Wednesday 17 December 2014

Top answers and why?

What are the most important art exhibitions you have seen?

- The louvre, this was possibly an amazing turning point for me as it wasn't until i explored the louvre as a young child and stared in amazement at the mona lisa, thinking how someones work could become so famous and how I could create something like this which in years to come could become a sought after treasure that other people could look up to.

- The baltic in newcastle, I have visited this on numerous occasions, most lately with my university and this allowed me to see things from a different perspective.

-The mima in middlesborough, I went on a trip with the university here and this was the first art gallery I visited after I started appreciating different and new things,  as I was never as interested in abstract and the idea that art can just be paint and not anything in particular, however seeing works of artists such as Jackson Polluck and others in person completely changed my opinion.

- Lazarides art gallery, this art gallery featured a lot of different street art with surreal twists which is a huge influence on my personal style, this was the first time I had witnessed a banksy piece in person which was a big deal for me at the time.

- The baltic 39 in newcastle, it is a smaller art gallery compared to that of the Baltic, but i much preferred the different exhibitions which was housed there at the time, and was my personal favourite and enjoyable that I have visited.

Which contemporary artists are most important to you?

-Guy Denning, I studied Guy in my 6th Form and found his work inspiring and affected my personal studies quite a lot.

- Allen Ruppersberg, to me he helped break the idealism of what is art.

-Keith Tyson, the way he blends colours and the way he chooses his composition means a lot to me.

-Ai Weiwei, his sculptures of shapes and repetition I found to be hypnotising and intriguing.

- Douglas Gordon, his work entails setting fire to famous images and making a different thing completely, showing that destruction is also art if done right.


Which historic artists do you like and respect most?

- Salvador Dali, surrealism is my favourite type of painting styles and he was the most well known that was associated with surrealism, that and his quirky personality traits I found to be amusing.

- Francis Bacon, to me his surrealist art was always dark and gothic which I thought was unique compared to others.

- Alberto Giacometti, his elongated skeletal figures were the first art work I recall attempting to recreate myself with wires. His work is extremely valuable to this day and he managed to make his work look both so simple and complex at the same time.

- Joan Miro, I could stare at a Miro art work for a long time, questioning what things are and what they represent, giving things a new outlook and appearance.

- Francisco Goya, Goya is my personal favourite artist at portraying different emotions and some almost in a sinister appearance.

What are films you have seen that you think are culturally significant?

-  Fight Club, it explores a lot of different atmospheres to current life, such as the mundaneness and repetitiveness to modern day living and the barbaric-ness to which we need excitement, and throw in a mental disorder it gives a lot of twisted and unique views online that leaves people questioning what is living.

-  Leon the Professional, it challenges the stereotypes of a hit man with that of a child like innocent man who hasn't lived and is socially inept, who gets a partner of that in a young girl which has shown him things and helped him to become alive through simple menial things such as having fun.

- Se7en, a murderer uses the seven deadly sins as his reason for killing people while leaving clues, and through the dark atmosphere and realisation that nearly all people are liable to the sins it brings   a lot of dark questions into the movie and it's significance.

-Watchmen, this isn't like the typical super hero movie as you find that most of the heroes are just as villainous as their enemies, which brings an uneasy feeling into if their is right and wrong, or just a conflict of needs.

- Train spotting, a film about the lives of different youths who attempt a friend going cold turkey on heroin so he can hope for a normal life.

Who are your favourite historic or contemporary heroes or heroines beyond the art world?

- Mahatma Gandhi, for the revolution of non violence movements throughout india and parts of the world.

- Keanu Reeves, a rich actor whom isn't money orientated and shares his wealth with the less fortunate but outside of the medias eye so not for attention or publicity.

- Abraham Lincoln, was a smart and self taught leader whom struggled through hard times but prevailed.

- Walt Whitman, a humanistic poet which was looked down on at the time due to his beliefs.

- Bob Geldof, raises a lot of awareness and money for charities without personal gain.

What books about art have you found most informative?

-Salvador Dali, his self titled book features many of his paintings and the thoughts that went behind him when finishing these, I found his thought process to be inspirational.

- When I was much younger my sister had bought me a learn how to draw book, which got me interested in skeletal structures of creatures and taught me the very basics of how to draw.

