Friday, 29 June 2012
My new concept...
1st piece...
A mixed media piece made up of
Collage of Mediterranean Greek scenery, impasto painting, and embroidered fabrics
A mixed media piece made up of
Collage of Mediterranean Greek scenery, impasto painting, and embroidered fabrics
Thursday, 28 June 2012
CORNO PORNO
There is something aesthetically pleasing in a sexual manner in Corno's work. It is sensual, vibrant, holds a high viscosity and contrast as well as swift emotionally driven lines. This one whispers..."Ahhhhhhhhh (I) love to love ya babyyyyyyyyy"
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Review of the exhibition "Journeys" at CCA Montreal
About a year ago, in the eventful Montreal metropolis, an exhibition
named, “Journeys: How traveling fruit, ideas and buildings
rearrange our environment” took place at the Canadian Centre for
Architecture (CCA). This unpopular museum theme was looking at how travelling
tangible things and people rearrange our environment from a perspective that
takes diffusion as much as place making into account. The exhibit consisted of
fifteen sections indicated by vignettes to demonstrate that place is “an objective
location that has both uniqueness and interdependence with other places” as
well as “a subjective social and cultural construct – somewhere that has
personal meaning for individuals or groups”. (Knox, Paul L., Marston, Sallie A., Nash, Alan E.) Numerous
journeys were presented such as the traveling coconut, the immigration of
Senegalese workers into Italy, and many more intriguing wanderings.
A
sub-section that struck me was that of the movement of houses in Newfoundland
entitled, ”Configuration - The accumulation of buildings from other places rearranges an
established urban grid”.
This “journey” of somewhat 30,000 people relocating in order to follow fish
populations in destinations such as Arnold’s Cove in Placentia Bay is painted
in a sensorial manner. We are offered a map of Arnold’s Cove with its resettled communities,
pictures of the houses, which were displaced, and snapshots taken during the
internal migration. These static images tend to our desire to visualize in
order to grasp such concept.
The public becomes aware after reading the first official statement
describing the aims of the resettlement program by Newfoundland premier, Joey
Smallwood, that the migration was voluntary
and influenced by both push and pull factors. What attracted to move the
migrants to a new location and to constitute and shape a new place was that
they would find employment in the fishing industry. The impelling of these
persons to abandon their community was caused by the government’s decision to
only financially aid the families if the whole community agreed to relocate as
an entity. Arnold’s Cove therefore doubled in size by 1970 as it was inhabited
by hundreds of resettled families that socially constructed an entirely new
place consisting of new arrangements.
Nelson Squires’ chiaroscuro short film “The Move” (1970)
was additionally included in the “Configuration” sub-section, which walks one
through the process of displacing a Newfoundland house to later establish a
home. This audiovisual mediator tracks the Newfoundlanders’ mobility while
catering to our appeal to cinema as a window of perspective. Conjointly, the
exposition grants us a simplification of reality. A model depicting how a boat
tugged the house across a river lies in the center of the room, however we are
denied the privilege of pleasing our sense of touch.
Although it is quite difficult to re-express ideas in a
museum setting, the CCA exquisitely epitomized the Newfoundlanders’ excursion
in a vivid fashion. The ideas that are conveyed nonetheless are obviously
transmitted subjectively. Parts of the Newfoundlanders’ journey are omitted. Letters of the moving communities
to their loved ones aren’t presented to see how they were experiencing it from
their perspective and not a legislative one. The archives provided are that of legal
nature and the only personal tangible objects on display are a memory-map and a
structural model made from memory of Barron’s Cove. It would have been
beneficial to see local artwork, postcards, or any written document
demonstrating the migrants’ feelings towards the move in furtherance of having
an encompassed understanding. All things considered, the theme of traveling people reshaping their
environment is one of common interest since it is inevitable and recurring
everyday. From my speculation, all in all, the museum successfully got the
message across to me and to the public.
References
Exhibition:
Journeys: How traveling
fruit, ideas and buildings rearrange our environment
Knox,
Paul L., Marston, Sallie A., Nash, Alan E. (2010) Human Geography Places and regions in Global Context (3rd
Canadian Edition) Pearson. Ontario: Toronto.
Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit"
Referencing
numerous texts of a particular style or even genres, pastiches paint a colorful
and explicit picture that makes us look deeper. They group information and
project it in a clear and very understandable way so that the message is
quickly conveyed. Nirvana’s rock song “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” the band puts
together a video along the lines of a “teen lifestyle” theme. Their video
contains mainly cheerleaders, basketball players, and a large crowd. These are
all symbols of the teenage surroundings in high school. These are the types of
people that are classified according to the so-called species that live in the
high school realm, which convey the teenage lifestyle. The cheerleaders also have
anarchy signs on their red uniforms, which connotes that teens protest and
always have some reason to rebel against systems or rules and regulations. From a semiotic perspective, we can
focus on the presence of a janitor, who is one of the elders in the high school
world. He can possibly signify the view of the adolescents according to the
future and how they envision the separate generations. By the crowd who is
bobbing their heads at the same rhythm and the similar attire in this video, we
can easily presume that this is a sign of conformity. Last but not least, there
is a constant spotlight on Kurt Cobain’s face while he is signing. This shifts
our attention from anything on the screen but himself, which is what young
adults do. They strive for attention and like to be concentrated on, as if
being the center of the universe. “Smells Like Teen Spirit” is undoubtedly a
pastiche because it mimics not only teen spirit, but also their way of life.
