Animated Collage (The Nose)

Finished GIF

My gif  represents my accumulated frustrations when I read “The Nose”. The cartoon breaking the pencil and the frustration sign are references to the annoyance I felt. The background filled with random letter characters is the confusion I experienced when I attempted to analyze the piece. The letters are meaningless combinations. Since I didn’t understand the message “The Nose” is trying to convey, I saw the story as a meaningless combination. This was the source of my frustration because I was positive there is a message. Billy is suppose to be Kovaloff, he chases his own nose  and fails to catch it because a pretty woman stopped him. After Billy fails to capture his nose, he becomes angry. The finished collage represents my irritation and the plot of the story.

The destruction phrase represents my understanding of “The Nose”, after we went over it in class. I highlight the background and white out everything but Billy to represent that the confusion and frustration are gone. I left Billy or Kovaloff untouched because he and his actions are central to the story. The green pyramid I drew represents social status. I wrote  the words “I understand now”. The words might be difficult to see when they first appear near the top left, but toward the end, I place them in the spotlight. I destroyed everything around the words to emphasize that it has become clear to me now. I ended the gif with a conversion from a black to a white background. The conversion allows the focus of the viewer to be entirely on the words. The pauses throughout the gif are for emphasis and to allow the viewers to see the collage.

Citation for images:

 

FreeVector. “Free Vector Grim adventures of Billy and Mandy 027.” VectorJunky. n.d.              Web. 17 Oct. 2013. JPEG file.

Itsmyjob. “Classy Lady.” Zazzle. n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2013. JPEG file.

Joachimopelka. “Confused Data.” Depositphotos. 8 Aug. 2011. Web. 17 Oct. 2013. JPEG           file.

Mofosu. “the grim adventures of billy and mandy.” Online video clip. Youtube. Youtube, 3         Feb. 2008. Web. 17 Oct. 2013.

Morningbru. “Frustration.” Blogger. Morningbru Coffee. 11 July. Web. 17 Oct. 2013.

Petty, Arts. “Arts Rants: The Insane and Confusing Battle for the Pipe into your                           Home.” Art Petty Group. Management Excellence. 25 July 2009. Web. 17 Oct. 2013.

Seth and Ray. “How to be Successful While Dealing with Frustration.” WordPress. Seth             and Ray Blog. 14 May. Web. 17 Oct. 2013.

 

Video

Cheng Dong – Animation Assignment

Cheng_GIF-Final

Completed Collage (Midpoint) BelowIDC Collage 26

The idea for my animation has been quite simple. In the construction phase of the anime I try to show Nose’s theme of “social hierarchy” by constructing a social pyramid. I start with a bunch of kneeling people on  the bottom, then less standing people on top of them, after that I placed several successful people in suits above, and finally I placed a nose wearing a crown on the very top. The nose being a sarcasm of the nose in the play that obtained a high ranking position of course. Advancing into the deconstruction phase, I attempt to display the fact that social hierarchy is held up by the mass amount of lower class people. As the lower class people disappear, the higher class falls down and losses their power.

Bang! Kaboom! Art!

Through many of our discussions in class, I have learned that art has various platforms. Today I learned of a new platform when I read an article that was published by writer Blake Gopnik titled “Bang! Kaboom! Art”. He talks about a new show that will open on next Thursday (October 31st) called “Damage Control: Art and Destruction Since 1950”. In the show, various artists will showcase or physically perform their pieces, all with a strong theme of destruction. For example, one piece made my Liz Larner in 1987,  “is a two-foot-square block of hazardous substances. Its list of materials includes saltpeter (an ingredient in gunpowder), ammonium nitrate (used in the Oklahoma City bombing) and TNT itself.” (Gopnik). Other pieces might have an artist lively axing a piano or guitar, making the show a combination of still and moving images.

Although each artist may have his or her personal reasons for making a specific piece, most of the entries into the show are speaking about human nature and our contained anger. Many pieces also focus on public destruction occurring through war or disease. These pieces are showcasing various pieces throughout the embody a greater message about piece. Yet other pieces focus simply on the natural human emotion of anger. By that, I mean that these works of art random times in your life when you want to just destroy something. The variety of the show really embodies the complexity of human anger and destruction.

