Wednesday, March 23, 2016

What is Art?


Believing is Seeing, Creating the Culture of Art by Mary Anne Staniszewski


Reaction From Chapter 1: What is Art?

Before opening "Believing is Seeing,"I had a deep feeling of procrastination.  To be honest I wasn't looking forward to reading a book that was dated, and had a book cover that looked a bit cliche.  I guess I should have listened to the life lesson of not judging a book by it's cover!  After reading the first FOUR chapters in only an hour I realized how sucked into this book I really was! I even flagged certain pages and quotes that caught my attention with ripped post-it notes.  Some statements even made me smile-which rarely happens when reading a book for a class!  Mostly, the first chapter was highly engaging for me because of the images that supported the text.  When Mary visually questioned what art IS it really made me think.  She was highly engaging with her questioning and supporting evidence.  Most people DO consider objects and paintings from the time of the Venus of Willendorf, 25,000-20,000 B.C. until now, ART.  However Mary made me think, are they really art?  Were they made for artistic purposes or simply for documentation, story telling, rituals or religion?  Probably a little bit of everything!! I feel like it may be a little unfair to say "this was not Art."






Stopped Motion Video : DUDE
Working on this video was a blast.  My team worked so well together and had everything prepared. Our original plan was to photograph our film in black and white and also included a few extra scenes.  However with the time permitted and the way in which things were panning out, we decided to omit the extra scenes.  Our choice to keep the film in color was unanamous.  We all loved how the blues and greens looked in our photos.  I think it was a good choice.  The final video turned out better than I could have imagined.  The music lined up perfectly with the actions in the film.  Even though it was a blast and turned out well, I'm not sure stopped animation is something I would continue to persue.  It is so detail orianted and requires a TON of patience!!

Personal Photo Portfolio
http://averillmcdowelldigitalart.weebly.com/

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Gone Fishin'


The storyline for our stopped motion animation film follows a robot into the wilderness and documents his journey throughout the duration of a day.  This robot/dude hops into a boat on the edge of a body of water.  He pushes himself optimistically into the water to begin his day of fishing.  Our backdrop shows a rural mountainous landscape with only wild animals to keep our dude company.  He starts his journey at sunrise excited for his day.  As he is fishing he endures the monotony of being in the middle of a body of water by himself without a single catch of the day.  He becomes frustrated and ready to give up, when he finally catches a fish!  This fish pulls him out of the boat and into the depths of the water.  As our dude reaches the surface, his boat is long gone.  Dude swims to the shore where he builds himself a fire to keep warm.  At this time of day the sun is beginning to set.  As he warms himself by the fire the decides to cast one last line out of boredom.  To his surprise he catches a perfectly sized fish for his belly!

The story ends with Dude and his fish smiling at the camera.  This whole stopped motion will be filmed in black and white to show the beauty and simplicity of the shapes and lines.  

Here is a link to a black and white stopped motion: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3Yn5mVtgco 

Monday, March 7, 2016

Stopped-Motion Animation/Photo with Text


 The Boxtrolls

This film used stopped-motion animation, 3D printing and cutting edge technology.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1El1xVRrkA


 I chose this photo because of the text in between the lines on the crosswalk.  I played around with adding more text in Photoshop, but would prefer to add a bit of collage elements into the white lines of the lush jungle to show the juxtaposition between the city and the jungle.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Same Subject Different Light

In these photographs I used all artificial light at night.  One was photographed inside while the rest were photographed outside.  While taking these photographs I leaned how important it was to direct my subject while also moving my body to get the best possible lighting.  My favorite photo is the one where my subject is looking straight into the camera.  I enjoy this photo because of the strong contrast and wrinkles in his clothing.  His stare is also piercing.  The photo I am most proud of is the full body shot where the light illuminates from behind him, which creates a halo around his body.  My vision was exactly what I was able to capture.

I decided to make all of my photos in back and white because of the simple elegance the final products embody.  Sometimes I feel like color complicates things, and I wanted the subject and shapes to speak for themselves.