Author: Diane

  • Week 11

    TUESDAY

    Artist spotlight from Art 21 – Christine Sun Kim

    https://art21.org/watch/art-in-the-twenty-first-century/s11/christine-sun-kim-in-friends-strangers/

    https://ghebaly.com/work/christine-sun-kim/

    Discussions with instructor

    In-class work time


    THURSDAY

    Critique for 6 students

    Discussions with instructor

    In-class work time

  • Week 10

    Tuesday:

    Continue looking at Conceptual Portrait examples

    Brainstorm and discussion of ideas

    Thursday:

    Artist spotlight from Art 21 – Christine Sun Kim

    https://art21.org/watch/art-in-the-twenty-first-century/s11/christine-sun-kim-in-friends-strangers/

    Discussions with instructor

    In-class work time

  • Week 9

    Tuesday:

    Audio Art critique

    Thursday:

    Complete Audio Art critique

    Untitled, (Portrait of Ross in LA), 1991 Felix Gonzales Torres

    Make a CONCEPTUAL PORTRAIT*

    – Uncommon documentation of an aspect of life

    – A collection of objects to make a portrait

    – A material stand-in for an abstract concept

    -Results of an experiment performed to learn about something

    Works can be in prints, slide-show images, video, audio, or found object sculptures and installations. Consider using text in your work when needed. Maximum limit for time-based works is 3 minutes.

    _____________________________________________________________________

    “In conceptual art the idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work… all planning and decisions are made beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair. The idea becomes the machine that makes the art.”

    Sol Lewitt, from Peter Osborne, Conceptual Art, Phaidon, Themes & Movements

    “The system is the work of art; the visual work of art is the proof of the System. The visual aspect can’t be understood without understanding the system. It isn’t what it looks like but what it is that is of basic importance. “

    Sol Lewitt

    For this open media project you will create a representation of someone or something – in a non-literal way. You will create your conceptual portrait by using a system – like a rule, a formula, a series of tasks, or an experiment to plan and create the work. Your work will not be narrative or decorative – it will include only what is necessary to convey your information, follow your task, or show the results of your experiment.

     Let the system be the “machine that makes the art.”

    Some artist references:

    Christian Marclay Mel Bochner On Kawara The Bechers Hiroshi Sugimoto John Baldessari Kelly Mark Germaine Koh Sandy Plotnikoff Spring HurlbutFelix Gonzales Torres
    Micah Lexier
    Germaine Koh
    Sophie Calle
    Tom Friedman
    Douglas Gordon Roula Partheniou
    Hannah Black Dean Baldwin Katie Patterson

    On the Blog: DRAFT a proposal of your ideas for discussion in the next class

    Write about an artist reference from the lecture that informs your thinking – use images and prepare to discuss your proposal in our next class meeting:

    *See schedule for work time and critique dates.

  • Week 8

    Tuesday:

    No class meeting. Note make-up class: Sat. Oct. 21 in Toronto Field Trip

    Thursday:

    Artist talk from Evgenia

    Sound exercise

    Audio Editing demo with Nathan

    Discussion of ideas in development