I am writing this blog in order to create my own moving and developing online version of a visual Journal. The sketchbook for me is the highlight of a project, from the research and the links forged, through to the journey of an idea, I am happily filled with a sense of excitement and purpose, I revel in the unravelling of information and in the development and articulation of the idea and spend hours filtering through sources in order to explain my intentions and let others know the map I have created in my own mind. The sketchbook process allows me to absorb my environment and contemplate my world, it allows me to grow and changes my path every time. To challenge myself in this final year I am endeavoring to try a new way of sharing and archiving my journey, putting aside the pritstick and Scissors, pulling up my chair and putting on my glasses this will now be my Sketchbook.
So here it begins a diary of the idea, growing and moving as I go forward with the project. It is what it is. What it will become ... I have no idea and to you the viewer I make no apologies.

Joseph Derby

Joseph Derby
Cottage on Fire at Night, oil on canvas, ca. 1785-1793

Wednesday 17 November 2010

Blue Velvet Opening

TUTORIAL no:3

POINTS & OBJECTIVES:
  • What makes something Scary?
  • Videos of Ink and water & Immediate surroundings 
  • Suburban Journey's 
SUGGESTED RELATED ARTISTS:
Ged Quinn

Ged Quinn 2005 Oil on linen 267 x 183 cm

Ged Quinn, 'The Lone Ranger', 2007 Oil on canvas, 183 x 252 cm 

Daniel Richter
Daniel Richter - Fatifa
Saskia Olde Wolbers
Often taking the inspiration for her stories from actual news articles, television documentaries, and urban legends, each of Saskia Olde Wolbers films narrate fictional biographies into complex backgrounds of global politics, neuroses, and contemporary mythology. Loosely based on the real life story of a man who convinced his family he was a doctor for over 20 years, Olde Wolbers’s Placebo and Interloper videos explore the dynamic of relationships, identity construction, and co-dependence.

From 'Placebo', 2002


Tuesday 16 November 2010

TUTORIAL no 2:

POINTS & OBJECTIVES: 
  • Manipulation of environment
  • What is installation?
  • Real space & Virtual space
  • What format? What scale?
SUGGESTED RELATED ARTISTS:

ANSELM KIEFER
Osiris und Isis (Osiris and Isis) 1985-1987 Painting | oil and acrylic emulsion with additional three-dimensional media

Steigend sinke nieder by Anselm Kiefer. Photo by Nigel Young. © The artist and the Thaddeus Ropac Gallery


MARIELE NEUDECKER
The Sunken Village (Das Versunkenes Dorf)
 2001 mixed media incl. building timber, roof tiles, iron, approx. 2000 x 2500 cm
 permanent installation of two domestic houses and one church drowned in the Tiggelsee, Steinfurt in Münster, Germany commissioned by Skulpturen Bienale Münsterland


This Thing Called Darkness
 2008mixed media including resin, steel, lamp 560 x 920 x 470 cm 
permanent installation for Towada Art Centre, Amori prefecture, Japan

I Don’t Know How I Resisted the Urge to Run, 1998
GERHARD RICHTER
Gerhard Richter, Seascape (Cloudy), 1969, Oil on canvas


TUTORIAL no 1:



POINTS & OBJECTIVES:
  • Film relationship to Painting
  • Cinematography
  • Is scale important?
  • Post Apocalyptic landscape - How is it imagined? Is there a narrative? 
  • Narrative and Anti-Narrative
  • Could I create a fictional environment in my immediate space?

SUGGESTED RELATED ARTISTS:

Steve McQueen


Filmed in New York City, Drumroll (22 min., 4 sec., 1998; color-video projection with sound) beautifully combines the artist’s interest in performance art, improvisation, music, the tradition of film and the cinematic experience. Three cameras mounted inside of a barrel offer spinning views of New York City as the artist pushes the barrel along the streets and sidewalks of Manhattan. The viewer listens to the cacophony of the city interrupted occasionally by the voice of the artist.


His 2008 film Hunger, about the 1981 Irish hunger strike, premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. McQueen received the Caméra d'Or (first-time director) Award at Cannes


The Wilson Twins 
Projected onto four screens, the scenes shift subtly in pace and orientation, from close-up to distant shots and from vertical to horizontal. Such contrasts are typical in the Wilsons' formal repertoire. The underlying narrative is a tale of utopian idealism, science, and Communism gone awry, yielding only unfulfilled expectations and a program that languishes in economic disarray.


