Feature Article

“Better Out Than In”

What draws you in? Bad-asses? Secrets? Art? If so the controversial British graffiti artist, Banksy, is your man.

Banksy has been the topic of conversation this past October. Everyday this month he created a new artwork and displayed/incorporated it into different areas of NYC. Banksy is a pseudonymous British graffiti artist. He is a political and environmental activist, film director, painter, author, and critique.

Banksy follows the words of the artist, Paul Cézanne, “All pictures painted inside, in the studio, will never be as good as those done outside.” Just as Paul Cézanne’s art was the transitional door from the 19th century art to the 20th century art, Banksy is the transitional door towards appreciating aspects of “graffiti” as a true art form. Inspector Richard Close, of the Central British NPT, said: “Graffiti is vandalism…Good art work can be appreciated… such as Banksy… None of the graffiti I have seen is of the same high standard or appropriately placed with the consent of the property owners.” The world needs Banksy to change its perspective on this art form.

In London and Bristol, England, his home country, Banksy is famous for creating stenciled graffiti fighting against environmental issues. In Abu Dis, a city on the edge of Jerusalem, separated by a wall, he was called an “art terrorist” for stenciling nine images, with political innuendo to tear down the West Bank barrier.

In Los Angeles, 2010, Banksy directed the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature, “Exit through the Gift Shop.” This film tells the story of the French immigrant, Thierry Guetta, and his obsession with street art.

Banksy has self-published four books containing pieces of his art from different places in the world along with some of his writings. In his second book Existentialism, the color version of his first black and white book Banging your Head Against a Brick Wall, he explains various reasons for his actions. He states, “ Nobody used to listen to me and I used to think that was their problem. Eventually I got to realize maybe it was the fact I was boring and paranoid…you have to wear a mask. If you want to be honest then you have to live a lie.”

Banksy’s anonymity is essential. If he were to be caught he could go to jail or worse destroy his “element of surprise,” which gives his work a measure of finesse.  Even though he works with so many people around the world, he has not been caught because of the artist’s community confidentiality agreement. If one member squeals they will be slandered and placed on a blacklist by all other artists in that neighborhood.

Steven P. Harrington, founder of the blog BrooklynStreetArt, said, “People don’t talk. To me, the more or less [people share about him] proves the kind of respect he has on the streets. If you want to damage his brand, the first thing you’d do is expose him.”

A few months ago, an artist that worked with Banksy uploaded a picture to Instagram, captioned “Me and my boy, Banksy,” in order to show off that he knew Banksy. No one was impressed. Instead, this artist was slandered by the artistic community until he took it down.

The only public recognition of meeting Banksy was an interview in 2003 with Simon Hattenstone.  Simon had the privilege to interview Banksy in a pub in Shoreditch, England. Simon described Banksy as “white, 28, scruffy casual – jeans, T-shirt, a silver tooth, silver chain and silver earring. He looks like a cross between Jimmy Nail and Mike Skinner of the Streets.” This interview was the introduction to hearing Banksy’s political views in writing and not in the form of stencils.

The New York art community did not accept this “Brit” with open arms. But Banksy has been playing the same Ben and Jerry, Cat and mouse, game with the NYPD as the rest of the art community, so they respect him.

Banksy’s called his October Fest spoof “Better Out Than In.” Every aspect of Banksy’s art challenges, in a new way, society’s standards. Its better to challenge the status quo in a loud “Out” way that will obtain attention and support than to petition in an “In” way.

Banksy’s art is for the purpose of a cause and to convey a message. His art has been sold from $60 to $200,000, depending on whose purchasing. On October 13th Banksy had an old man sell stenciled canvases for $60 each on the street just for the hell of it.  He even tolerated bargaining from an old woman: who purchased them for half price. He creatively criticized McDonald’s by having a sculpture of a poor man shining Ronald McDonald’s shoes on October 16th. On October 11th Banksy disgraced factory farming by having a slaughterhouse truck filled with noise making stuffed animals sticking out the windows drive around different neighborhoods. He called this “out” artwork, “Sirens of the Lambs.” Another one of his ingenious oeuvres was an article he submitted to the New York Times on the 27th, which they refused to print. This article was called Skyscraper. It depicted Banksy’s view on how the state has decided to fight terrorism symbolically.  He thinks we should be making a tower to the sky and not just a tall-ish tower.

Banksy believes, “If you want to say something and have people listen, you have to wear a mask.” When he was featured in Time magazine 2010, 100 most influential people list along with Barak Obama and Lady Gaga he sent a picture in with a paper bag on his head, recyclable of course.