Shutter Island at a repertory theatre in Montreal
Trying to get
through a busy schedule and our hasty lifestyle, people of this present society
escape to theaters to forget their problems and the life they live. Cinemas
have become a haven that shelter us and let us submerge into a reality
constructed by a visionary director, weather it be one that is passionate or
just getting by the given script (a industrially generic director). Never the
less, we all are accustomed to the usual Famous Players, Guzzos, and other
mainstream cinemas. In this semester’s “Introduction to Film” class, given this
assignment, I attended a repertory cinema and viewed Martin Scorsese’s “Shutter
Island”. I had already seen this film at a Guzzo on its opening night because
the preview had caught my attention. When I realized that this film is also
being screened at a repertory cinema I decided to watch it once more to see if
the experience altered my feelings about the film itself.
I
chose to attend Cinema du Parc, which gave me a sort of culture shock. The
venue was a lot smaller and compressed compared to the spacial grandeur that is offered by
Hollywood picture screening theaters. The cinema also had a mezzanine gallery
containing works that can be classified in the world of cinematic visual art. This was
an opportunity to broaden my artistic horizons and kill two birds with one
stone since I had the privilege of viewing a work of art (the main film) and
seeing photographs in a mini gallery before hand. The hall of the screened
movie was somber and gloomier than the habitual ones I’ve previously sat in. Dim
light washed the room. The rows of the seats were closer together and I
personally felt compact and more to myself. The feeling was much like being a
part of a pack of sardines except for people weren’t representing the sardines
in this simile; the seats were. The room wasn’t even half capacitated. With the
emptiness of this hall I experienced individualism. There was no pressure to
change your facial expression according to the audience’s reaction (not that I
personally do). You were basically emotionally unaccompanied. The film evoked
your sentiments and you were forced to think, suffer, undergo crude emotions,
and let the atmosphere alleviate your cinematic experience.
The
cinema really reflected the film in a way. This foreign atmosphere was
mysterious to me. Dark and stuffy, it made me feel like Leonardo Dicaprio in
the moving picture, in a place surrounded by people I wasn’t used to being
around. This film starts off much
like any other Hollywood one would, with a storyline that seems usual, and
previously used by other directors. As the film progresses though you see that
Scorsese has made a work of art. The decor and
staging is incredible and full of dramatic potential. The story is set in 1954,
where a martial named Teddy Daniels and his new partner Chuck arrive at a
mental hospital on a secluded island of New England. Shutter Island is located
on an old concentration camp that was converted into a psychiatric institution
for the criminally insane after the war. The story starts off usual and we can
assume we know what will happen. Even if the actors are renowned and easy to
identify with, they seem to give a different and more passionate performance in
“Shutter Island”. The cinematography clearly doesn’t go unnoticed. Scorsese’s
mise-en-scene is undoubtedly thought out and has a tremendous impact on the
viewer. This is particularly seen in the scene where Dicaprio places all his
deceased children in order of height and Scorsese gives us a “bird’s eye view”
medium shot that is kept for quite a few seconds.
The strongest scenes of the film are dream-like. These are numerous
scenes of vivid flashbacks. One consists
of a female corpse along with a young girl and several other victims of war all
frozen together that is monochromatically painted with a cyan color. Another is
one of Teddy Daniels’ frequent nightmares where he re witnesses his wife dieing
in the fire and she slowly disintegrates in his arms while standing in a sort
of ash-rain. These scenes, although beautiful, provoke the viewers and force them to feel. Paranoia is also
a psychological disorder constantly present in the narrative and is embodied by
the light and shadow, which stimulates the spectator’s imagination. The
director establishes a grey area between reason and madness and we are
sometimes (I’d say often) unable to distinguish reality from fantasy. On the
topic of sound, Scorsese does make great use of it non-diegetically, although
not in a cliché fashion. It enrobes the film perfectly and respects its themes.
After the film had
ended, I came to the conclusion that repertory cinema isn’t a pastime or some
place you go to simply “do something tonight”. This was an experience that
drifted from the spacious halls, comfortable seating, and wide variety of
snacks and accompaniments. People who attended repertory cinemas were there to
pay for something worth watching and thinking over. They were individuals and
not a bunch of teenagers uniting just for the sake of going out. It was
refreshing to see a storyline that wasn’t expected and completely foreshadowed
by its previews. The experience at the repertory cinema compared to a
commercial theater was that the viewer was expected to have the film as a focal
point and not their surroundings.
Ahhh the infamous Manet!
