Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Manifestos!


ASSIGNMENT:  DEEP SONG AND URGENCY

Artistic Praxis:  Write a manifesto. Go to www.manifestos.net and nose around (not just poetry here, much art and politics).  Do a ton of nosing around.  Think about your own particular obsessions/commitments/desires.  A manifesto is a statement of need—a calling into being of a movement into the world.  If you can’t manage one—a passionate and bombastic proclamation about how what you believe could and should change the world (through politics, art, work, living, etc.)... then write a defense or an apology for your less dogmatic position. 

Whatever you write (even if it is a defense) should be a big statement, by which I mean a philosophy of making/being.  You can tie your statements to other passions (birdwatching/comics/whathaveyou) but be aware that such statements are intensely public statements of private practices and will be read as such.  You should be nailing your soul to the door of city hall, and daring others to refute or join you. 
   
Manifestos often have three sections:

    * An Intro which declares its context—a specific place and time. The description can itself be an explanation of the kind of art/life/work you are calling for. This section should identify what you are against and why.
    * Mission statement for your art in list form (often numbered).
    * Conclusion: how this would change the world—why others should enter into your utopian/dystopian vision.

Make others want to join you.  Make me.

Musings: “Play and Theory of the Duende” from In Search of Duende, Federico Garcia Lorca (p.56-72) 


Prompt:  Was this difficult?  Why, do you think, it was difficult?  And if it wasn’t—why do you think this was easy for you, in particular, as an artist?

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

LINKS TO TIME ISSUES

Great article about time in art: http://www.hoodedutilitarian.com/2012/08/dwyck-tempus-fugit-degas-comics/

The power of controlling time through movement (by a technical genius): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXO-jKksQkM

This one done with video (and technical geniuses): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4X5z8AQc3s

No video tricks here, nor (not too much) technical virtuosity: http://dailypicksandflicks.com/2013/10/07/world-orders-flawless-slow-motion-choreography-video/

Stop motion video wall art (playing with time differently): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuGaqLT-gO4&feature=player_embedded

Stop motion video body-bed art: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_HXUhShhmY&feature=player_embedded

Control of reading speed in a video poem by Thomas Lux: http://www.motionpoems.com/?p=11

And bodies/video/text in a book trailer with a limitation--present the flavor of a novel in 1.5 minutes (yes, just like a movie trailer... these things exist): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUvnmgCQgzE

FROM ALLY! David Sedaris reading Miranda July (with repetition!) http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2012/11/fiction-podcast-david-sedaris-reads-miranda-july.html

FROM MATT! A video game that limits elements to create an aesthetic communal experience. http://youtu.be/3RLFAc1kU9o 

FROM QUINN! All about time. http://www.wimp.com/illusiontime/

Saturday, February 8, 2014

PROPOSAL

DUE TUESDAY FEB 25th

Each group will create a detailed 3-7 page document that outlines their vision for their project

Each proposal will contain these elements (but may also contain anything else you deem relevant to your particular project):


  • A WORKING TITLE FOR YOUR PROJECT 
  • A MISSION STATEMENT that includes:
    • The exploratory goal (what the artists seek to get from this process, what compositional strategies/structures they are investigating, what their working method will be)
    • The communicated goal (what content/elements of this process they want to convey to the audience, what kind of experience they are curating for the audience)
    • The Venues (where will you meet? where will the final work be shown/performed?)
    • The Product (as clearly as they can possibly envision it at this point--and it may change over the ensuing weeks--provide a description of the Final Event and Final Object/s of your project)
  • METHODS AND MATERIALS SECTION
    • A comprehensive list of physical materials needed to complete the work (and here you may include your plans for gathering these materials-- this is a DIY project-- and materials are always a source of limitation... think of it as a challenge and one that is at the heart of most art making... artists are not, in general, a rich bunch)
    • A WEEK BY WEEK calendar of your meetings with your group and what you hope to accomplish in each session/each week.
    • Have you organized your group yet? Delegated certain responsibilities? Named a group manager to help keep the timeline running smoothly?
  • PROBLEM SHOOTING/NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED LIST
    • This takes the place of the budget in our case. This is the place where you highlight issues that need to be figured out at the onset--things that must be converted from vision to reality and how you plan to do so... this will necessarily be very different for each group.
  • ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF RESOURCE MATERIALS
    • Please keep a running list of websites/books/people you are looking to for inspiration or for technical know-how. You would be surprised how useful it can be to return to your sources when you hit a sore spot. I'm certain that this list will expand as you continue to work--and you will have to turn in an updated list with the reflective response to the final project. But I am looking for your seriousness of purpose here, and the time you've spent thinking through facets of your project by connecting them with other work (analogy/translation/layering is at the heart of this class.)
GOOD LUCK!!!

Thursday, February 6, 2014

SOME LINKS for PERUSAL and RESEARCH

For limitation-based computer programming which incorporates the unexpected: