Showing posts with label modern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modern. Show all posts

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Roy Lichtenstein, the Stan Lee of Pop Art?




Hey Boys and Girls,

I bet you're wondering why I'm up at five in the AM. It's because i haven't slept in two days. I've been swamped with a Psychology research paper, and let me just say, I don't think the topic of sex has ever been less enjoyable for a human being. If I so much as hear the word "arousal," I am pretty sure a third stroke will finish me off. I can barely see what I'm writing. I feel like I'm in a bad comic book. Wait...

Comic Books?

What about good comic books? Roy Lichtenstein knew a little something about good comic art. In fact, he was one of the great "pop artists" of all time. Utilizing a comic book style of design, he created massive paintings which resemble photographs of comic book panels. This design, in itslef, became a comment on mass media as a whole, on the cookie cutter art of the 1960's, 70's, and 80's. His famous pieces include "Drowning Girl" (on display at the lovely Museum of Modern Art, New York and "Whaam" (currently on display at the Tate Modern London). Wikipedia would like you to notice the "the use of the onomatopoetic lettering" in the title "Whaam" A common feature of comic design (think the original Batman television series.)

I've got to say, I really think that his art is genius. It's just the way in that his art looks so plastic and fake. it really adds heft to the meaning of the piece. It almost nullifies anything that subject of the piece is saying. It just comes out seeming cliche and "plastic." and not like "IV Drip save your life" plastic, like "Paris Hilton and Pamela Anderson locked inthe Matel toy works plastic." And the faces. In "Drowning Girl," it has those tears on that perfectly crafted 1950's face. It's...almost...comedic in the tragedy of it all.

Hmm...I'm not really making sense. I guess I'm off to bed. I should really put my eyes in some water, get them hydrated...or something.

So here's looking at you Roy. Oh and Prof.? This one's for you.

duchamp

Thursday, January 4, 2007

The First of Many

Hello,
My name is really not important. For the time being however, my name is duchamp. What you see before you is not just a blog. Actually, it is an important part, an extremely intricate piece, of a much larger plan, laid out for me and my peers by a professor. In an effort to educate my class about the wonders of modern media, he felt it necessary to teach about blogs and the act of blogging through the creation of our own. This is mine.
What is the subject of this blog? Art. Art is indeed an extremely important part of our lives. It is not considered by all to be necessary, but it is. It is a living, breathing record of time and it's effects on humanity. Art shows what people think, what they do, what's acceptable, what's taboo. Everything about the human condition is represented through art. What we don't realize, however, is that art is a major part of our everyday lives. It affects all of our decisions, from the products we buy to the clothes we wear to the music we like. We create art too. Each task we complete is stamped with our own specific style, unique to only ourselves. In the same frame of mind as Marcel Duchamp's "Fountain," a urinal signed with his name, it can be said that everything we touch becomes, to some extent art. So, with the study of certain pieces I have selected, I hope to spark thought not only about the work, but about the message it conveys. Through this endeavor, I hope to learn not only about the art, but about the study and analysis of art in new media forms.

Sincerely,
duchamp