“Luncheon Lunacy”
The realm of the arts has become
saturated over the previous centuries and artists have become less considerate
of “copying” and “copyright laws”. In this day and age it is difficult to
produce a work that has not been influenced by what has come before it and
appropriation has risen to new heights. Édouart Manet’s “Déjeuner sur
l’Herbe” or “Breakfast in the Open Air” painting that was originally titled “Le Bain” or “The Bath”
is a large oil-on-canvas painting produced in 1863. This canonic piece possessed a revolutionary
power and shock value that inspired many to concoct their own work stemming
from this very canvas. Among the many, a 1980’s
New-Wave
band created by Malcolm McLaren appropriated this artwork some a hundred years later. The
"African-derived drum sound" (Russell
A. Trunk’s Excusive Magazine) style band was named “Bow Wow Wow” and they
produced a CD cover that also caused controversy in their time. The scandal
mainly revolved around the lead singer Annabella Lwin taking over for the 19th
century Victorine Meurent. “Le Déjeuner” was
and still is a multi-faceted artwork that can spark a heated discussion, and
for this very reason Bow Wow Wow chose to appropriate it in 1981.
Manet’s original piece was a mixture of
all three genres of painting: landscape, still life, and portrait. All of these
aspects of the piece are stunning though striking all at once since they all
don’t fit proportionally together. The image appears unreal and even dreamlike.
This was due to the scale of the landscape not matching the scale of the
figures. They didn’t match up for the single reason that the whole painting was
conceived indoors in Manet’s atelier, although the current style at the time
was for painters to take their easel outdoors. Manet’s painting is considered
controversial and even scandalous to some extent. For the 19th
century, something so liberated and advanced was “regarded as crude and even
unfinished.”(The Private Life of a
Masterpiece) To Manet contents were of secondary importance, he left behind
the thematic focal point and concentrated on form and esthetics. He was
interested in producing appealing compositions, attractive contrasts, and a
play of colors. To him the “how” overpowered the “what” in his creations. “Le Déjeuner” was
immediately refused when Manet applied for the 1863 annual exhibition of the
Academy Royale in Paris and was sent to be exhibited in the Salon des Refuses.
This was a gallery put together by Napoleon the third to expose the outstanding
number of works that were rejected that particular year. Although at first it
was not allowed to be seen, the second the critics laid eyes on the piece they
scolded and immediately gave it bad judgment. The canvas’ size was considered far
too large for such a mundane subject, being four people having an everyday
picnic. What shocked the viewers was that the work had no allegorical or
idealized figures in it. It was obscene and no one could possibly make any
sense of it. It puzzled many as they pondered on a hidden meaning and tried to
figure out the implied narrative. Some came up with the theory that the posing
nude, that was a depiction of Manet’s favorite model Victorine Meurent, could
be a well-regarded prostitute in the midst of an orgy. This was backed up by
Manet’s subtle painting of a frog in the grass of his landscape, given that in
the nineteenth century “frog” was a common term for “prostitute”. Also, it was
outrageous to see common faces in the piece. Manet’s future brother in law and
brother posed for the male figures in the canvas, and the female in the
foreground was just an ordinary woman. She wasn’t a symbolic representation for
something grander such as Delacroix’s “Liberty Leading the People” seeing as
her clothes were disposed of next to the delightful fruit basket. People could
now identify with the hero in paintings and find the hero in themselves. In
sum, with this masterpiece, which was said to be a gem of the nineteenth
century French culture, Manet became the chief of impressionism and paved the
way for future modernist painting.
The work finally entered pop culture in the
1980’s when the pop group “Bow Wow Wow” appropriated it, who also claim that
they made viewers more aware of the original. The creator of the group, McLaren,
purposely desired to create uproar with the CD cover of the popular album “See Jungle! See Jungle! Go Join Your Gang Yeah!
City All Over, Go Ape Crazy!”
hence the effect the original painting had on the population at its first
exhibition. This technique not only worked out to the band’s advantage, but
also was named one of the best album covers of all time. On the contrary with
“Dejeuner Sur L’Herbe”, the 80’s photographed CD cover focused more on the
work’s content over its form. They opted the recreation of this masterpiece for
what it represented thematically: confusion, controversy, and lack of
correspondence. They attempted to give a creative and even more modern spin on
the original by placing themselves in Manet’s cinematic scene. "It was a
beautiful album and meant to be done in good taste – and I of course had my
hesitations about [the album cover] because I was underage! And that was
obviously what the uproar was all about because I was being accused of posing
nude for other reasons. But I did it because at the time it felt to me that
this would be a brilliant re-creation of this painting”, claims Annabella
Lwin in her interview with Russell A. Trunk. The photographer in charge of this appropriation, Andy Earl,
knew that chaos awaited him even as he was shooting the band. He assured the
young nude teen that the image would not turn out in away way sexual; she would
look beautiful. The photograph therefore didn’t contradict the conventions of
beauty like the front-lit Victorine that was made to look flat and have all her
defects made visible. The creator of the group was searching for public
attention while demonstrating his affection towards the arts. He certainly got
it with this album cover, especially with it getting banned in the UK and in
the US.
To conclude, Édouart Manet’s “Déjeuner sur
l’herbe” was a canonic realist painting of the 19th century that
stood as a muse to following artists and fueled their art work. Even though
bathed in lukewarm praise at its first appearance, the piece took the world by
storm and inspired the pop group Bow Wow Wow to appropriate the painting with
the means of photography. They took the challenge to re-shock the people and
push them out of their comfort zone for a second time. Manet and McLaren were
visionaries who searched to create analytically with a conscious and the desire
to explore the possibilities of the art world.
