Celebrated for his gigantic, stainless steel Cloud Gate sculpture in Chicago’s Millennium Park, Anish Kapoor is changing the cultural environment with his public works.
1.Research Kapoor's work in order to discuss whether it is conceptual art or not. Explain your answer, using a definition of conceptual art.
I found that "Conceptual Art" is a contemporary form of artistic representation, in which a specific concept or idea, often personal, complex and inclusive, takes shape in an abstract, nonconforming manner, based upon a negation of aesthetic principles(caroun.com,n.d.).Anish Kapoor is one of Britain’s leading talents in Conceptual Art.Kapoor's sculptures are frequently simple, curved forms, usually monochromatic and brightly coloured (wikipedia,n.d.).
2. Research 3 quite different works by Kapoor from countries outside New Zealand to discuss the ideas behind the work. Include images of each work on your blog.
“I am interested in sculpture that manipulates the viewer into a specific relationship with both space and time.” –Anish Kapoor
“The Farm” transitions from a vertical ellipse seaward to a circle at midspan, to an identical, but horizontal ellipse at lands end.hirty-two longitudinal mono-filament cables provide displacement and deflection resistance to the wind loads The sculpture, which passes through a carefully cut hillside, provides a kaleidoscopic view of the beautiful Kaipara Harbor at the vertical ellipse end and the hand contoured rolling valleys and hills of “The Farm” from the horizontal ellipse(fabric architecture,n.d.).
Cloud Gate is the 110-ton elliptical sculpture. It is forged of a seamless series of highly polished stainless steel plates, which reflect Chicago’s famous skyline and the clouds above. A 12-foot-high arch provides a "gate" to the concave chamber beneath the sculpture, inviting visitors to touch its mirror-like surface and see their image reflected back from a variety of perspectives(explorechicago,n.d.).
The design of Anish Kapoor’s ‘Orbit‘ viewing tower has just approved for the Olympic Park by London 2012 . It will be the largest public art work in the UK, though has already attracted controversy. Regardless of your aesthetic taste, the headline is that an artist and an architect have pulled this together, placing art at the centre of the Olympic park(culture @ the olympics,2010).
3.Discuss the large scale 'site specific' work that has been installed on a private site in New Zealand.
"The farm" is so huge.This is amazing work, and I also really like it.The sculpture is fabricated in a custom deep red PVC-coated polyester fabric by Ferrari Textiles supported by two identical matching red structural steel ellipses that weigh 42,750kg each. The fabric alone weighs 7,200kg that "This award winning eighty five metre long tensioned fabric sculpture is one of the world’s most extreme fabric structures"(compusoft,n.d.).It is so big work,I like the red colour,and It is even more dazzling on the grass. It is also simple, curved forms, and monochromatic ,this is Anish Kapoor’s style that Looking is so spectacular.
4. Where is the Kapoor's work in New Zealand? What are its form and materials? What are the ideas behind the work?
Anish Kapoor often creates his outdoor sculptures for permanent residence. Such as the case with his recent installation for “The Farm,” It is a 400ha private estate outdoor art gallery in Kaipara Bay, north of Auckland, New Zealand. Kapoor’s first outdoor sculpture in fabric, “The Farm”, is designed to withstand the high winds that blow inland from the Tasman Sea off the northwest coast of New Zealand’s North Island(para.2).
5. Comment on which work by Kapoor is your favourite, and explain why. Are you personally attracted more by the ideas or the aesthetics of the work?
My favourite is Anish Kapoor’s "Orbit". when I saw this work, my eyes were shined. I can not believed ,but he did."Orbit" was also approved for the Olympic Park, and I am looking forward to the arrival of the London 2012 Olympic,I believed Anish Kapoor will bring us amazing public art work on the Olympic Park.
I am attracted by Kapoor's ideas, and he has a lot of good idear which before I never heard and saw.I should learn from him about Bold imagination and unique way of thinking.