Although this type of art is not common, it has been around for years. In 1966, Raphael Montañez Ortiz passionately broke a piano with an ax in his piece called  “Piano Destruction Concert”. Ortiz argues “instead of pouring out our natural aggressions on people, we should use them in an artistic framework.” The invention of auto-destructive is largely accredited to Gustav Metzger, who picked up a spray gun of hydrochloric acid and dissolved three full canvases that he had stretched. Both men’s pieces got worldwide attention from both critics and supporters.

I think this type of art is really cool but I can understand how it can be complex. Our whole lives we are taught that art is something that is beautiful, thought provoking, and powerful. In contrast, most of these pieces are loud, not very beautiful, and a bit painful to watch. However, I would argue that this type of art is very pure as it is a true expression of emotion. It embodies the true essence of art in that it connects the human mind, body, and soul. I feel that these pieces would really connect to many of us, as we have a lot of contained anger about classes, professors, sports, etc. but we don’t have many socially acceptable methods of expressing it. Also on a different platform, many of us have been the product of destruction such as the most recent Hurricane Sandy. Some of the pieces or the video of destruction between 1950 and now will probably resonate very closely with us.

In summary, I really think that this new art show will be very interesting as it connects with me better than most portraits or sculptures.

Works Cited:

Gopnik, Blake. “Bang! Kaboom! Art!” NY Times. NY Tmes, 23 Oct. 2013. Web.

Nose Poem

We believe loud noises fear noses

We saw confusion intimidate eyes

We saw joy struggle with legs

We saw confusion warped legs

We felt happiness chase legs

We felt anxiety chase the chest

 We believe the struggle sing joy through the head

WE felt excited extended mouth

We believe tired strange nose

By Evans Augustine, Kennneth Connolly, and Kevin Parakkattu

Sound Transformation by Nick Sanso, Josh Solomowitz, and Jaclyn Tortora

         

Our sound transformation tells a story about a relationship and how it progresses over time. It illustrates the many challenges that come with being in a relationship such as other people getting involved. The sound starts off in the middle of a problematic situation of a relationship. The song “Back to Black” by Beyonce demonstrates the problems that arise when another person becomes involved. Basically, the girl is saying that if the guy leaves her for another girl she is going to go “back to black.”

The next song “Don’t Trust Me” by 3OH!3 shows a guy in the new crowd describing the girl who is now creating a poor reputation for herself . The song “A Little Party Never Killed Nobody” by Fergie continues the “party girl” mentality of the girl because her relationship is still in limbo. She is saying she is going to party until the guy comes to his senses. Eventually, the song “Only One” by Yellowcard solidifies the guy’s decision to stay with the girl. We wonder if she will take him back.

We combined loud, unique sounds to give off a young, relatable feel to the situation we are trying to portray. Even though the sounds are all contrasting, they display the ups and downs of a relationship and the typical teenage relationship problems in an exemplary, but over the top way.

Beyoncé & André 3000. “Back to Black.” Rec. 7 May 2013. The Great Gatsby (Music from Baz Luhrmann’s Film). Interscope Records, 2013. MP3.

Nathaniel Motte & Sean Foreman. “Don’t Trust Me.” Rec. 7 July 2008. Want. 3OH!3. Photo Finish Records, LLC., 2008. MP3.

Fergie, Q-Tip, GoonRock. “A Little Party Never Killed Nobody (All We Got).” Rec. 7 May 2013. The Great Gatsby (Music from Baz Luhrmann’s Film). Interscope Records, 2013. MP3.

Key, Ryan. “Only One.” Rec. 10 July 2003. Ocean Avenue. Yellowcard. Capitol Records, 2003. MP3.

2013 National Design Awards Winners

As someone who enjoys studying architectural designs, I find Smithsonian National Design Awards very fascinating and I wish more people knew about it. I found many of these award distributions interesting and I was able to learn about many amazing designers through these awards.

