Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Monday, April 14, 2008

Images of Today (photos)

My bro Clay and I tooks pics and posted an image for every day from April 5, 2007 - April 5, 2008: IoT. I'm still trying to post every day, and here are all of the 405+ horizontal pics: horizontal.

Index card drawings (draw; big)

index card drawings: (both are 120 index cards: 4 feet 2 inches tall, and 3 feet wide: 50"x36")



I like that they're big and look like Jr. High projects. (click either for a bigger pic.)

originals: (the second is of my great-grandparents, Heber and Annie Price)

Friday, March 21, 2008

Frederick Wiseman - Blind (documentary; 1986)

Before Talladega Nights, there was Blind (library write-up):

This film follows K-12 students at the Alabama School for the Blind, where blind and visually impaired students have been educated to be in charge of their lives. Sequences include mobility training, braille instruction, traditional classroom education, psychological counseling, vocational training, staff dealing with student disciplinary problems, and the wide variety of recreational and athletic programs. (132 min.)

(@ the Boulder Public Library)

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Andrea Polli (CU lecture; March 18, 2007)

An interesting spiel on the sonification of large-scale data sets. In other words, check out her website. She collaborates w/ scientists (gets their data) and translates it into sound. Like Lita Albuquerque, she's been to Antarctica on an art grant. She uses weather stations and, for example, and maps temperature data to pitch, producing sounds of varying intensities and frequencies. The actual noises she makes aren't as interesting to me as her process and subject matter, but what she's doing is pretty cool, especially on the web.


Andrea Polli

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Whitney Biennial article (link; The New Yorker)

Lessness by Peter Schjeldahl

audio interview w/ Schjeldahl

(better, I think, than the video below)





Here's a panel interview w/ the author (previous to the article):

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Faye Hirsch (CU lecture; Mar 12, '08)

Faye Hirsch is an established and broadly-informed art critic. In her power point presentation she discussed several artists and how they referenced art history: John Currin (she's not a huge fan of his), Lisa Yuskavage, Andrew Raftery (below#1), Tony Birch (etchings), Nicole Eisenman, Mark Greenwold (below#2), and Walton Ford (below#3).







There were between 68-100 people there, including at least one guy wearing a scarf, which was about right, considering the weather, which is improving.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

current project 1 (draw; 120 ic: self-p)

I'll have this finished by the end of March (4 cards/day). It will be an ego-portrait, 10 index cards tall and 12 wide. Goin' for a large scale "middle-school" look. Pretty easy and fun.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Patrick Winfield (link)

Composites

car analysis 1 (photo; psd)

Lita Albuquerque (CU Lecture; Tues Mar 4 '08)



w/ Clay. Then we went to Taco Bell.

notes: She incubated in Africa. Something about a convent. Immigrated when she was 11. Is into mapping the cosmos. Being an artist is about freedom. She works from intuition and spreads pigment out on the ground and on the floor. Something about the procession of the equinoxes and vedic cycles. We get information from light. The sun may be in a binary star relationship with Sirius, the dog star. She was captivated by the horizon line for a while; something about her own verticality. She lined up a V to match the shadow of the Washington monument. She went to Antarctica do make a star map on the ground using blue balls: stellar axis. A companion art piece on the North Pole would invoke the idea of a spiraling DNA through the Earth's axis ... strands of star tehters, maybe. We're made of electricity and her purpose is to increase stellar awareness.

I enjoyed the scope of her ideas. I'd like to connect some stars and stories.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Picture of the Day (link)

All the good stuff is in science and computers. This pic is from "radiology picture of the day": radpod.org.



This patient underwent an fMRI to localize language preoperatively.

Patients are asked to perform specific tasks while being imaged, such as motor activity (see image) or verbal tasks. The relevant parts of the brain will therefore demonstrate increased signal.

Incidentally, I read a cool article earlier today entitled: Numbers Guy: Are Our Brains Wired for Math? It's primarily about a researcher who uses brain scans to study how the brain processes numbers. Here's a quick excerpt:


Because Chinese number words are so brief—they take less than a quarter of a second to say, on average, compared with a third of a second for English—the average Chinese speaker has a memory span of nine digits, versus seven digits for English speakers. (Speakers of the marvellously efficient Cantonese dialect, common in Hong Kong, can juggle ten digits in active memory.)



Also on the subject, I suppose. Another blog of mine: counting people.

sugar babies (paint)

Sunday, February 24, 2008

images of today 2 (draw: blog)

trying out a new daily activity/blog idea: draw a news pic every day on a 3"x5" card. After a year I'll have a stack of 365.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

skull a day (link)

Being creative with materials: skull a day.

This is a carved potato: "Mr. Potato-skull":

alien lincoln (draw: paint)

12.5" x 22.5"



watercolor pencil and acrylic on cardboard box

coffee drinker (draw: paint)


wet acrylic and graphite pencil on newsprint mail

dignified do (dig:psd: self-p)

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

foreign numbers (dig:psd: self-p)

samurai shades



A pretty cool art/illustration blog: Gianluca Folì Daily Art Journal

Monday, February 18, 2008

fun park drawing (draw:IoT)

water-color pencil and white acrylic. Too light on the blue, but super-basic amateur.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Wooster Collective (link)

I like the lo-fi vibe and international scope of the The Wooster Collective (rss). One recent post: the freestyle combo-work of Michael Rodriguez: (to start with a bang)