Referrence:
caroun.com.(n.d.).Retrieved from http://www.caroun.com/art/conceptualart/conceptualart.html
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August15, 2011 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anish_Kapoor
fabric architecture.(n.d.).Retrieved from
http://fabricarchitecturemag.com/articles/0110_sk_sculpture.html
explorechicago.(n.d.). Retrieved from
http://explorechicago.org/city/en/things_see_do/attractions/dca_tourism/MP_orinigal.html
culture @ the olympics.(2010).Retrieved from
http://www.culturalolympics.org.uk/2010/04/london-2012-festival-cultural-olympiad-or-public-art/
compusoft.(n.d.). From http://www.compusoftengineering.com/projects/kapoor-sculpture-kaipara-harbour-nz
2011年8月31日星期三
2011年8月26日星期五
Week 5 - Pluralism and the Treat of Waitangi
In teaching week 5 you will discuss pluralism and the Treaty of Waitangi in your tutorials.
Use this discussion, the notes in your ALVC book and the internet to respond to the following questions;
1. Define the term 'pluralism' using APA referencing.
Pluralism is used, often in different ways, across a wide range of topics to denote a diversity of views, and stands in opposition to one single approach or method of interpretation (wikipedia.n.d.).
2. How would you describe New Zealand's current dominant culture?
New Zealand's current dominant culture is diversified.The culture of New Zealand is largely inherited from English and European custom, interwoven with Maori and Polynesian tradition. An isolated Pacific Island nation, New Zealand was comparatively recently settled by humans. Initially Māori only, then bicultural with colonial and rural values, now New Zealand is a cosmopolitan culture that reflects its changing demographics, is conscious of the natural environment, and is an educated, developed Western society(wikipedia.n.d.).New Zealand's arts and culture was obtained from all races, resulting in a combination of Maori, European, Asian and Oceania were the characteristics.
3. Before 1840, what was New Zealand's dominant culture?
Māori culture has predominated for most of New Zealand's history of human habitation. Māori voyagers reached the islands of New Zealand some time before 1300, though exact dates are uncertain. Over the ensuing centuries of Māori expansion and settlement, Māori culture diverged from its Polynesian roots. Māori established separate tribes, built fortified villages (Pā), hunted and fished, traded commodities, developed agriculture, arts and weaponry, and kept a detailed oral history. It was then when young ones respected the elders and women had no say in important meetings. Regular European contact began approximately 200 years ago, and British immigration proceeded rapidly during the nineteenth century.Te Reo Maori was the common language heard among this country before the 1840’s (para.2).
4. How does the Treaty of Waitangi relate to us all as artists and designers working
in New Zealand?
New Zealand has two 'high cultural' traditions: Māori and Western.
Pre-European Māori visual art had two main forms: carving and weaving. Both recorded stories and legends and also had religious roles. When Europeans arrived, they brought with them Western artistic traditions. Early Pākehā art focussed mainly on landscape painting, although some of the best known Pākehā artists of the nineteenth century (Charles Goldie and Gottfried Lindauer) specialised in Māori portraiture. Some Māori adopted Western styles and a number of nineteenth century meeting houses feature walls painted with portraits and plant designs. From the early twentieth century Apirana Ngata and others began a programme of reviving traditional Māori arts, and many new meeting houses were built with traditional carving and tukutuku (woven wall panels) were built. A longstanding concern of Pākehā artists has been the creation of a distinctly New Zealand artistic style. Rita Angus and others used the landscape to try and achieve this while painters such as Gordon Walters used Māori motifs. A number of Māori artists, including Paratene Matchitt and Shane Cotton have combined Western modernism with traditional Māori art.
5. How can globalization be seen as having a negative effect on regional diversity in New Zealand in particular?
Globalization is one cannot ignore the 'flattening' effect of the practice. Globalized trade and dedicated outsourcing of resources are bound to result in a conflict between various distinctive political forces.
Globalization is supposed to fuel and guarantee social, political and economic unification. However, developed and established economies continue to exploit the 'sharing' business to empower their own strong and wealthy economies. Subsequently, in the political arena, the reallocation of power is surfacing in the form of industrial and technological rivalry. On the social front, the world is now at a loss in the attempt to guard and flaunt diversity that is enriching. The random influx of ideology and lifestyles and unmonitored inter-cultural communication has resulted in the creation of a pseudo culture that is common across boundaries(Borade.n.d.).New Zealand also encountered the same problem on regional diversity.