I believe that Janette Sadik-Khan’s idea of starting the Citi Bike program really changed the city. It encouraged people to ride bikes instead of driving which reduces traffic, reduces pollution in the city, and encourages people who sit in offices all day to get some exercise on their way to work. I hope this program expands to other boroughs of NYC besides Manhattan and Brooklyn and that more people will take advantage of this opportunity.

I was surprised to read that TED won the corporate and institutional achievement award because most people don’t think of TED as a design organization. However, if you think about it, TED has spread numerous ideas that could potentially become inspirations for new designs. I really like Chris Anderson’s quote, “Design is not just about the function of objects, it’s to reimagine the future.” Designers are always trying to come up with unique work through their creativity and every piece of work they do is history for the future.

Another interesting winner is James Wines who designed Baruch’s nearby Shake Shack in Madison Square Park and parts of the Museum of Modern Arts in New York City. He has also created many fascinating architectural works throughout the world.

Here are the pictures of all 10 winners:

Screen Shot 2013-10-24 at 5.37.41 PM

 

Work Citied:

National Design Museum. “National Design Awards.” 2013 National Design Award Winners. Cooper-Hewitt, 2013. Web. 24 Oct. 2013.

Louie, Elaine. “A Look Toward the Future at National Design Awards.” New York Times 21 Oct. 2013. Web. 24 Oct. 2013.

To view this article, click here. And to learn more about the winning artists, you can check out the National Design Museum website here.

“As Downloads Dip, Executives Cast a Wary Eye on Streaming Services”

Now that we all have new, fancy MacBook Pros and the majority of us own iPhones, I would find it hard to believe if each and every one of us didn’t use YouTube, Spotify, Pandora, or another streaming device daily. This coupled with the ability to easily torrent music or download it for free is being considered when figuring out what the cause for the dip of digital music sales could be. In the article “As Downloads Dip, Executives Cast a Wary Eye on Streaming Services,” Ben Sisario considers different reasons for this decline in digital music sales. Last year at this time, track sales were 1.01 billion and now are down four percent. In total, all digital sales have dropped a full one percent.  Clearly CDs are out of date but executives did not expect digital downloads to dip this low so quickly. Are people in America getting smarter? Did we find a way to beat the system and claim our music for free?

Apple’s success in opening the iTunes Store in 2003 was obvious until the success slowly started to decline and in recent months, the sales have dipped. Music and business analysts cannot agree on a specific cause of the dip, but it seems that streaming services are a popular trend in conversation among the different opinions. Traditionally, costumers get music from the iTunes Store on their computer and buy a single track for what is now $1.29.  People are beginning to realize that they get more for their money by downloading an app for free or for a few dollars a month and getting unlimited access to songs in return.

However, the confusion lies in if the streaming services are actually helping the digital downloading industry toward positive results. The streaming and subscription services reached $1.03 billion in revenue, 59 percent greater than last year. The questions being asked are: Do Spotify and YouTube encourage people to purchase songs after streaming them? The answer is probably yes because this encourages sales for digital downloads however, it just as easily encourages people to copy and paste the link into a YouTube to MP3 converter and download the song for free. With that, most people are content with Pandora because they are choosing the genre of the radio station they are listening to. This exposes people to new music of their preference of sound. People do not have to search for new music to listen because their choice of station on Pandora and choice of song on Spotify and YouTube replace the need to buy music. Researchers also claim that Android users are using Google’s play store and straying from iTunes and spending less money.

The article explains that it is hard to know if people are abandoning one way of listening to music for another way. It seems that streaming services and the digital download industry are working side by side to provide music for listeners; one just clearly has a better value than the other. However, the market for digital downloads seems to take on bull like characteristics meaning that it is going to prosper. This must mean that streaming services are having a positive effect on the industry.

