“The Flowers of War”

During the time of the Beijing Olympics in 2008, film director Zhang Yimou decided to pick up a novel called 13 Female Martyrs of Nanjing by Yan Geling.  He was supposedly trying to find a distraction from the pressure he was facing during the rehearsals for the opening ceremony of the Olympics, but he did quite the opposite.   The novel is the story of the Nanjing Massacre, also known as “the Rape of Nanjing” told from the point of view of a 13-year-old girl.  This horrible event, which took place in December of 1937, involved the raping and killing of over 200,000 people in Nanjing, China when it was occupied by Japanese troops.  The 13-year-old point of view is what specifically caught the attention of Yimou.  So many television programs and documentaries have attempted to re-create this occurrence in history, but only 13 Female Martyrs of Nanjing has done so in a light that inspired Yimou.
Now, three years later, Yimou’s film, titled The Flowers of War, had its premiere in China and in the United States.  It is China’s official submission for the Academy Award for best foreign-language film (not to mention it stars Academy Award winner Christian Bale).   Most importantly, though, are the unique troubles that it faced with government.  Yimou stated that filming in China was almost a game in that an all-powerful Communist Party limited him.  He explained that “all the locations are owned by the government,” and “you must go through censorship after the movie is made.”  Especially because Yimou is well known, the spotlight was completely on him.   The Communist Party has always tried to manage the image of the Rape of Nanjing in efforts to reflect the relations between China and Japan.  So with all of this censorship, how accurate can a film about such a rough topic be?  And what is art that must be changed by people other than its creator?  Despite the challenges, Yimou makes it a point to say that he is truthful to history, though.  And in the process he had the opportunity to bring out a lot of Chinese culture.

Conlangers in High Demand!

What is language? Is it just a complex system we use to communicate that took thousand of years to evolve to its present form? Or is it a system that can now be created within a matter of decades? Apparently, it’s both! Language is defined to be a systematic means of communicating ideas or feelings by the use of conventionalized signs, sounds, gestures, or marks having understood meanings, and the combination and structure of these factors create an art form. It is becoming increasingly popular for science fiction and fantasy films in Hollywood to create new languages. What do I mean by that? Let’s use the example of James Cameron’s Oscar-winning film “Avatar,” that came out in 2009: it took almost 20 years for it to be released because of elements such as animation technology, and linguistics. Aside from purposely waiting for the right technology to be able to create his vision, James Cameron made it crucial to have a conlanger (someone who creates constructed languages) create the language of Na’vi, which took years to create. In this futuristic film that takes place in the middle of the 22nd century, our planet comes into contact with indigenous humanoids that have a society like ours, which included a language that has intricate structures and rules. The authentic-ness that this language added to the film made it all the more popular and of higher demand.

Now, more films are being released that have “actual” languages and are not a bunch of randomly sounds that are made to sound “extraterrestrial”. Because I’m biased, I would argue that they wouldn’t be as well thought out and as captivating as the Na’vi language in “Avatar,” but it’s downright awesome to see them be created. Being an Anthropology major and having an uncommon liking to Fantasy and SciFi films, makes it that much more exciting to see. It makes me question whether or not we’ll be seeing any of these “created” languages become officially used in our world for the hell of it. It’s definitely possible, seeing how are world is so obsessed with the future and aliens. It’s also amazing to see the art form of language become more and more developed and evolved. The way we communicate and express ourselves is very much an art form!  Who knows, maybe you might find me in the credits of a blockbuster film as the Conlanger (my new favorite word)! Ok, so it’s a long shot, but it’s fun to imagine, and isn’t this what it’s all about, imagining a new way of communicating and putting it to life?