WORKS
CITED
Fiero,
K. Gloria. The Humanistic Tradition,
Fifth Edition. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2006. Print.
The Private Life of a Masterpiece. DVD
Annecarlini.com/ex_interviews.php?id=635,
80’s – Bow Wow Wow ‘Putting The Wow Back Into Music’. Russell
Trunk’s Excusive Magazine. Web
An essay comparing the novels: "The Magician" & "The Cask of Amontillado"
“The wrath of vengeance”
Revenge is the act of retaliation for an offense
or injury caused to one by another. It can overwhelm a person, shake them to
their very core and become the most important facet of their life. Revenge is often
associated with anger, animosity, and even obsession. The person exacting
revenge feels that he has been wronged and feels justified in righting that
wrong. Throughout the short story "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar
Allan Poe and the novel “The Magician” by W.S. Maugham, the authors develop
the feelings of revenge possessed by the central characters Arthur and Montresor.
In these tales, Arthur Burdon, a self-opinionated surgeon loses his future
wife to a flamboyant magician, and Montresor, a commoner, is often offended by
his higher status peer Fortunato. Throughout their suffering, they seek
justice, but when justice’s restorative power fails, vengeance is the only
option that alters personalities and turns frail men puissant.
Arthur
and Montresor are similar in the sense that they are both portrayed as
vulnerable and sensitive characters at the very beginning as a first
impression to the reader. Arthur doesn’t have an opinion to get across, is
narrow minded, and Montresor is someone who sits and is often subjected to
offenses. For a peer to
have injured him numerous times, “The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had
borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge” (Poe,
p.1567), there must have been some sign of weakness Montresor
was exuding for someone to feel the liberty to mock him so often and
effortlessly. In addition, he waited to get mentally injured and humiliated
thousands of times before taking any sort of action whether it be revenge or a
verbal response. Also throughout the story we see that he is of inferior
status than Fortunato from the way he speaks of him, “…although in other
regards he was a man to be respected and even feared” (Poe, p.1567). In sort,
this makes him a frail character in the beginning of the short Poe story. The
evil flourishes from his desire to get revenge, which in sort makes him
puissant or evil in a sense. “Hatred
is the coward's revenge for being intimidated”, claims George Bernard
Shaw, an Irish playwright. “The Magician’s” Arthur never quite believed in
Haddo’s far-fetched stories such as him defeating three lions with three
bullets or creating life out of nothing. He was also always bothered by not
knowing whether Haddo was being sincere or not, which intimidated this young
man. “It disturbed his practical mind never to be certain if Haddo was
serious, or if, as now, he was plainly making game of them” (Maugham, p.59).
Similarly, when Haddo asks Arthur what he has to say about Porhoet’s occult
experience involving the realization of his mother’s death, the young surgeon
replies “nothing”, since he never voices his neutral opinion of the black arts.
This points out that Arthur is frightened
into submission by Oliver Haddo’s presence and remarks.
As
the story progresses though, we see that revenge has depleted Arthur and
Montresor to their very soul. Both these men develop a sense of wittiness,
slyness, and unexpected mental strength. The revenger feels dominant because
he is consuming others when he himself is being consumed by the greater power
of vengeance. This desire for retribution acts as a puppet master controlling
the strings of the person who allows himself to become a marionette in the
hands of revenge. It is evident that they are being controlled by their shift
in behavior. Arthur publicly expresses his change of views on the occult and
puts a mental stop to his skepticism, “I’m so broken, so confused, that I
cannot think sanely. At this moment everything seems possible. My faith in all
the truths that have supported me is tottering.” (Maugham, p.118) This is a
big step into open-mindedness when before he would “…laugh[ed] heartily”
(Maugham, p.73) at any reference to magic. On the other hand, Montresor's precise premeditated plan
demonstrates his dedication to his act. Only someone evil and disturbed could
have carried out all of his deliberate wicked planning, “There were no
attendants at home; … I had told them that I shall not return until the
morning, and had given them the explicit orders not to stir from the house.
These orders were sufficient, I well knew, to insure their immediate
disappearance” (Poe, p.1568). For a person to plot a murder because a peer has
insulted them numerous times is an extreme and abnormal solution, which makes
us question his sanity. In addition, he ironically mocks Fortunato of his
death, “’I drink,’ he said, ‘to the buried that repose around us.’ ‘And I to
your long life’” (Poe, p.1569). The two revenge driven men took private vengeance
because justice couldn’t be served through the law. The court can’t punish
verbal injuries or a fiancée leaving her man with no proof of force, so they
sought justice personally “I shall not take any steps of my own till I find
that the law is powerless” (Maugham, p.163).
All
things considered, Maugham’s “The Magician” and Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Cask of
Amontillado” are two striking tales that take us through the consumptive steps
that revenge takes to completely alter a person’s personality and drive them
out of character. The characters Arthur and Montresor are exhausted of their
persona and converted to the complete opposite. From being adynamic, these two
men take power and matters into their own hands and let revenge be their
guide. This animalistic response to injury lets them turn the roles around and
stand on dominant ground, instead of being submissive as they originated in
the stories.