In my opinion, people should stick to streaming devices. Paying $1.29 for a song on iTunes is absurd when compared with the monthly subscription of $3.99 to Spotify or the free version of Pandora if the person has patience for the occasional 15 seconds of an advertisement. While I believe this might be a bit of a rip off to artists compared to the kind of revenue they would be bringing in if streaming were not an option for listeners, it also allows artists to get discovered and increases publicity. I think overall, streaming is the way to go. It opens a whole realm of opportunity for people to discover music. Pandora comes complete with the album covers, lyrics, and background information about a band. This is revolutionary for music and I believe the music industry must continue down this path because the purchasing of digital downloads is going to further plateau until streaming becomes the main way for people to listen to music.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/21/business/media/as-downloads-dip-music-executives-cast-a-wary-eye-on-streaming-services.html?_r=0

Interview Assignment

Interview Assignment

            I stepped into ‘Casey Rubber Stamps’ late last Friday to see if I can talk to one of the East Village’s known eclectic, John Casey. . It’s very easy to miss the East 11th street shop, a basement among a long line of up and coming boutiques, high end thrift stores and old school bakeries. His shop is a small, huddled mass of tall stacks of shined wooden stamps. Stamps sit in bins, on shelves to the walls, depicted in catalogues and outdoors on a table. The back end is the workshop, open for view to customers, who can watch as a clutter of time worn machines, rubber sheets and metal inlays somehow churn out intricate, polished stamps. Alas, the bearded Irish artist wasn’t there but three of his young assistants-all art school students or graduates- were happy to discuss art, technology and the intersection of the two with me as I learned more about an art-form that isn’t actually, a dying business.

Me: We’re at the Stamp Store in the East Village. I’d like to ask you, what sort of artwork you do?

Rob: I do mostly print-work and a little bit design and some drawings.

Me: What draws you to print-work as opposed to other mediums?

Rob: Well, we’re surrounded by print materials. Our world, especially in New York, is made out of print. I think it’s interesting to have a kind of more intimate understanding of it.

Tim: It’s about leaving an impression, like a caveman.

Rob: Yeah, leaving impressions like cavemen. Also understanding what makes something graphically interesting or evocative is different than what makes something interesting in like a painting.

Me: How do you make things interesting and evocative in print making?

Rob: Oh boy.

Tim: Repetition.

Rob: That’s one way to do it. Prior to the industrial revolution, you’d have like single objects being always independent but with mass manufacturing, any object you see in the world is like a guarantee there’s another object like it somewhere. In printmaking, you see an image but you know it’s reproduced in some other place.

Me: Do you feel like the reproduction decreases the value of the art?

Rob: I don’t think so nowadays because even one of a kind art has lost its value like inherently because of reproducibility. I think that even if you have something that is one of a kind, people have become used to buying things in a world where mass manufacturing is the norm. So if you hand someone a handmade leather shoe, a pair of beautiful ones made by you know, a real artist, people are not going to be willing to pay what that object is worth in time and expertise.

Me: What fascinates you most about stamp making?

Rob: Actually, John Casey fascinates me most

Me: Does he have a philosophy about stamps?

Rob: Make more. Haha, I think that’s his philosophy. Until your fingers bleed and you cry.

Me: What kind of people are most attracted to stamps?

Rob: F***ing goofballs.

Keith: Little girls. Three year olds.

Rob: Yeah, three year olds and scraggly weird dudes.

Tim: A lot of housewives.

Rob: Businessmen. People who want to be entrepreneurs

Tim: Musicians

Rob: There’s also a collector’s element because they’re these little objects. There’s an object fetish quality that a stamp has. It has weight, a very pleasant weight and feel. There’s the wood.

Me: How long did it take you to learn how to be a stamp maker?

Rob: Not long.

Tim: About a week.

Rob: Yeah. But to really understand the woo of stamps-

Keith: The nuance.

Rob: Yeah, it takes a long time.

Me: Can you tell me why the founder of this store wanted to focus on stamps?

Keith: John collected stamps and his dad ran a dance hall that needed stamps so he took John to the stamp-maker to make stamps.

Tim: John became fascinated and wanted to do it for the rest of his life.

Rob: He founded the store or the business in the 70s.

Tim: 80s

Me: So, what’s your personal background as an artist?

Rob: I went to the North Carolina School of the Arts. Keith went to SVA and this guy goes to Cooper Union, currently.

Me: So how do you come up with an idea for a stamp? What’s the process?

Tim: Our boss tells us.