Jane and Louise WilsonStasi City , (still) (1997).

Cormac McCarthy (review by Adam Mars-Jones for The Guardian) 

A man and his young son make their slow way across a blasted landscape towards the sea. Theirs is a rodent life of hiding and scavenging. They follow the road, but sleep out of sight of it whenever they can. Other human beings have nothing to offer but cruelty and danger. The father creeps out of the boy's earshot at night when he has a coughing fit.
For all practical purposes, the world came to an end some years before in what was presumably a nuclear war, although those words are not used. The dead are unburied and thousands of mummified corpses can be seen still stuck in the tar of the roads that melted round them as they tried to escape.
The boy was not yet born then, though he was well on the way. It isn't certain that he remembers his mother. Now the sun hardly shows its face and nothing grows. The man has to explain the phrase 'as the crow flies' to his son, in the absence of crows or anything else that flies.
Without vitamin D in pill form, the boy will get rickets. There's rarely a roof over his head, so he's out in all weathers, but the sun no longer plays its part in the old bargain of outdoor lives and healthy bones. The only food to be had for the dwindling bands of survivors is tinned - and miraculously undiscovered by all the other scavengers - or else human.
The Road isn't a fable, or a prophesy, or even a tract in the manner of Shute's On the Beach. It's a thought and feeling experiment, bleak, exhilarating (in fact, endurable) only because of its integrity, its wholeness of seeing. The man pushing his shopping cart towards nothing hopeful, boxing the compass of despair, makes Brecht's Mother Courage seem downright fortunate in the choices she must make.

Sunday 7 November 2010

Film Landscapes

My experimentation in my visual journals outside of this blog is developing into the field of captured landscapes, I am interested in film and manipulating the narrative of a landscape. The idea that a landscape has been picked to create 

Apocalyptic monsters - Creating an army

Continuing fantasy worlds ...


Many of the post apocalyptic fantastical landscapes I have discovered are inhabited in some way by a form, sometimes human form, sometimes fictional. In my research I am pulled into two directions, there is the element of sci fi that naturally runs through ideas of the end and then there is the natural landscape that invokes ideas of the sublime with creation and cataclysm. Creation has historical attachments to a time before science and technological development, a time where the imagination created fact from description and writings. Cataclysm has in a postmodern world become a futuristic idea embroiled in hyper reality, science and rapidly progressing digital advancements. 


 Kris Kuksis Imminent Utopia

Zislaw Beksinski



Wednesday 27 October 2010

Twin Peaks



One of my absolute favourite TV moments is the 90's series Twin Peaks. David Lynch and Mark Frost collaborated on the series set in a small north American town, surrounded by dark forces. Following the themes of Blue Velvet, this production crosses genres and creates an unsettling yet homely atmosphere. 
Twin Peaks is an exploration of a small town whose dark secrets are revealed during the murder investigation of high-school prom queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee). Combining characters and storylines straight out of soap operas, sit-coms, detective stories, science fiction, and horror, Twin Peaks was a huge hit with its intertexuality, post-modern humour, and supernatural themes.
Similar to Blue Velvet, the sudden idealistic ending of perfect happiness is so drenched in irony that ultimately Lynch seems to be suggesting that people who have the potential for violence cannot find true happiness.



This link explores further the masterpieces of David LynchThe Evil that men do

Moving into Film

The Surreal World of David Lynch
David Lynch is the master of creating and manipulating his own landscapes and environments. The way in which he plays with the perception of the viewer can create an unnerving, sometimes uncomfortable and always confusing feeling. The movies pull in the viewer, yet refrain from explaining the coded and surreal events as they unfold. There is an anti narrative of sorts - not a clear beginning, middle and end - just a series of questions and concepts on the viewers part.



This is an extract of an essay on the film Blue Velvet and covers many of the areas I am interested in, with particular reference to perception and the participation of the viewer. The full essay is linked below -
'the post-modern aesthetic relies on four tightly inter-related sets of concepts ; 'parody and pastiche', 'prefabrication', 'inter-textuality', 'bricolage'." Post-modernism, as Lyotard defines it, also implies a blurring of high and low cultural boundaries, the inability to distinguish between the 'real' and the artifice, the commodification of everyday life and the sense of the fragmentary, ambiguous and uncertain nature of living. To these features add heightened social and individual reflexivity, ironic self-referentiality, the de-differentiation of classical western categories, the questioning of meta-narratives and the concepts of the French Cinema du look, that of emphasised style - the fetishisation of the image.'