6. Shane Cotton's paintings are said to examine the cultural landscape. Research Cotton's work 'Welcome'(2004) and 'Forked Tongue' (2011) to analyze what he is saying about colonialization and the Treaty of Waitangi.
Cotton's work evocatively includes both Maori iconography and culture, such as shrunken heads, mokomokai, and native birds such as tui, and European symbols and items. His paintings have explored questions of colonialism, cultural identity, Maori spirituality, and death. Many of his paintings go into depth of primitive ideas especially through Maori whakapapa (enotes,n.d.).In Witi Ihimaera’s “The Trowenna Sea” many of the Maori and Pakeha characters discuss the impact of the Treaty of Waitangi, their ambivalence about concepts of landownership and the notion of two cultures living in the one land.It is something of this ambivalence about the land and the cultural landscpae of New Zealand which is also at the heart of Shane Cotton’s art.These memories in turn develop into our individual and collective cultural landscapes.
In paintings such as “Forked Tongue”, which features a cliff face, a fantail, some Maori designs and a tracery of red lines these symbols or metaphors become starting points for an elaboration on the links between the physical, historical and spiritual landscapes.
All the works in the exhibition seem aged and fractured with an almost medieval feel to them. However, they also contain images which seem to provide hope with the images of natural images and lines which trace over these them suggesting links to the past and the future( Daly, 2010 ).
7. Tony Albert's installation 'Sorry' (2008) reflect the effects of colonization on the aboriginal people of Australia. Research the work and comment on what Albert is communicating through his work, and what he is referring to. Describe the materials that Albert uses on this installation and say what he hopes his work can achieve. Define the term 'kitsch'.
The installation of Tony Albert’s Sorry 2008 was inspired by former prime minister Kevin Rudd’s formal apology to Indigenous Australians on 13 February 2008. On this day, Australia witnessed one of its most overtly optimistic displays of unity and emotion and, in the eyes of many, grew up. Capturing this outpouring of emotion in his work, Tony Albert introduces us to a forest of faces, each of which shares a history with those stolen from their people, land and culture. Each also represents a false identity; a manufactured black face made to fit a white society. By collecting and reintroducing these so-called ‘kitsch’ items into the world as ‘Aboriginal’ art, Albert affords each object a new and different life in the company of kindred souls: his practice is a liberation(Art in the first decade,2010).
kitsch is a form of art that is considered an inferior, tasteless copy of an extant style of art or a worthless imitation of art of recognized value. Excessive sentimentality often is associated with the term. The contemporary definition of kitsch is considered derogatory, denoting works executed to pander to popular demand alone and purely for commercial purposes rather than works created as self-expression by an artist.
The concept of kitsch is applied to artwork that was a response to the 19th century art with aesthetics that convey exaggerated sentimentality and melodrama, hence, kitsch art is closely associated with sentimental art(Wikipedia,n.d.).
8. Explain how the work of both artists relates to pluralism.
I find that both Albert and Cotton's works include the culture of different regions ,and they express the idea of pluralism in their artworks by their cultural background. Albert and Cotton are admirable artist that They can be brave to express their inner thoughts.
References:
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 1, 2011 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluralism
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 25, 2011 from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_New_Zealand
Borade,G.(n.d.). buzzle.com. Retrieved from http://www.buzzle.com/articles/bad-effects-of-globalization.html
enotes.(n.d.).Retrieved from http://www.enotes.com/topic/Shane_Cotton
Daly,J.( 2010 ).The national Business Review Daly. From
http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/shane-cotton-paintings-examine-cultural-landscape-126412
Art in the first decade.(2010). From http://21cblog.com/behind-the-scenes-tony-albert-sorry-2008/
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 26, 2011 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitsch
Use this discussion, the notes in your ALVC book and the internet to respond to the following questions;
1. Define the term 'pluralism' using APA referencing.
Pluralism is used, often in different ways, across a wide range of topics to denote a diversity of views, and stands in opposition to one single approach or method of interpretation (wikipedia.n.d.).