What novels have you found most enjoyable?( poetry/plays also)

- Tyler Knott Gregson is a poet who released the book, 'Chasers of Light' that is amongst my favourites One of my personal favourites of his pieces is from his typewriter series, number 996.

"Maybe I was a thing to be
dismantled,
pulled apart
one piece at a time,
all the parts spread out,
catalogued, photographed
and stored.
All I know is the dusty scent
of the box I'm kept in,
the lid I mistake
for night. "

- Another of my favourites poets is Christopher Pointdexter , this is an extract from his book, ' The universe and Her, and I' number 288.

"I am something new."
you must tell yourself.
"I am the beginning and
end
of a story that
will never be lived again.

I am new earth and new air
and new words.
I am as fresh
as birth.

I am significant."

- Red Dragon by Thomas Harris, later made into a film iconicity starring Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal  Lecter.

- Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson is a good novel that delves into characters and how events change them morally.

- Looking For Alaska by John Green, this was a very emotional and hard book for me to read as it shows how quickly life can go from normal to despair after someone closes death and leaving a lot of things to go unanswered that you have to live with.

What music albums do you regard as essential listening?

- Pink Floyd- wish you were here, I have never heard a band that resembles pink floyd in anyway, they have a magical atmosphere towards them and even the instrumentals seem to speak to the listeners.

http://vimeo.com/28208077

- John Frusciante- the empyrean, such a simple and beautiful album done by the guitarist from red hot chilli peppers, John is an artist who is independent on himself purely and in the past had a coke addiction which influenced his mentality and himself to what he has become now and he has shown the beauty of his talents in his work.

http://vimeo.com/2579381

- Isles and Glaciers- The hearts of lonely people

www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzmi6uB2hmc

- Lynyrd Skynyrd- (pronounced leh-nerd skin-nerd)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHQ_aTjXObs

- Anberlin- New surrender

www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdddceIqW2k

Which are your favourite historic or contemporary buildings?

-The sage building located in newcastle, living so close to it I seen it often whilst travelling, I also witnessed it slowly getting built throughout my childhood.

- Coach Omotesando flagship in Japan, from a far its intricate glass design looks amazing and confusing.

- The blue planet in Denmark, its spiral design looks extremely impressive, especially from a birds eye view.

- Mercat Encats in Barcelona, features an abstract roof of different angles which is complete mirror, so the sky view is that of the ground but in a twisted view point.

-SOGA in mexico, its an open air bridged walk through area which looks like an inside interior design and is extremely appealing and interesting to look at.


What are your favourite pieces of contemporary design?

- David Stanley- Wye Spring

- Jo Lewis - Riverscape

-Nenad Zilic- Genesis

- Slava Groshev- Melancholy

-Zachary Walsh- aTOMIC CHILD 6



What are the most significant national or international events that you have 'witnessed'?

- 9/11, I was a young child but I remember the news at the time and how it is still considered a monumental event of the 21st century.

- Barack Obama becoming the first black president, this was a huge step in the way of equality amongst races, changes is happening and people are gradually getting more and more rights when you look at how different races and genders were treated even just a few decades ago.

Wednesday 26 November 2014

6 body artists

Pablo Picasso







Pablo Picasso paints using cubism, which may look very strange from first viewing but is much more visible when you see it as all the sides of a cube folded out, so instead of just seeing one angle of the face you can see all of the sides, which wouldnt even be visible from the original view point.

He used oil pastels to colour this piece in which I think worked well because it let the colours blend very easily with each other and gave a very bland colour which adds to the dreary atmopshere behind the image..

Joan Miro







Miros work is very abstract and surreal, he draws people like distorted stick men with different shapes intervening and colours in somewhat random places. In his work 'metamorphosis' he adds collage of mannequins dotted all over the image in circular and ovular shapes.

Charles Cohen







Charles Cohen is a photographer who cuts out the model from the background, and what youre left with is a white silhouette of where the model was which is very interesting when you see the persons shadow right behind them and his work is very original.

Salvador Dali







Dali is renowned as one of the most famous surreal artists, and this painting shows distorted limbs holding other limbs in the style of a king of building structure. I like Dali because each of his paintings could have intriquite hidden meanings behind themselves.