Keith: For stock, basically we just look at an image and if it’s going to be a seller we just make it and then kind of test-market it. You make five of them and put them on a shelf. If it sells- we make more. If it doesn’t, we just don’t make them anymore. Pretty basic.

Me: So what’s your bestselling one?

Keith: There are a lot of bestselling ones- guns, skulls, lot of animals, anatomy pieces, Alice In Wonderland… Depends on who is buying and what they’re using it for. Like Christmas is coming up and a lot of people are going to be buying a lot of Santa stamps and Season’s Greetings and stuff like that. Like a lot of bars will get little things and we get a lot of drug dealers coming in, they want little things- but we’re not supposed to sell to drug dealers.

Me: Oh that’s really interesting. I know that different drug dealers have different signs so that you can tell what is theirs.

Keith: Mhm, yep. Same thing like branding.

Me: From a business perspective, wouldn’t that [market] be useful?

Keith: To cater to that market would be problematic-

Me: Morally?

Keith: There’s that, but also legally. We had a colleague who also runs a stamp shop and he was called to court because some drug ring was caught and they found out that he made the stamp.

Me: Do you see yourself moving to digital design and image making?

Keith: I don’t like to categorize things.

Rob: Right or like put them on a scale like, ‘We used to do things by hand but then computers came along, and we started to do it that way.’ There are still things that are done best by hand and there are things that computers are better at, and things done by computers that have never been done by hand. It’s just different things. I’m with Tim. I prefer to do things by hand.

Tim: There’s another stamp shop that our boss refers people to when he’s freaking out and can’t do their stamps and he prints by laser cutter. And with laser cutting you can’t really do half the things. In solid images, it’ll cut out solid spots but it can’t do a half turn image like this; so there are some things you can’t do with them. These are all done by hand, mostly. I mean you do need the computer to do it but the majority of our work is by hand. It’s a mechanical process. It comes out a lot better and different.

Me: Do you think that the success of an art piece depends on the financial success that it gets?

Tim: No.

Rob: Just no. Because if you start thinking that way your just f***ed. Game over.

Me: Can you elaborate on that?

Tim: Jeff Koons- it’s funny how his sh*tty work can go for so much. He had some kind of awareness event and the piece itself went for 2 million dollars. But its cast steel, its hollow inside. Bullsh*t.

Rob: I think that sh*t comes from what he’s talking about. There’s the art scene and there’s art- like actual work. And then there’s the gallery/fashion thing. The gallery concept has like tried to supplant actual art- its biggest achievement is that its convinced the whole world that it is the art scene somehow or it is like what art is; like that giant f*cking stupid balloon puppet thing that was sold for that much money. But that’s just self-created value. That’s just fashion. That’s just silliness. Like the whole white wall gallery thing is not the extent of art, though most people would go there to find it- which is sort of a shame.

Tim: I started doing art for street art purposes, or because I was motivated by street art.

Me: Would you say that art is your primary passion in life?

Tim: Well I’m f***ed if I want to do anything else.

Rob: Yeah, it’s a passion. I’m passionate about a lot of stuff but it’s probably what all of us feel like we’re best at doing and enjoy most. What else would we do, you know.

 

 

Nose Poem

Adona Pjetergjoka, Nicolette Belitsis, Michael Goldberg

We believe the nose felt joy running freely away from Kovalyov.

We saw a proud nose become his own being.

We saw sadness through Kovalyov’s eyes.

We saw a barber get threatened by his wife.

We felt confused when the actors on stage attacked the bagel lady.

We felt embarrassment for Kovalyov because the nose almost ruined his life.

We believe the background was very busy.

We felt happy when the nose returned.

We believe everyone should enjoy the opera in New York City.

Interview with Jacqueline Tran of LaGuardia High School

Jacqueline Tran is a very talented cousin of mine. She comes from a family of first generation amateur musicians. She’s one of the youngest, but she’s also the only who has stuck fast to her passion. Aside from violin, she’s also known among her acquaintances for her many other talents, such as fashion designing and acting. She is currently a senior at LaGuardia High School.