LED Sheet Lighting!
The term innovation
dates back to the 15th century and means “the
introduction of something new, a new idea, method, or device” (Merriam
Webster dictionary.) In other words, it is a new way of doing something. It refers
to revolutionary alterations in thinking, products, and processes. “A
distinction is made between invention, an idea that is thereafter manifested,
and innovation, ideas applied successfully with a significant result” (Mckeown 2008). In many fields,
something new must be considerably different to be innovative. The goal of
innovation is positive and substantial change, to make something better. An
innovation is not always created to fit a particular frame but to expand with a
wide range of possibilities. Grote’s new LightForm technology of paper-thin LED
technology will change lighting in advertisement in ways we haven't even begun
to imagine and shift the evolution of illumination with this totally new branch
of publicity. Steeve Angers, a sales representative of Lumi-ere Media, who uses this
clever technology for publicity and advertisement in restaurant menus, is also
a pioneer in this new business. He had come to restaurant Quartier dressed “to
the T” with a smile up to his ears grasping on to a rectangular menu. He
approached me and my father, saying “Are you ready to see the best menu in the
world?” With this he showed us an illuminated menu that made my gears grind and
think of all the possible opportunities.
To understand the concept of LED sheet lighting, it is substantial to
first have an idea of what simple LED lighting really is. A Light Emitting
Diode (LED) is a semiconductor device that converts electricity into light,
which has been around since the 1960s in America, but is just now beginning to
appear in the advertising and communications market. LED lighting was actually invented
in Russia in the 1920s and then later introduced to the United States as a
practical electronic component in 1962. It is an electronic light source that
has several advantages over traditional light sources. The advantages are lower
energy consumption, greater longevity, improved robustness, and a noticeably a
smaller size. LEDs mostly fail by dimming over time, instead of an abrupt burn out
of traditional light bulbs. LEDs can have a long life span. One report
estimates a recorded 35,000 to 50,000 hours of life when compared to fluorescent
light tubes which normally last about 10,000 to 15,000 hours, both depending on
their conditions of use including temperature and time of usage (switching on
and off). Thus, LED is efficient and this is why it should be chosen for advertisement
lighting (news.thomasnet.com).
Grote’s
newest edition to LED technology will significantly alter the advertising world
through its innovative ways of being used for various facets of publicity.
Grote industries is a manufacturer and marketer of vehicle lighting and safety
that was founded a hundred years ago and has remained family owned, starting
from when William Grote opened the doors for business. Grote Industries gave a
conference on March 19th 2009 in Louisville, KY stating, "LightForm is
a game changer that will dramatically alter the way the industry uses lighting,
while challenging all of our imaginations in the process," (Grote,
Dominic). The engineers already subjected the product through stress tests
including heat and cold, extreme humidity levels, and salt baths to examine its
capacities. Grote also claimed “LifeForm is already hardened and robust-far
beyond the mere prototype stage.” LED sheet design not only contributes
to the vehicle and safety business but also has leaped into the creative media
spectrum, such as Steeve Angers has demonstrated with his involvement in
Lumi-ere Media. LED paper lighting could refresh existing media options by illuminating static ads. This
implies marrying with existing technology. It can go beyond traditional media by being wrapped around columns,
illuminate floors, and being used in concave walls. LightForm increases advertising effectiveness and brand
visibility by making it possible for publicity to be seen through the
clutter and making people stop and stare. All in all, the possibilities of
advertisement opportunities are endless with LED paper.
LED sheets
change the illumination aspect of advertising with their breakthrough new
design that makes décor and publicity easy and convenient. LED sheets are an Illuminated spread
of paper-thin material, similar to plastic that can be flexed, bent, twisted
and rolled. They are highly malleable and can be installed pretty much on any
type of surface whether concave or convex. This product requires very little
energy and can be fully illuminated by a small handheld battery pack. For
example, the lit up menus have to be charged a total of twelve hours to run for
two whole weeks. This proves that it is convenient and practical. Measuring less than
one millimeter thick, LightForm is a highly advanced, thin-film, solid-state
lighting device. “When one considers the weight, energy use and aerodynamic
advantages associated with an exterior application of LightForm, we've really
accomplished something significant but when you consider that you can now bend
your lighting around corners, over contoured areas and into complicated shapes,
we've simply changed the entire lighting equation,” claims William Grote, CEO
of Grote Industries, at a press conference. Its dimensions make complicated lighting
easy instead of putting let’s say a housing for neon light bulbs behind a poster. By
replacing this technology with that of LED sheet lighting it is possible to
place a sheet of illuminated paper behind the poster or just print on the sheet
itself. Altogether, the practical design of this new technology makes it an
innovation, which without a doubt will sweep the nation.
Moreover,
Grote’s new LED sheet lighting, that numerous media companies such as Lumi-ere
Media have used to expand their horizons, is perceptibly shifting and molding
the communications field in ways that are continuous and everlasting. With this
technology’s history of simple LED illumination, its new form, and its wide
range of capabilities make it an innovation to the media domain.
