Monday, April 13, 2009

Controversial and Historic Art

Controversial Art:

http://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2007/11/29/gal_danielheyman_6.jpg

http://www.thesanctuaryforindependentmedia.org/files/images/artnoterrorad.preview.gif

Historic Art:

http://globeleap.com/images/places/mount%20rushmore.jpg

http://saudijeans.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/obama.jpg

Controversial Art

We did our paintings on the controversial paintings of Chris Ofili's "Holy Virgin Mary" and "Piss Christ" by Andres Serrano.





This picture was controversial because it shows a small plastic crucifix supporting the body of Jesus Christ submerged in a glass of the artist's and some critics said it had some blood in there too.




This picture was controversial because it showed the Virgin Mary with featured sexually explicit cutouts covered with elephant dung.

Picture This- Angry

We chose to do "Angry" Here is a picture of me that I think respresents anger!!!!!

Public Art and Architecture-Group 5






















These are a few of the pictures we used for the Public Art and Architecture Project. These are all paintings around the schools..and building around Carrollton.




























Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Op Art Information

"Optical Art is a method of painting concerning the interaction between illusion and picture plane, between understanding and seeing." John Lancaster

Op Art, or Optical Art, is concerned (in many different ways) with the bridge between art and optical illusions. The desired effect is for the viewer to see the piece and observe something widely considered impossible on a 2D surface, such as movement, enlargement or shrinking, shifting, or changes in lighting. It came about when many open-minded students at a German school which primarily stressed the bond between artwork, realism, and perspective fled to the U.S. after the school's closing. There it took root in Chicago and later Asheville.

This is an example of Op Art entitled "Infinite Staircase." It uses the fairly common tactic of making an object appear to move. When the viewer looks at the piece at a glance, he thinks that the inner, colorful circle appears to rotate clockwise, as well as varying in width. Neither of these visual phenomena are actually occurring.

In this image, entitled "Mushi-Kun," appears to have moving pieces (the worms moving horizontally), when, in reality, this movement is not actually occurring.

Optical Art's most widely invoked technique plays upon the human eye's basic expectations. By creating juxtapositions that cause tension in the viewer based upon a lifetime of images that he has experienced, the piece can actually make the viewer's brain connect the pieces or begin the commonly remembered movement.

Although it is a fairly popular form of art, Optical Art often takes a very long time to create. Thus, we do not see much new Op Art in a relatively small amount of time.

Post Impressionism

Tim Presentation 1