2. How would you describe New Zealand's current dominant culture?
New Zealand's current dominant culture is diversified.The culture of New Zealand is largely inherited from English and European custom, interwoven with Maori and Polynesian tradition. An isolated Pacific Island nation, New Zealand was comparatively recently settled by humans. Initially Māori only, then bicultural with colonial and rural values, now New Zealand is a cosmopolitan culture that reflects its changing demographics, is conscious of the natural environment, and is an educated, developed Western society(wikipedia.n.d.).New Zealand's arts and culture was obtained from all races, resulting in a combination of Maori, European, Asian and Oceania were the characteristics.
3. Before 1840, what was New Zealand's dominant culture?
Māori culture has predominated for most of New Zealand's history of human habitation. Māori voyagers reached the islands of New Zealand some time before 1300, though exact dates are uncertain. Over the ensuing centuries of Māori expansion and settlement, Māori culture diverged from its Polynesian roots. Māori established separate tribes, built fortified villages (Pā), hunted and fished, traded commodities, developed agriculture, arts and weaponry, and kept a detailed oral history. It was then when young ones respected the elders and women had no say in important meetings. Regular European contact began approximately 200 years ago, and British immigration proceeded rapidly during the nineteenth century.Te Reo Maori was the common language heard among this country before the 1840’s (para.2).
4. How does the Treaty of Waitangi relate to us all as artists and designers working
in New Zealand?
New Zealand has two 'high cultural' traditions: Māori and Western.
Pre-European Māori visual art had two main forms: carving and weaving. Both recorded stories and legends and also had religious roles. When Europeans arrived, they brought with them Western artistic traditions. Early Pākehā art focussed mainly on landscape painting, although some of the best known Pākehā artists of the nineteenth century (Charles Goldie and Gottfried Lindauer) specialised in Māori portraiture. Some Māori adopted Western styles and a number of nineteenth century meeting houses feature walls painted with portraits and plant designs. From the early twentieth century Apirana Ngata and others began a programme of reviving traditional Māori arts, and many new meeting houses were built with traditional carving and tukutuku (woven wall panels) were built. A longstanding concern of Pākehā artists has been the creation of a distinctly New Zealand artistic style. Rita Angus and others used the landscape to try and achieve this while painters such as Gordon Walters used Māori motifs. A number of Māori artists, including Paratene Matchitt and Shane Cotton have combined Western modernism with traditional Māori art.
5. How can globalization be seen as having a negative effect on regional diversity in New Zealand in particular?
Globalization is one cannot ignore the 'flattening' effect of the practice. Globalized trade and dedicated outsourcing of resources are bound to result in a conflict between various distinctive political forces.
Globalization is supposed to fuel and guarantee social, political and economic unification. However, developed and established economies continue to exploit the 'sharing' business to empower their own strong and wealthy economies. Subsequently, in the political arena, the reallocation of power is surfacing in the form of industrial and technological rivalry. On the social front, the world is now at a loss in the attempt to guard and flaunt diversity that is enriching. The random influx of ideology and lifestyles and unmonitored inter-cultural communication has resulted in the creation of a pseudo culture that is common across boundaries(Borade.n.d.).New Zealand also encountered the same problem on regional diversity.
6. Shane Cotton's paintings are said to examine the cultural landscape. Research Cotton's work 'Welcome'(2004) and 'Forked Tongue' (2011) to analyze what he is saying about colonialization and the Treaty of Waitangi.
Cotton's work evocatively includes both Maori iconography and culture, such as shrunken heads, mokomokai, and native birds such as tui, and European symbols and items. His paintings have explored questions of colonialism, cultural identity, Maori spirituality, and death. Many of his paintings go into depth of primitive ideas especially through Maori whakapapa (enotes,n.d.).In Witi Ihimaera’s “The Trowenna Sea” many of the Maori and Pakeha characters discuss the impact of the Treaty of Waitangi, their ambivalence about concepts of landownership and the notion of two cultures living in the one land.It is something of this ambivalence about the land and the cultural landscpae of New Zealand which is also at the heart of Shane Cotton’s art.These memories in turn develop into our individual and collective cultural landscapes.