A look at Artist Marcel Dzama
“Marcel Dzama: Rebel
With A Cause”
Marcel Dzama is a
German artist from Winnipeg, Manitoba that voiced nationalistic sentiment
throughout his work. He was born in 1974, making him currently 36 years old,
and obtained his Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts in his hometown. His interest
in the arts seems to be widespread considering his involvement in watercolor
illustrations, installations, sculptures, collage, assemblage, and even film.
This makes Dzama a flexible artist experimenting and utilizing every medium
possible to get his message across.
His
installation, recently mounted in the Museum of Contemporary Art, named “The
Underground” (2008) is constructed out of wood, ceramic, fiberglass, resin,
sand, metal, and fabric. This
multi-composited sculpture consists of three scarlet-masked soldiers holding
AK-47s behind a squatting nude female. She is seen urinating into the mouth of
a suited man underground through a translucent tube. Next to them, sits a
pipe-smoking dog in a burrow witnessing the scene. The figures here all share a
high degree of primitivism with their cartoonish form. “The Underground” conveys ideas of birth
with the cave representing the womb and the tube symbolizing the umbilical cord
nourishing the only well dressed male. The work also depicts ideas of death and
war, which seam to be the subjects Dzama is fond of. This is made evident with
the combat setting he built and the famous soldiers in the background. Many
elements can be deciphered in this image such as a portrayal of political
issues, for example the hideout of Saddam Hussein. This sculpture, most
importantly, embodies the mythology that one constructs in their thoughts with
a childish spin.
“Untitled:
Winnipeg Was Won, Winnipeg Was One” is one of Dzama’s illustrations made up of graphite,
ink, and watercolor on piano paper. This painting, like his others feature
torture scenes, graphic erotic escapades, and carnavalesque ballet dancers.
These scenes, although notorious and daring, depict the aesthetically
attractive and somewhat choreographed behavior of several figures. His reoccurring
characters are delicate and illustrate the artist’s interest in minimalism.
Marcel limits his color palette to somber earth tones such as root-beer browns
and grey washed navys, and the three values: white, grey, and black with a repeated
punch of crimson. This artificially bright pigment depicts themes of war, nostalgia,
and even politics. Just like his other pieces shown at the gallery, his
concoction is truly instinctive and visceral
while dealing with crude and elemental emotions.
Marcel’s work
can be compared to a scene in the film “Schindler’s List”. When coming close to
his illustrations and paintings, the young Hebrew girl wrapped in a red dress
amidst the black and white crowd instantly came to mind. This was also done to
attract attention to a singled out character and to remind us of the
holocaust’s bloodshed. In Marcel’s case he wishes to make the violence more
perceptible by focalizing it.
All things
considered, Marcel Dzama is a modernist artist for the reason that he freely
expresses himself and creates subjectively with personally selected
limitations. He, like many modernists, has blurred the lines between mediums
such as sculpture and painting, hence generating his own distinctive style.
Dzama instills his knowledge and his “id” in his productions with a juvenile
spontaneity that will surely leave a vivid imprint in our minds.
I invented a person! May I introduce you J.A.J.
James A. Johnson was a 23 year old man that stood
5”10, had chestnut brown tussled hair and emerald sparkling eyes; his gaze
always fixated and somehow able to look right through anyone. No one was able
to shield himself or herself from his mysterious stare. James had eyebrows that
were a shade darker than his hair color and also messy but never the less groomed.
His eyelashes were quite long for a man but attracted a fair amount of ladies
when he would bat them. His facial structure was square cut, chiseled, and had
a masculine air. James’ face possessed the power to almost always reflect his
inner emotions with a usual flex of his jaw muscles and his inability to look
another person directly in the eyes when hurt. He usually kept his arms crossed
and didn’t know how to let his body loose. James was as stiff as a statue and
overly reserved. His physique was lean, toned, and his skin had a sun kissed
glow due to his long walks and exposure to the British sun on blessed days in
devoid of rain.
J. A. Johnson had little sexual experience and social
bonds didn’t quite tickle his fancy. He had slept with a number of women that
can be counted on a single hand that were mere acquaintances to fulfill his
masculine needs. His testosterone level was undoubtedly lower than his drive.
He was extremely goal oriented and focused on attaining what he had set for
himself. The path towards his objective was the single and only one he chose to
walk on. His aspiration was unmatched and he did not let himself get carried
away with any of life’s minutia or ephemera. James enjoyed the spatial grandeur
of galleries and observing washes of color. J.M.W. Turner was one of his
beloved painters as he illustrated abstract scenes with veils of colored oil
paint resembling watercolor, hence his distraction by the church’s grandness. James
adored the arts, especially the kind that required deep thinking and analysis.
His perspective was one of a different angle, unparalleled by anyone else. He
spent most of his time either confined in his study room writing or in the open
space of the English countryside. He respected romantic painters of his time,
but wasn’t the least bit interested in reading other poets’ work. His writings
were highly esteemed by himself even if he hadn’t familiarized himself with
anyone else’s verses. He claimed himself to be a remarkable poet and knew that
what he spent his time scribbling during the late hours of the night would one
day be valued and prized. He was also truly meticulous about the cut and tailoring of his garments that indicated his appreciation
for quality, as he was fussy about his poems. He always sported the best linens
(as shirts) that were always accompanied by his somber-blue long coat with a tail behind it that was unique with its tall standing
collar.