Chapter 3: Blue Velvet Post-modernism and Authorship 

Apocalypse

Apocalypse
Moving forward with my project I am returning to the landscape in its dramatic form, looking at the negative sublime and apocalyptic imagery. My dissertation theme is placed with in the historical notion of the gothic landscape and its reinterpretation into contemporary art, looking at the hyper-real. My studies will be centered in Apocalyptic landscape and I will be looking at literature, film, photography and painting.  The following artists create fantastical, post apocalyptic, and fear invoking environments, covering a range of mediums.
Emily Nelligan American Draughtsman, born 1924    
 Each drawing is a testimony of what she breathed that day.
I love the atmospheric style of Emily Nelligan's drawings, the minimal detail and vast tonal range creates deep and turbulent landscapes. The sense of scale is dependent on the viewers imagination as there is nothing to compare it too, however the depth created tonally gives me the impression of a huge void and therefore creates a negative sublime - the notion of the last days, the end even.
Adam Hancher Illustrator
Adam Hancher's illustration style lends itself to the idea of fantastical make believe lands with a negative twist. I love the limited palette that adds to the gloomy dystopia, the tree stumps litter the foreground as the rain pours down.

Hisaharu Motoda's Neo Ruins
A series of lithographs depicting the cityscape of a post apocalyptic tokyo. The graphic quality of this work is what has drawn me in,  The fine detail adds to the chaos and turmoil, yet the emptiness allows the eye freedom to roam over the destruction peacefully and quietly. The antique look of the lithographic medium effectively amps up the eeriness of the futuristic setting. "In Neo-Ruins I wanted to capture both a sense of the world's past and of the world's future," says Motoda on his website.
Goya El Coloso
This image was described by Baudelaire as 'giving the monstrosity the ring of truth'.


Tuesday 12 October 2010

Into the Void

Next Steps
So far I have looked into historical representations of the sublime landscape, and touched on the creation of atmosphere and the enormity of the concept of our world and our impact as humans (for example in the film Koyaanisqatsi). 
I seem to be interested in the drama of an event, the emotion and feeling that can be invoked just by an atmosphere. Dark brooding thunderstorms rumbling in the distance and the impact as they arrive. 


This research has given me a lot to think about, so I have began with observing the landscapes around me and those which cause me to react or have a sensation of some sort.
The journey took me to Tintern Abbey in the Wye valley:
I love the idea of imaginary landscapes, looking at the horizon from a different point of view. The idea that a small log could be seen as a mountain or leaves as trees, a fantastical approach. I am experimenting with different mediums in my explorations adding to the unlocking of more ideas and inspiration. 

Photography, Installation, Video and Writing/Literature are the mediums that interest and inspire me - with a little painting added on the side, therefore I will be experimenting in these areas in pursuit of my end goal .. which is unwritten.


REWORKING THE LANDSCAPE
I seem to view the landscape in front of me as a puzzle, fitting together the fragments, wondering whether I could move one part somewhere else and re arrange the pieces. I am in awe of the power of nature and haven't been fortunate enough to witness any of the 'wonders' as of yet, but i haven't missed out, nature is wondrous wherever you are, its accessible to anyone who cares to look. Making characters from clouds or being bewildered by the perfect rays of sun through a heavy cloud, gives me a sense of being small and confused, it also makes me want to learn and inspires me to make the most of the game.


Yuken Teruva
Yuken Teruya Notice Forest (Mc Donalds Bag)

This is a beautiful example of the creation of a landscape within a false environment. Paper art is a sensitive and delicate art form that lends itself to creating magical scenes. The light coming through the bag adds to the beauty. This is just an aesthetic response to the piece as it also has obvious commentary on the environment and the corporate giant at its heart.

Paul Hayes
Paul Hayes Paper Forest
This installation conjures up ideas of autumnal leaves falling when illuminated with filtered lighting. When seen in the daylight without lighting it takes on less of a natural aesthetic and becomes much more structural and abstract. 

Zeger Reyers

Reyers installation gives the empty room life, the forms attach themselves to the walls and ooze from the corners. The natural life forms growing and taking over the space.







Salvador Dali
Dali manipulates the landscape in this scene to play on the viewers perception, do we see elephants? or do we see swans?. As the eye bounces up and down in a response to the trickery the landscape becomes filled with mischief and the surrealists notorious delve into the subconscious dream world. 


NEW WORLDS