In paintings such as “Forked Tongue”, which features a cliff face, a fantail, some Maori designs and a tracery of red lines these symbols or metaphors become starting points for an elaboration on the links between the physical, historical and spiritual landscapes.
All the works in the exhibition seem aged and fractured with an almost medieval feel to them. However, they also contain images which seem to provide hope with the images of natural images and lines which trace over these them suggesting links to the past and the future( Daly, 2010 ).
7. Tony Albert's installation 'Sorry' (2008) reflect the effects of colonization on the aboriginal people of Australia. Research the work and comment on what Albert is communicating through his work, and what he is referring to. Describe the materials that Albert uses on this installation and say what he hopes his work can achieve. Define the term 'kitsch'.
Tony Albert | Australia b.1981 | Girramay people | Sorry 2008 | Found kitsch objects applied to vinyl letters | 99 objects : 200 x 510 x 10cm (installed) | The James C Sourris Collection.Purchased 2008 with funds from James C Sourris through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation | Collection: Queensland Art Gallery
The installation of Tony Albert’s Sorry 2008 was inspired by former prime minister Kevin Rudd’s formal apology to Indigenous Australians on 13 February 2008. On this day, Australia witnessed one of its most overtly optimistic displays of unity and emotion and, in the eyes of many, grew up. Capturing this outpouring of emotion in his work, Tony Albert introduces us to a forest of faces, each of which shares a history with those stolen from their people, land and culture. Each also represents a false identity; a manufactured black face made to fit a white society. By collecting and reintroducing these so-called ‘kitsch’ items into the world as ‘Aboriginal’ art, Albert affords each object a new and different life in the company of kindred souls: his practice is a liberation(Art in the first decade,2010).
kitsch is a form of art that is considered an inferior, tasteless copy of an extant style of art or a worthless imitation of art of recognized value. Excessive sentimentality often is associated with the term. The contemporary definition of kitsch is considered derogatory, denoting works executed to pander to popular demand alone and purely for commercial purposes rather than works created as self-expression by an artist.
The concept of kitsch is applied to artwork that was a response to the 19th century art with aesthetics that convey exaggerated sentimentality and melodrama, hence, kitsch art is closely associated with sentimental art(Wikipedia,n.d.).
8. Explain how the work of both artists relates to pluralism.
I find that both Albert and Cotton's works include the culture of different regions ,and they express the idea of pluralism in their artworks by their cultural background. Albert and Cotton are admirable artist that They can be brave to express their inner thoughts.
References:
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 1, 2011 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluralism
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 25, 2011 from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_New_Zealand
Borade,G.(n.d.). buzzle.com. Retrieved from http://www.buzzle.com/articles/bad-effects-of-globalization.html
enotes.(n.d.).Retrieved from http://www.enotes.com/topic/Shane_Cotton
Daly,J.( 2010 ).The national Business Review Daly. From
http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/shane-cotton-paintings-examine-cultural-landscape-126412
Art in the first decade.(2010). From http://21cblog.com/behind-the-scenes-tony-albert-sorry-2008/
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 26, 2011 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitsch
2011年8月13日星期六
Week 4 - Kehinde Wiley and inter-textuality
Kahinde Wiley is a Gay American based painter born in Los Angeles, who has an international reputation. Wiley lives and practices between Beijing and Brooklyn.
1. Find a clear definition of Intertextuality and quote it accurately on your blog using the APA referencing system. Use your own words to explain the definition more thoroughly.
According to Semiotics for Beginners(n.d.), "Intertextuality refers to far more than the 'influences' of writers on each other." the concept of intertextuality reminds us that each text exists in relation to others(AUT University,2011). Intertextuality is a determine text with its reference, rewritten, absorption, expansion, or, in general, to transform the relationship between the other text.Any text is a intertextuality. In the text, it is different degree with all sorts of how many can identify the form of existence other text.
2 Research Wiley's work and write a paragraph that analyzes how we might make sense of his work. Identify intertextuality in Wiley's work.
