Wednesday, January 25, 2012
GSH
DiVonte Gorham Proposal
Julie Smith Proposal
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Matt Youngblood's Proposal
Savannah Niles-- Proposal.
Juan Castillo Proposal
Junior Tutorial Proposal for SP 2012
I’ve been very scattered with my artwork up until this point. In a college environment (or maybe just at SMU), the simple joy I feel when making a very technically motivated piece feels very out-of-style. Where I come from, when one makes a painting of, say, a bird, or a face, no one asks what it means. In class, I find myself having to justify my reasons for painting such things, as if I could have only painted these things having first been intellectually inspired to do so. I explain this context simply to contrast a different sort of inspiration I’ve been feeling lately. It may be that watching all of the Republican candidate debates has finally made me a little more politically aware, or perhaps everyone complaining about the same thing on Facebook has made me give things a second look, or just maybe, my “higher education” is finally kicking in; but whatever the reason, I find myself actually thinking about something intellectually, and then wanting to set out and create a work of art that responds to it. In other words, my work is going to actually be trying to say something.
Specifically, I plan on making work centered around two ideas: social & political commentary, and the frame as a container. The latter is sort of my miscellaneous category, but I’ll mostly be drawing from personal experiences for it. However, I should first explain what I mean by the “the frame as a container”. When I write that, I’m writing about the idea of a drawing, painting, print, (or anything with a border, really) and its capacity to not only imitate something, (the way an observational drawing does), but also, to capture something too. When conceiving of the painting as a way to capture something, I find myself wanting, not to replicate a scene (and focus on realism), but rather, capture the feeling of a particular moment. When thinking about the idea and its implications for size, I think it’ll be fairly unlimited, because containers come in all sizes. Anything from wallet-size, to house-size, because after all, they’re all containers, aren’t they?
Alright, down to business, I want to work mostly with paint, at fairly large sizes (depending on its costliness). I already have two commentary pieces in mind about world hunger and Christmas (motivated by street artist like Banksy), and I also have another piece in mind for my “container” idea. The “container” idea I have in mind is a piece composed of multiple frames, depicting a past experience. Although the media will mostly be paint, I will have to make sculptures and drawings (as models) for some, in order to prepare for the final piece. I’m very much looking forward to it.
Kate Esbenshade Proposal Update
Nicholas Clark Proposal
Nicholas Clark
Gil Scott-Heron Proposal
My goal is to construct a body of work that starts a conversation involving the artist, the art and the viewer. The conversation will concern the life and work of Gil Scott-Heron. Scott-Heron was a jazz poet and musician among other things. His lyrical content is concerned with social and political issues in the United States. The recently deceased poet will serve as a potent subject due to his untimely death and the relevance of his work.
The art will be separated into columns. Each column will form a single idea based on some aspect of Scott-Heron’s work. They will be accompanied by motion-activated sound that will play segments of the poet’s lyrics. Each column will have a sensor and the columns will activate depending on where the viewers stand. In a sense the viewer is in control of the project’s auditory aspects. Alternatively, a button will trigger the sound if the motion aspect does not pan out.
The visual portion of this work will be done digitally and influenced by pieces of Scott-Heron’s music. As I have not defined a specific scale for the images, working digitally will be beneficial; however the minimum size will be 13”x19” per image. The final scale will depend upon how the printed work turns out.
A secondary goal in this project is to make it an interactive piece, hence triggering the sounds with a motion sensor. Creating an interactive piece is not a particularly original idea, but it is one that further involves the viewer and that is nearly always a positive consequence in art. The decision to incorporate an interactive feature stems from a longstanding appreciation of Scott Snibbe’s work. For example, Snibbe’s, Boundary Functions, is a project that critiques the idea of personal space. The piece does not fully become art until at least two people enter the space. This is the level of viewer interaction that has guided me to the Gil Scott Heron project.
