

“The concept of exomorphism considers the hidden sensuality of living bodies. I have a purely plastic attitude to this dimension of life. The skeleton hidden within humans is frightening whereas the “exoskeleton” of shellfish or insects is seen as beautiful. This sensitivity has led me to consider exteriorization: I wanted to apply the same plastic attitude to the inner skeleton. This escaped what we are used to seeing and involves a relationship with the strange and extreme. I have tried to extract a poetry of form that is applied to design. My objects inaugurate a new approach to design that pushes form to extremes. Likewise, work on textures helps breathe life into objects. The dorsal spine necklace in self-lightning glass is halfway between a sculpture and the fashion accessory. It is jewelry with dreamlike and mutant forms that constructs a new mythology. Techno-naturalism illustrates this paradoxical will to interpret the natural through high-tech.”

He blurs the lines between humans and other animals, including insects. This in combination with the fact that he is taking something generally seen as not beautiful or strange and extreme and pushes that on peoples bodies calling attention to their sensuality and humanism is absolutely beautiful and exemplifies my theme perfectly.

(The link is his site because it was the only place I could find the English translated version of this magazine published interview)

Jim Duvall:

“His art has been shown at the Seattle Erotic Art Festival and many other erotic art festivals around North America. He helped start The Betty Pages, an LGBT magazine serving Whatcom and Skagit counties and was a writer and photographer for the magazine for 5 years. As a sexuality activist Mr. Duvall has volunteered for many organizations over the years. He is a founder and former President of the Board of Directors of the Center for Sex Positive Culture (nee Wetspot). He founded the Seattle Erotic Art Festival. He is a past President and Board member of the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom.”

The only information I could find published outside of the artist’s website was that on his character and his life actions, not particularly his work. But through this, it is made more evident that his art is absolutely, positively about sex. I find that his work exemplify my theme because he often uses the human body to altar it and contort it in ways it doesn’t ordinarily conform to on its own. It is through these manipulations that he photographs these bodies. The images he creates are rather alarming and disturbing, but still overtly erotic.



Victoria F. Gaitan:

The following is from a review of her solo exhibition in D.C.: “Gaitán’s work focuses on female subjects, and in the past several years, she has created provocative images of women that evoke in us a sense of beauty, chaos and at times, decay.” When I saw some of Gaitan’s work at a different gallery in Reston, I was surrounded with images of a beautiful woman smothered in food, providing a sense of beauty and eroticism while looking dirty and smothered in a grotesque amount of doughnuts. Her work is the perfect middle ground that I was working to unveil through my theme: overwhelming disgust and intense eroticism.

11th image?

I am posting this image from an artist I have been following and have seen in an exhibit in Reston, Virginia. Her work related to my theme, and I am posting this because I might have to replace another artist' image with hers, as I have not been able to find adequate information or critiques and reviews from all of the other artists I have chosen.



Victoria F. Gaitan  “Sweet Meat 01” 2010