Wiley suggests that his paintings “quote historical sources and position young black men within that field of power.” Intertextuality is present in the sense that when we see his work we immediately think of the historic segregated society where it was the “white men” of the world who were in high positions as oppose to “black people.” Not only does Wiley make us think about the historical context but also about today’s society in general.
Kehinde Wiley’s portraits of African American men collate modern culture with the influence of Old Masters. Incorporating a range of vernaculars culled from art historical references, Wiley’s work melds a fluid concept of modern culture, ranging from French Rococo to today’s urban landscape. By collapsing history and style into a unique contemporary vision, Wiley interrogates the notion of master painter, “making it at once critical and complicit.” Vividly colorful and often adorned with ornate gilded frames, Wiley’s large-scale figurative paintings, which are illuminated with a barrage of baroque or rococo decorative patterns, posit young black men, fashioned in urban attire, within the field of power reminiscent of Renaissance artists such as Tiepolo and Titian(Recogpize,n.d.).
3. Wiley's work relates to next weeks Postmodern theme "PLURALISM" . Read page 46 and discuss how the work relates to this theme.
Wiley's work relates to theme pluralism as pluralism in art refers to the nature of artforms and artists as diverse. Wiley's work remind us of the cultural and ethnic diversity, people who have had the same rights, we are all equal ,There is no cultural segregation in the post-modern world. the cultural context of art is all encompassing in its respect for the art of the world's cultures. inclusion of individuals of differing ethnicities, genders, ideologies, abilities, ages, religions,economic status and educational levels is valued(AUT University,2011).
4. Comment on how Wiley's work raises questions around social/cultural hierarchies , colonisation, globalisation, stereotypes and the politics which govern a western worldview.
Kehinde Wiley’s very successful, he has created large, vibrant, highly patterned paintings of young African American men wearing the latest in hip hop street fashion. The theatrical poses and objects in the portraits are based on well-known images of powerful figures drawn from seventeenth- through nineteenth-century Western art. For all of his works all around the colour of our skin, his work notice us what is real "equal" in this world, no matter what is your skins colour, we live in one world, this is paceful world. Wiley‘s works quote historical sources and position young black men within that field of power,and posit young black men, fashioned in urban attire, within the field of power to express advocating everyone is equal,and People no different insocial/cultural hierarchies , no colonisation, harmonious globalisation, no stereotypes and the politics which not only govern a western worldview.
5. Add some reflective comments of your own, which may add more information that
you have read during your research.
Wiley, as the contemporary descendent of a long line of portraitists including Reynolds, Gainsborough, Titian, Ingres, and others, appropriates the signs and visual rhetoric of the heroic, powerful, opulent, majestic, and sublime in his representations of young, urban, black men. The subjects and stylistic references for his paintings are juxtaposed inversions of each other, forcing ambiguity and provocative perplexity to pervade his imagery. By applying the visual vocabulary and conventions of glorification, history, wealth, power, and prestige to subject matter drawn from the urban fabric in which he is embedded, Wiley presents his young men as both heroic and pathetic, aestheticized and reified, autonomous and manipulated.
Wiley’s paintings often blur the boundaries between traditional and contemporary modes of representation. Wiley’s portrayal of masculinity is filtered through these poses of power and spirituality. His figurative paintings "quote historical sources and position young black men within that field of power.” In this manner, Wiley’s paintings fuse history and style in a unique and contemporary manner(artnet,n.d.).
References:
Semiotics for Beginners.(n.d.).Retrieved October 4,2003, from
http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/S4B/sem09.html
AUT University. (2011). Academic Literacies in Visual Communications 2: Resource Book. New Zealand, Auckland: Lyceum Press
Recogpize.(n.d.).Retrieved from http://www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/recognize/paintings.html
artnet.(n.d.).Retrieved from http://www.artnet.com/awc/kehinde-wiley.html
2011年8月6日星期六
Week 3- Hussein Chalayan
Chalayan is an artist and designer, working in film, dress and installation art. Research Chalayan’s work, and then consider these questions in some thoughtful reflective writing.
