Friday 30 March 2012

When Life Shuts a Door...

Theo van Doesburg. Stained-Glass Composition: Female Head, 1917

Rose Window, Santa Maria del Pi, Barcelona

Check out the rich colour in van Doesburg's stained glass window.  Bet you didn't know it was a portrait of a woman until you read the title - I for sure didn't, anyway.  Compare to the fantastic rose window from the Barcelona cathedral Santa Maria del Pi.  They are both so beautiful, with such fantastic colours and great geometry, yet so different.  Van Doesburg is considered one of the founder of De Stijl, a style that valued harmony and order, and featured hyper simplified compositions.

Tuesday 20 March 2012

Bianca Chang- Recent Works

Using hundreds of pieces of paper, Chang creates intricate sculptures, the tedium of which is awe-inspiring.  The pure aesthetic of the finished product stands alone, but in order to appreciate the full value of the work, one must watch the stop motion of its production.  In the video, the process becomes a performance, giving scope to the creation of each piece.  If only my Art History prof would accept a ten page paper cutout in place of a ten page essay.  If it displayed even a modicum of the exactitude and consideration of Chang's art, it would be much more enjoyable for everyone involved, and have a lot more staying power.  

To any environmentalists out there: Get pumped.  Chang just saved hundreds of sheets of paper from padding the recycling bin.

Saturday 17 March 2012

glɪtʃ- The Art of the Accident

breaking bad[ly] glitch art series- Nina Wenhart

JPEG Glitch inspired painting - Andy Deckler

Since Aphex Twin inundated the 90's with their creepy synthetic strains, the internet era has revolutionized the art world.  The digitization of communication media has had a profound effect on visual language, which has been forced to evolve along with the ideas it represents.

An interesting side effect of this change is the creation of glitch art.  According to Wikipedia, the term glitch comes from the German word glitschig, which means "slippery", and refers to "the unexpected result of a malfunction".  This anomaly has risen from the propensity of technology to screw up.  We've all experienced that teeth grinding hair pulling sensation when several hours of fruitless button pushing fail to rectify a skipping disk or a flawed program.  Fortunately, human creativity can triumph over the machine by turning the frustration of the cracked image into art.

As proven by the above images, the "unexpected" can be beautiful.  The two artists whose work is pictured have aestheticized flawed, pixelated images to turn a TV clip or a broken image into a compelling stand alone work.

As with all art, or all human output, for that matter, you have to sift through a lot of crap to get to the good stuff.  Upon searching 'glitch art' in Google, I immediately decided that I hated it.  Images in garish colours with jarring or poorly thought out composition bombarded my retinas.  However, further inspection modified my opinion as I discovered that not ALL of the art displayed sub par visuals or lack of consideration - just most. 

One possible reason why glitch art seems so hit or miss is its accessibility.  Anyone with a computer and an imagination can crack an image.  YouTube tutorials or Yahoo! Answers will walk you through the logistics, or you can simply download a program to corrupt your image for you.  It is obscenely easy to make a piece and upload it.

Although this makes for of a lot of ugly art, the freedom of it and the proliferation of creation it allows is delicious.  The internet has made possible an unprecedented amount of information sharing and communication, be it visual or textual.  If that freedom is used to create, I'll take it.