Most of your acquaintances know you as a gifted person. You play the violin. You design and
make clothes. You even joined an acting class. How do you define yourself artistically?
I’m a little bit of everything. I’ve come to realize, as I explore different forms of art ­ fashion, visual arts, photography ­ everything’s connected, one way or another. They all convey some kind of reality that we never get to see otherwise. I can’t say that I’m only an violinist, or I’m only an actor. But I definitely think violin is a catalyst to everything I’ve done in the past three or four years. I’m a bit of everything. I think I’m a very open­ended, well rounded artist.
How does going to a high school like LaGuardia shape you artistically? Did that somehow
cement your passion for the artistic culture?
To tell you the truth, I came into LaGuardia thinking that I would only be a violinist. And so I thought that for a year or two. But it was because of LaGuardia that I stepped into this realm of competition that I wasn’t previously exposed to before. So I worked really hard and I realized at one point that it’s not going to cut it for me if I only just play violin, so I actually dropped violin for a while. I gave up hope. I thought, maybe I’ll try fashion, and this was partly because my friends were into fashion. Maybe I’ll take photography. Maybe I’ll try acting on the side too. LaGuardia gave me the opportunity to meet people from different artistic fields and to be exposed to competition and really get myself into the arts. LaGuardia definitely made me a better artist, and not in the general way.

So basically, your initial drive was the competition, but later it was the competition and the people around you that helped you branch out.
Y es.
Do you still think that LaGuardia has a lasting influence on you still? Does that competitive vibe still affect you somehow?

Not as much anymore. I’ve grown to be “outside” of LaGuardia. LaGuardia was my first step. Then I worked at internships for theatre companies, and then I bought a lot of film and tried photography. I play violin outside of school as well. Now that I think about it, LaGuardia looks like it could be an open­ended art school, but it really isn’t. That’s because it’s broken up into different divisions. Most people believe that they must stay within their own divisions. Ultimately, my initial exposure to the environment at LaGuardia is what made me who I am today.

Would you say you’re a special case or do most LaGuardia students have similar experiences?

I don’t want to say I’m a special case, but I guess I am. Not many people want to step out of their zones and try branching out into new art forms.
Is violin still an important part of your life?
It still is. I just had a moment of doubt. It was because I thought I wasn’t good enough and considered giving up. I worked so hard and got nowhere. I ignored my homework and practiced six hours a day and I still wasn’t good enough. So yes, I kind of gave up for a while. Now I’m back on my feet. Half of the schools I’m applying to are liberal art schools that have good conservatories. Violin is still a huge part of my life even if I’m branching out.

Violin takes priority over everything else? Even school?

Yes, more so than other things. But I also have experience juggling my activities since I have been playing for fourteen years. It’s because I was exposed to other art forms that I began to like violin more. I originally saw it as something I had to overcome. I saw it as something I had to be better at. Since I

played for so many years, I should be at a certain level. I should be, like people who’ve played for as long as I have, at some sort of benchmark. After I started trying other things, I learned that it’s not about winning and competition. Once you get stuck in that mindset, you just think about winning and you start to forget the core value of art.

It’s obvious you’re passionate about violin. Has it always been that way? I know that you were initiated by your parents. Half of music students in general ­I mean, people who were forced to learn instruments­ tend to give up once things get inconvenient. Remember how going to college made your sister give up on piano?

I always wanted to be different from my sister. I saw someone with a violin and just thought that I should try it. I was four. It wasn’t a passion. When I was in elementary school, no one else I knew played it. I think my passion was kindled in 7th to 8th grade.
What made it happen?

I applied to Mark Twain because it was the best middle school in Brooklyn. I played violin well; I felt I could get in because I was good enough. I was first chair for three years straight so I felt pretty good
about myself. As I got older, I realized how fun it is to be in the orchestra. But I didn’t get any competition yet. It wasn’t a passion, but it was an attachment. But after I got into LaGuardia, things changed. It was because of the huge amount of talent around me.

Do you think you’ll pursue music as a profession?

I don’t think so. I really want to, but I’m not good enough. The only thing that I could even dream of getting a shot at is joining an orchestra somewhere. I’ll try. But I don’t think it’s a very big possibility. Who knows?