1. Chalayan’s works in clothing, like Afterwords (2000) and Burka (1996) , are often challenging to both the viewer and the wearer. What are your personal responses to these works? Are Afterwords and Burka fashion, or are they art? What is the difference?
Not all clothing is fashion, so what makes fashion fashion?
My responses are his design is not rooted in history, the street or the myths and legends, but reflect a future images and Thoughts on the future, he used in his fashion design conveys an evolution of human civilization the possibility, is to the human feet may leave land.
HUSSEIN CHALAYAN: “FASHION IS A COMBINATION OF ART, PROFESSION AND PRODUCT”(FASHION LIFESTAY,2008).
I agree with him,but it is limited.My opinion is that too extreme expression is not fashion,It is art. Such as Afterwords (2000) and Burka (1996). Fashion is the pursuit of beauty trends,art can express All emotions of the inner world .The childhood and a part of chalayan youth years in Turkish Cyprus incise forever in his spirituality and conscience.Yashmak and headcloths, shalwars or something like shalwars and in general the different signs in the Islam in the appearance penetrate permanently in his works. It is elementary to interpret all this like standard experience for visual representation of the Moslem women and their situation in the today’s society. In fact the intelligent and the provoking combination of these signs with other modern components give to his works originality, emblematic and ripeness.. He calls his mother country “turbulent zone” – Turkish Cyprus, and he reminds with pain the cruelty of the constraint, which introduces the ethnical and religious boundaries and forms the fear and the hatred.Not all clothing is fashion, making fashion fashion need Innovative and unique,and the ultimate goal is to achieve beautiful.
My responses are his design is not rooted in history, the street or the myths and legends, but reflect a future images and Thoughts on the future, he used in his fashion design conveys an evolution of human civilization the possibility, is to the human feet may leave land.
HUSSEIN CHALAYAN: “FASHION IS A COMBINATION OF ART, PROFESSION AND PRODUCT”(FASHION LIFESTAY,2008).
I agree with him,but it is limited.My opinion is that too extreme expression is not fashion,It is art. Such as Afterwords (2000) and Burka (1996). Fashion is the pursuit of beauty trends,art can express All emotions of the inner world .The childhood and a part of chalayan youth years in Turkish Cyprus incise forever in his spirituality and conscience.Yashmak and headcloths, shalwars or something like shalwars and in general the different signs in the Islam in the appearance penetrate permanently in his works. It is elementary to interpret all this like standard experience for visual representation of the Moslem women and their situation in the today’s society. In fact the intelligent and the provoking combination of these signs with other modern components give to his works originality, emblematic and ripeness.. He calls his mother country “turbulent zone” – Turkish Cyprus, and he reminds with pain the cruelty of the constraint, which introduces the ethnical and religious boundaries and forms the fear and the hatred.Not all clothing is fashion, making fashion fashion need Innovative and unique,and the ultimate goal is to achieve beautiful.
2. Chalayan has strong links to industry. Pieces like The Level Tunnel (2006) and Repose (2006) are made in collaboration with, and paid for by, commercial business; in these cases, a vodka company and a crystal manufacturer. How does this impact on the nature of Chalayan’s work? Does the meaning of art change when it is used to sell products? Is it still art?
'the level tunnel' is a 15m long, 5m high installation that can be experienced from the exterior or blindfolded on the inside. chalayan has developed an experience of the senses, working with a number of different materials as well as playing with scent, touch and sound. the viewing is blindfolded and led into the installation, where they are confronted with sound created by a flute made from a vodka bottle. further on, a breeze carries the scent of lemon and cedar as the visitors moves along the leather coated railings. a heart monitor is fitted onto the visitor and a display on the outside projects their heartbeat to external viewers(designboom,n.d.).
'Repose' were making a statement about the space between our homes and our busy out of home lives; the shoulders of this dress are sponsored by your grandmother's armchair.
He dose not change the meaning of art when it is used to sell products.Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music, literature, film, photography, sculpture, and paintings. The meaning of art is explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics, and even disciplines such as history and psychology analyze its relationship with humans and generations(wikipedia,n.d.).It is still art."[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen(Steve Mithen,1999). Art plays a large part in making our lives infinitely rich.