Lora Zombie







Lora Zombie uses water colours and mixes people with animals and generally has something 'exploding' out of something else, and she sticks to using a specific colour scheme for every picture, generally blue or black.She usually paints the water colours to be running down over the main image in multicolours too, allowing them to blend and create psychedelic patterns whilst the original background image stays visible.

Ron Mueck







Ron Mueck makes sulptures of people which from photographs look like normal people, however they are scaled on massive proportions and you only see the true impressiveness when you have something to compare them too. Mueck adds extraordinary details into his work so is extremely impressive even from up close.

6 self potrait artists

Kathy Kolwitz








Kathy Kolwitz is an artist who mainly works with graphite and charcoal pencils and does self portraits of herself portrayed differently, Kolwitz is a jewish woman whom survived world war two and the holocaust and a lot of her work portrays some raw emotion which she had felt throughout that stage in her life.

Phillip Guston







Phillip Guston is an artist whom paints himself in surreal ways, his work signifies his addiction to alcohol which he has had since a young age and what it was like for him to get over it, I like the way in which he paints quite comically but this however contrasts the seriousness in which it affected his life.

Ken Kiff







Ken Kiff is a figurative artist and was brought up when abstract art was becoming a big thing, so this influenced him a lot, resulting in his paintings and other art work to look almost dream like and like that of a child's fantasy tale.

Guy Denning







Guy Denning is an self portrait artist whom uses mediums of paint, charcoal , pencils and collage within his work. Denning is one of my favourite artists due to how with only a few powerful lines amongst some smudged colours he can effectively grasp the figures emotions and gives a huge amount of detail.

Bryan Lewis Saunders







Bryan Lewis Saunders is an experimental artist and he set out to give himself unique factors whilst painting unlike other artists, for his self portrait series of work he gave himself multiple drugs, each painting he is under the effect of something different, this series of work I found to be extremely amazing due to all the different styles he achieved. Showing that artists may perceive things differently depending on the way they feel and the chemicals in their brain.

Francis Bacon







Francis Bacon is an artist whom manages to show a lot of raw power and emotion with his paintings, often isolating his figures in cage like shapes and using dark colours, he became renowned as one of the most influential dark and gothic artists. His self portrait of himself shows his face to be twisted, perhaps signifying that he sees the world in a different way from others, at the time bacon was a closeted homosexual so this might have had some relevance.

6 landscape artists

Ansell Adams







Ansell Adams explores american locations and uses a slow shutter speed to capture more movement among the clouds and water in lakes, he is also a great photographer and has an amazing eye at capturing good depth of field and positioning his shots, his photographs include a lot of power and detail from the amazing views that he represents through the digital images.

Steve Greaves







Steve Greaves uses quick brush strokes and barely goes over and blends his paint allowing his art to look quite abstract but still clear as to what it is, I find his best work to be those with a blue colour scheme with outlines of red spread around some of the hills and trees that give it an edge and makes it much more aesthetically pleasing due to the contrast.



Peter Lancaster







Peter Lancaster uses water colours to paint landscapes which include water as he paints whilst fishing, I find that a lot of his paintings have parts which are painted in a lot of detail and other parts seem quite monotone and bland in comparison, this allows the audience to maintain its attention on more parts than others , his use of reflection and shadows I find to be very good also on his work.

Rafal Olbinski







Rafal Oblinski entwines both landscapes and dream like thoughts in his work, often making it so that models are affecting the landscape and making it fit to their needs rather than accepting it for what it is, my favourite piece of his works involves a dead forest with a woman who had climbed a ladder and changed the scenery to that of an ocean with a singular tree in it, this surrealism is very intriguing to what it could signify and what aim the woman had and what she could be thinking about, and I find work that is thought provoking to be more interesting to view.

Katherine Norris







Katherine Norris is an landscape artist whom uses quite dark and pale colours as a base colour and then layers slabs of bright colours in contrast as the leaves and parts of grass which makes her paintings look divided between and attracts the audiences gaze at only specific parts of the work.

Cathy Horvath







Cathy Horvath uses natural colours however uses extreme versions of them making them stand out and add a lot of vibrance and light to her art. My favourite parts of her art work is when she paints water and uses the reflection of clouds over the surface as it reminds me of old Japanese artwork which is done on paper and outlined with a simple yet effective appearance.