 

Creative Project 3 – Cate

file:///Users/catelarsen/Documents/idc%20project.gif

Link to my animation ^^ (It takes much quicker to copy and paste this link into your address bar instead of directly clicking it on the site)

 

My animation was very literally formed around the three intertwining themes of blood, shadows, and desire in Nosferatu. Its main goal was to explain how Count Orlok was consumed by his desire for blood to such an extent that his source of pleasure became his demise. The two images in the foreground of it all were my eye (red because I had an eye infection from sleeping in my contacts, ew) representing blood, and the bonfire symbolizing desire. I thought a fire was the most fitting representation of desire. A fire can grow so large and consume the things it comes across in the way a desire can begin with a thought and suddenly consume a person and those around them. I felt that these really connected in Nosferatu, because Count Orlok’s desire was literally for Lucy (or Nina’s) blood. This passion could not be quenched until the Count drank it up.

Therefore, I placed the fiery desire in a small place at the center of my eye, and reimaged it to grow larger and larger until it consumed the entire center, as if it was literally consuming the blood itself. In the background of this all is the image of a dark, brooding sky, which represented shadows. I felt that this was appropriate, because the whole idea of a passion for somebody’s blood is a bit dark and deviating from the norm. It also is a foreshadowing of what is to come; desire can seem pleasurable, yet it’s consequences here led to Orlok’s disintegration.

To begin the end, I covered the fire slowly with black paint (similar to the tendrils of a fire). The shape the black paint formed for a moment turned into a humanlike image, which represents how Count Orlok actually became his desire; he let it fully take over his thoughts and senses. This was the first step of what led to his destruction in the end, shown by the shapeless black blob, the twisting of the image, and the way the entire animation was reduced to a lifeless black and white outside of the colors of the world.

 

Here is the fully constructed collage (mid-point), in which the fire has grown to its largest, fullest size. It  was after this point that I began to deconstruct, as mentioned above.

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The Thing

This short film has been brought to you by Karen Choi, Julian Tsang, and Ariel Yuan.

 

Works Cited

Jojikiba. “Door lock sound effect.” Youtube. Youtube, 12 November 2011. Web. 15 November 2013.

Medwyn Goodall. Behold the Darkness. Rec. 1 Aug. 1999. 2003 New World Music, 1999. YouTube. YouTube, 31 Jan. 2009. Web. 10 Nov. 2013.

Miguel Custódio. Hermione Granger Scenes Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone Part 1.” Youtube. Youtube, 6 July 2013. Web. 16 November 2013.

RandomMinecraftBuild. “Slender Static.” Youtube. Youtube, 1 October 2012. Web. 17 November 2013.

TheCandid. “DRAMATIC/SUSPENSE SOUND EFFECTS 2.” Youtube. Youtube, 6 May 2013. Web. 15 November 2013.

WolvesOfEurope. “Static Noise [Download link in description].” Youtube. Youtube, 1 December 2012. Web. 10 November 2013.

Creative Project #3!

FINAL

The three motifs I concentrated on for this creative project are shadows, change, and mystery. My background is a picture I took when the sun was setting in my neighborhood. The change in the color represents, well, change. It is hard to tell whether the sun is setting or rising. The color also hints at mystery. While the setting of the picture is serene, the color choice contradicts the seemingly quiet neighborhood. I took my friend and his shadow from a different photo, changed the opacity, and pasted him. My friend’s shadow and the shadow from the trees represent the shadows, obviously. I also added in decorations that are different colors and odd shapes. I chose to add this to represent a sense of mystery. Who placed that there? Was it a child? Did he/she use chalk? Where is that person now?

Mid-phase:

Collage020

Creative Project #3 Animation

IDC Creative Proj 3

The themes that I chose best represented Nosferatu would have to be women’s innocence, shadows and life. I symbolized women’s innocence through the orange flowers. Their bright, vivid colors contrasted with the black bushes and outlines surrounding them. These black outlines symbolized the shadows and the image of Nosferatu. In my mind Nosferatu is very dark, evil and lonely. I wanted to show the large difference between these two ideas through their colors. I also represented life with an egg. In my collage the egg can be seen as the sun. I believe that life is the energy that fuels everything else. It gives the flowers, women’s innocence, a chance to grow and bloom. It is also important for the existence of shadows because without light, shadows can’t possibly exist. For Nosferatu’s case, his long life leads him hide in the shadows and is partly responsible for the dark and lonely life he lives. At the end of my animation, I decided to turn one flower red. This was to signify the turning of a women’s innocence. In Nosferatu, the flower would symbolize Lucy and in Dracula it would represent Nina. The flower, which is surrounded by darkness and the shadows, eventually succumbs to being tainted. The color red in my collage is associated with “becoming tainted”. I changed the hues of my collages to look more red because I wanted to represent how the world has become more tainted with darkness and the shadows.