3. Chalayan’s film Absent Presence screened at the 2005 Venice Biennale. It features the process of caring for worn clothes, and retrieving and analysing the traces of the wearer, in the form of DNA. This work has been influenced by many different art movements; can you think of some, and in what ways they might have inspired Chalayan’s approach?
The Absent Presence is an enigmatic story based on identity, geography, genetics, biology and anthropology. It opens the argument on how certain identities can or cannot adapt to new environments and generates a research based narration for Hussein's cross-disciplined installation with filmic images and sculptures(ART100,n.d.).I think Chalayan might be influenced by Installation art ,Sound art,IMMAGINE&POESIA,Futurism,Neo-expressionism,Conceptual Art, Performance art.
'the level tunnel' is a 15m long, 5m high installation that can be experienced from the exterior or blindfolded on the inside. chalayan has developed an experience of the senses, working with a number of different materials as well as playing with scent, touch and sound. the viewing is blindfolded and led into the installation, where they are confronted with sound created by a flute made from a vodka bottle. further on, a breeze carries the scent of lemon and cedar as the visitors moves along the leather coated railings. a heart monitor is fitted onto the visitor and a display on the outside projects their heartbeat to external viewers(designboom,n.d.).
'Repose' were making a statement about the space between our homes and our busy out of home lives; the shoulders of this dress are sponsored by your grandmother's armchair.
He dose not change the meaning of art when it is used to sell products.Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music, literature, film, photography, sculpture, and paintings. The meaning of art is explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics, and even disciplines such as history and psychology analyze its relationship with humans and generations(wikipedia,n.d.).It is still art."[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen(Steve Mithen,1999). Art plays a large part in making our lives infinitely rich.
3. Chalayan’s film Absent Presence screened at the 2005 Venice Biennale. It features the process of caring for worn clothes, and retrieving and analysing the traces of the wearer, in the form of DNA. This work has been influenced by many different art movements; can you think of some, and in what ways they might have inspired Chalayan’s approach?
The Absent Presence is an enigmatic story based on identity, geography, genetics, biology and anthropology. It opens the argument on how certain identities can or cannot adapt to new environments and generates a research based narration for Hussein's cross-disciplined installation with filmic images and sculptures(ART100,n.d.).I think Chalayan might be influenced by Installation art ,Sound art,IMMAGINE&POESIA,Futurism,Neo-expressionism,Conceptual Art, Performance art.
4. Many of Chalayan’s pieces are physically designed and constructed by someone else; for example, sculptor Lone Sigurdsson made some works from Chalayan’s Echoform (1999) and Before Minus Now (2000) fashion ranges. In fashion design this is standard practice, but in art it remains unexpected. Work by artists such as Jackson Pollock hold their value in the fact that he personally made the painting. Contrastingly, Andy Warhol’s pop art was largely produced in a New York collective called The Factory, and many of his silk-screened works were produced by assistants. Contemporarily, Damien Hirst doesn’t personally build his vitrines or preserve the sharks himself. So when and why is it important that the artist personally made the piece?
I think when a work is conception and creation, need the artist to doing their own work, because it is unque, valuable. Of course, some art is replicated by others, most of these are as a commodity to sell, such as clothing. There is also in the process of artistic creation, the use of materials, method, there may be others to do, because it is not the artist's original, and others can do, these can be performed by someone else to do.such as Damien Hirst doesn’t personally build his vitrines or preserve the sharks himself.But the main ideological work and the way of expression are need the artist personally made the pice.It is important that The artist's idea.If the work has no soul and mind , it is just a copy,and no value.
designboom.(n.d.).From http://www.designboom.com/weblog/read.php?CATEGORY_PK=&TOPIC_PK=2858
wikipedia.(n.d.).Retrieved August 10 ,2011,from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art
Steve Mithen.(1999). The Prehistory of the Mind: The Cognitive Origins of Art, Religion and Science.
ART100.(n.d.).From http://art100.wikispaces.com/Hussein+Chalayan
ART100.(n.d.).From http://art100.wikispaces.com/Hussein+Chalayan
订阅:
博文 (Atom)