James was one of seven children since families contained many children and accepted that not all of them would survive
back in the 19th century. Although romanticism was present at the
time, he was the only child that possessed such deep inner feelings and
adoration for nature. He and his
family resided in the countryside of England, since his father, Jonathan A.
Johnson, asserting that the towns were dirty, unsanitary, and overcrowded with
common folk. They attended church every Sunday as a family to satisfy the mother, “Mean
Martha”, even if it distracted James from his personal thoughts in addition to
deriving him from his own perspective of the world and what surrounded him. His
family was wealthy and owned a spacious Victorian home and frowned upon their
children visiting the city of London in order “not to catch a disease”. James
though befriended a lovely young lady that was a part of the middle class. She
had a young brother of eleven years old that her parents forced to work in a
textile factory due to him lacking any specific talents. James spent quality
time with this lady, Mertie, and her brother, Jack, and learnt to take off his
blinders and widen his vision of humanity. Mertie was a poet as well and was
interested in reading James’ work although he denied that privilege to
everyone. With the restriction of his parents, he rebelled and desired to
travel near and far during his parents’ frequent vacations to nearby European
nations. Life in his home followed a strict routine filled with unnecessary
traditions that bored him to
his very core. This made the twenty three year old James explore his curiosity and
come in contact with various individuals such as his male servants and
strangers he would come across in Liverpool and London. Although self-alienated
at home near his domestic relatives, James possessed an open mind and spirit
ready at all times to discover during his frequent absconds. Poverty was a
reality that exasperated the young poet
to his very core but he refused to contribute financially. He alleged that his
woven baskets of words would have their content published one day to give hope and
positive feeling to all those who were capable of reading the presently furtive
stanzas. James had additionally attended Oxford and studied psychology with the intention of understanding multifaceted beings
such as those around him and the more problematical self. This young, complex,
and educated romantic hero enters the (presently untold) story filled with
spontenuity, drive, and a satiated ego.
Morality & the medical system
Morality is possible because we all have a conscience. We all have that
capability to decide for one reason or another that something can be right or
wrong. Either from religious influence or by the law or even by our parents’ or
community’s morals we build our own way of distinguishing if something is
ethical or not. Morality’s purpose is to promote co-operative behavior and so
that everyone can live in a safe world where they are free to pursue their
interests and also to express them by being able to predict other’s behavior
according to their own duties as well. For example, there shouldn’t be a
conflict with someone wanting to steal your cup of coffee because it is immoral
to steal from others. So by predicting the other’s behavior of not taking your
coffee, you are free to do as you wish knowing your coffee is out of harms way.
Morality solves conflicts because it is also a two-way road, such as respect. Along
with rights, come duties. In this way we can progress since morality “greases
the wheels of society”. In other words, it keeps things flowing in a stable
peaceful fashion. It is also of great importance to involve ethics in
our health care system so that we assure the patients permanent wellbeing. Certain
patients cannot make rational decisions for themselves and also have no family
members who are qualified or can even be there for them. This is where the health
care providers (HCPs) come in. They are trained to behave in a beneficial way
to give the best possible medical care. Although it is easy to lose trust in a
HCP, their intentions are always positive and are always carried out in a
deontological manner. They are trusted to do what’s best according to the
information that they have been given and gathered about the patient. It is
imperative that the HCP has been properly prepared to make rash decisions
because putting an end to someone’s life cannot be done carelessly or without
thorough investigation on the medical case. Euthanasia, being a popular topic
in the bioethical field, whether being passive or active is a final choice that
HCPs take after careful and close consideration. In conclusion, morals play a
large significant role in medicine due to the fact that we trust doctors,
nurses, and health care providers to treat us with utter respect and have the
upper hand to choose what is right for our wellbeing. Morality also is the key
in how everyday people, HCPs, and we go about making verdicts and judgments in
conflicts in order to resolve them.
HCP= Health Care Practitioners
What does it mean for medicare to be sustainable?