Nosferatu [gif]

Creative Project 3: The Cycle

Animation

 

For my animation, I focused on the themes of female innocence, mystery, and death. However, as kept working, I realized that the innocence could represent innocence in general, not only that of females. To tie innocence with mystery, I used a simple white flower on a background of lurking shadows. Generally, we all have innocence in some sense because we do not have all the knowledge the world has to offer. The flower gradually shrinks and darkens, representing the awareness that we have gained from birth until now, contributing to the corruptness we see in the world. This is similar to Nina reading the book that she was told not to. Eventually, the flower returns to its original size but is discolored because of this new knowledge.

Sometimes, with too much knowledge comes death, as represented by the bare tree. Learning about Nosferatu ultimately led to Ellen’s death. In our cases, there are some things that we have learned but wish could have unlearnedtainting our purity. However, it is those things that open our eyes to making better choices in life. I added roses in increasing opacity to symbolize the life of those new ideas. As we grow and make mistakes, those experiences help us. Because the cycles of life and death are never ending, the roses die and return to the soil, where the process starts again.

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Midway Point

Creative Project 3: Rise and Fall

 

 

 

finished project

 

I have three themes contained in this project that include: life, death, and change.  It starts off the sun, the source of all energy.  The world is full of green and lustrous plant life.  However, they start dying off (turning gray) because humans are destroying the environment in order to make societies.  Soon the plans and trees die off until nothing is left.

Next, humans construct monstrous buildings that seem like they almost pile on top of each other.  Notice how the color still doesn’t return to the piece.

Then, one by one the buildings collapse.  If you look closely, the some of them turn sideways and upside down to represent them falling.  This shows change- the human race is dying off from constant warfare over scarce resources.

Lastly, there is only darkness.  Nothing at all is left- all life is gone. The cycle repeats over and over again as the rise and fall of life on earth.

There is life and death of plant life, life and death of human civilization, and change throughout the duration of my piece.

 

Horror Video Theatrical StoryTelling By DNA

Produced and brought to you by DNA:

Donald Fung

Nick Djamalidinov

Alan Chen

Here is the video:

Play it on 1080 HD for the highest quality.

Citations concerning music:

WildFunAwesome. “Horror Movie – Jump Scare Sound Effects (2) LQ.” Online Video                Clip. Youtube. Youtube, 18 Aug. 2012. Web. 13 Nov. 2013

Gu Coppyy’I. “Scary Horror Music!!” Online Video Clip. Youtube. Youtube, 23 Aug.                  2010. Web. 13 Nov. 2013.

FunSoundTube. “Big Scary Bang Sound Effect.” Online Video Clip. Youtube. Youtube,             24 Mar. 2013. Web. 13 Nov. 2013.

 

Creative Project: Collage of Living Desires

Creative Project

 

The three motifs I used in my collage are longing, desire, and life. My background image*, which is a cityscape/landscape with clouds blocking the sun, represents longing. To me, the sun (and the city) seemed very far away from my perspective. After realizing how distant the two were, I was even more enticed by the view. The first image I applied onto the background consists of a woman. The entire photograph** was inspired by the famous portrait Countess d’Haussonville by Ingres, and it represents sensuality. The light and shadows on the skin, the dreamy gaze, the feather fan, and the bold red of the ribbon in the subject’s hair symbolize desire. In the last image, there are two puppets that I focus on***. Although they are not living characters, they are ironic images of life because they act as living people.

In the collage, I placed the portrait of the female on the landscape so that some of the sunlight shows through behind her head, which is to emphasize the idea of an unattainable desire. Then I placed the two puppets to the left of the female, and I added strings (extracted from the puppet photograph as well) to parts of the female’s body to make her represent a puppet as well – what I initially came up with was that although she appears to be very different from the two puppets (she is more human), she can actually be considered a puppet herself because she is an instrument of desire. Therefore, the presence of the two puppets can be interpreted as the reminder that the female figure is no different from them. After, in the process of taking the collage apart, I focused most on taking the strings away from the female as she slowly vanishes.

Of course, there is always room for other kinds of interpretations! Please tell me what you thought.

Midpoint: Constructed Collage

Creative Project

*Photograph taken on a roof in Queens, NY

**Photograph was taken during a photo shoot.

***Photograph was taken at Macy’s 2012 Christmas window.