Sustainability is always the most complicated stage in putting together
a plan or system of operation. This is the phase of maintenance and upholding
of the system, in this case, the Canadian medicare. For medicare to be
sustainable, it has to ensure that enough resources are available to provide
adequate care for the ones who need it over a long-term period of time in the
health sector. Romanow explains how now, medicare has become close to
impossible to sustain for various reasons. These include the high cost, it
taking too much of the governments’ budget, and also it being a barrier in
lowering taxes since 7% of them is directed to health care. There exists three
essential dimensions that are imperative in order to sustain this system. These
are services, needs, and resources. Services, being that they are accessible on
a regular basis. Needs, meaning being able to evaluate weather or not the
health care measures up to all of it’s Canadian patient’s needs compared to
other countries. And last but not least, having the proper resources, in other
words not only fiscal but human resources, such as health care providers along
with physical resources as well. Romanow also discusses how most Canadian hospitals
are mainly non-profit institutions but the possibility of increasing private
for profit services can make the system more efficient. By doing so, they offer a greater
amount of choice and resources. Nevertheless,
there is always room for improvement even if our medicare has been doing a good
job in meeting Canadians’ needs. With the private clinics and hospitals there
are three main grey areas involved. Patients can run to a private practice
clinic to take x-rays or quicker test results to later pursue their treatment in
the public hospitals, which is considered as “jumping the queue”, or cutting in
line and speed up the process. The other reasons are that patients on CSST get
quicker treatment so they can quickly return to work and also special surgeries
are offered faster at a private clinic. Romanow gives us these important points
but furthermore adds that turning to private for profit institutions only makes
the situation unfair. It defies the main purpose of medicare, which is that
money cannot get you better service and that we are all at par. Health care in
Canada could evolve positively in numerous ways such as setting a user fee,
which is one of Romanow’s discussed solutions. In the end, with every thought
out resolution, there will be controversy and maybe even havoc considering that
we as Canadians have it good. The poor might uproar and protest, nevertheless
something has to be done in order to keep medicare running and even maybe
ameliorate as a system, whether this is done by forcing people to start Medical
Saving Accounts or pay for their piece of the medicare pie in every paycheck or
just have a user fee. What ever the case may be we have to work as a community
to better our situation.
Security VS Privacy
In this technological and rapid evolving 21st
century, new tools have been introduced to facilitate homeland security and the
safety of individuals. Cameras have gotten smaller, more portable, and hence
cheaper. They are, more or less, being installed by all businesses. Recording
devices have also been mounted on street corners and traffic lights to assure
the protection of drivers and everyday pedestrians. This growing phenomenon has
surfaced many arguments and complaints against it. Several concerned citizens
feel that their privacy has been violated and stripped from them without
consent at an alarming rate. In this case, the limitation to my founded argument
is that of legal surveillance when those who are being taped are clearly informed
and aware.
Surveillance cameras
are, to some, a type of intrusion that violates the fourth amendment of guard
against unreasonable searches. Individuals feel uncomfortable knowing they are being
caught on tape while carrying out personal and private activities. These cases
are usually the ones that are expressing
unfaithfulness out in the open, going
to an interview for new employment without the knowledge of their current
employer, or even visiting psychiatrists or couple’s therapists. These are examples
of people that certainly have something to hide and therefore strive for
confidentiality. They are against cameras in any public areas and not just the reasonable private space
(example being a bathroom stall) where they shouldn’t be permitted. Many have developed a “Big
Brother fear” and are now
categorized as the “functionally paranoid” thinking that they are being
constantly watched anywhere they go. They don’t regard cameras as a “technological bounty
hunter” but as a spy tool used to pry in the mundane lives of common folk. What
they don’t see is that private and public companies that use this surveillance
method do so for security purposes and don’t have the slightest interest in
people’s personal lives. If all those who were paranoid put themselves in the
positions of business owners and landlords, they would come to understand their
purpose. They have to comprehend that privacy
is what you would do in the comfort of your own home, with the doors closed and
the blinds drawn; nothing else is private. Taking a step out into the world is
entering public domain. Folks should grasp that reality. For all those who will
still oppose this view, there has been technological advancement for their
concern as well. A company named iSee has created an online program that lets
you enter your current location and destination in order to reach it without
being recorded or photographed along the way. This should evoke a positive reaction by all surveillance camera
opposants.
On the other hand, supervision
has been provided to people in parking lots, banks, malls, airports, and many
more locations that accommodate a large number of civilians for legal defense
and personal safety. Now factual evidence can be provided in a courtroom for
those who have been wronged on tape. That should be considered a privilege since
proof is at hand and there is no need for exhausted legal procedures. They are
effective in prosecuting criminals that perform theft, abductions, physical
violence, and assaults. The surveillance camera is used in order to fortify
safety. It fights crime and rarely sides with the offender over of the law-abiding
citizen. “The right to privacy enjoyed in
one’s home does not extend to the streets.” claims J. Karl Miller, a retired colonel in the Marine Corps. People should
sacrifice themselves being filmed or face being scanned in turn to protect them
from criminals. On the topic of “traffic cams”, they have substantially slowed down traffic by
warning the drivers with photographic signs that there is camera presence in
the area. Drivers tend to hit the break pedal only by fear of being penalized.
If the government wanted to simply spy on its general population it wouldn’t
announce that they are watching. Also, mock video
cameras have been set up outside stores fronts that do not record, and only
stream live video that threaten loiters and criminals. The clear presence of
these cameras deters them from hanging out in front of stores and causing
trouble. Many might argue that this works for the specific business owner and
that the persons in question causing trouble will go do it elsewhere. This will
be hard to carry out if we consider that most, if not all, business owners do
have security systems that involve cam-corders, either functional (recorded
tape) or dysfunctional (streaming video).
Ultimately, “[security cameras] aren't there to spy on private lives.
They are there to protect private lives.” as mentioned by honor’s student Cory
Myrtle in his paper on invasion of privacy in 2001. Although countless people
have questioned their presence and efficiency, these safety devices ensure a
fair and secure community. Technology will always have its pros and cons but we
cannot stop its development. Therefore, we should try to reap all of this
tool’s benefits for what they’re worth.
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