 

The Future of Media

I can’t believe it, but there is a second article in the December issue of Gameinformer that applies to my the concepts of art that we have talked about before in this class. “I remember how I felt when I first played Final Fantasy VII. I suspect my reaction was not unique–I came out of that game feeling, for the first time, like I’d played a movie. I think that’s the first inkling I had of what was to come, what is still coming. More and more, it seems that traditional lines between entertainment media–film, book, game, song–are bleeding together. I think that video games hold the future of what we might call the “uber-media” form. The combination of all traditional arts into a single experience, mixed with the new art of the 20th century–the art of guided participation.” After reading through this editorial, I was curious as to who wrote it. It’s often that the editorial for the magazine is actually written by one of the staff, presumably because nobody writes in anything worth publishing–if they send in anything at all. However, the level of writing for this editorial seemed higher than normal, so I checked to see who wrote it. Brandon Sanderson wrote it. He is an accomplished author, who is currently in the process of completing the Wheel of Time (one of my favorite book series) after the original author, Robert Jordan, died.

It was extremely interesting to see somebody who works in a different media of art to discuss the merits of video games. Sanderson goes on to reference two other games as examples of “the future of art”. This has been a theme in many of my posts, because I am very intrigued by the evolution of art. While I do not like many of the new forms of art (especially in music), I do respect that they are art. However, I have played a few games that I would call art. They were able to sustain a story that kept me interested in the characters–like a good movie or book–with appropriate music, believable voice acting, and amazing graphics. However, rather than praising these games, they make me look to the future and think how amazing games will be in a few years. As Sanderson says, the “art of guided participation” seems like it is the art of the future. Since I draw, play music, write (both english and music) the possibility of being able to create art that combines all of these different facets of art is very tantalizing.

I Give You: Tim Minchin!

Ask me what my favorite music is, and I won’t be able to avoid talking about him. Ask me who inspires me, and he will probably be the first name I mention. I’m talking about my musical idol, pianist/singer/songwriter Tim Minchin. How big of a fan am I? I’ve seen him four times and counting, traveled as far as Washington D.C. to see him, waited by the stage door after every show to meet him and get one of his famous bear hugs. Creeped out yet?

So, as the one year anniversary of me discovering Tim Minchin’s music approaches (It was January 12th, he was the musical guest on Conan), I thought it fitting to blog about thoughts that my latest Tim Minchin concert experience provoked, which happened on November 4th at the Town Hall in Manhattan.

As aforementioned, Tim Minchin is a pianist, singer, and songwriter. He is also a very gifted comedian. He usually performs solo in the cabaret style, alternating between playing songs and telling jokes. He is not your run-of-the-mill Jerry Seinfeld, however. The reason why Tim Minchin holds the key to my heart is because his brand of comedy is extremely intellectual and philosophical. While his jokes are laugh-out-loud funny, every one of them is based on modern day issues and meant to be thought about seriously at the end of the day. His jokes are about mostly controversial subjects, mostly evolution, atheism, the corruptness of organized religion, etc.

In this manner, Tim is a lot like the groundbreaking artists we’ve examined all semester long in class. Tim’s music is still definitely not understood by most of the world. The overall conservativeness of American values (despite pockets of liberalism as seen strongly in New York City) makes Tim’s audience limited to only those who can handle the starting nature of his frankness, verboseness, frequent cursing, and unconventional appearance.

At the concert, Tim told a joke that examined what makes things sacred. It involved him taking a copy of the Qur’an and a copy of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and swapping their book sleeves- he kept on asking, “is anything sacred as long as you have the word ‘Qur’an’ on it?” He went on to ponder whether it’s the title, the cover, or the text that makes a physical object sacred. This entire bit reminded me of the countless debates we’ve had over “what makes something good art?” Is art good because of the artist who creates it? Is the artist good because of the art he or she creates? Tim’s song “Beauty”, in my opinion, is a great attempt at answering these questions. He himself says he doesn’t know what the song means, but I see it as a lament on what the world’s obsession with beauty does to art and the people who create it.

I’ll try not to spam with too many links. Here is a wonderful introduction-to-Tim song.

Here is a very serious song about Prejudice.

Here is a ballad that will make you cry.

And here is a 9 minute jazz backed beat poem.

Note: Tim also has penned the music to Matilda the Musical, which is playing in London at the moment, but there’s no doubt in my mind that it will eventually come to Broadway 🙂

Underground Moving Art

On Saturday, December 10, 2011, on my commute over to the American Museum of Natural History, my peers and I were lucky enough to come across a vintage train running on the F line. We were on the E train when we got off on the 53rd and Lexington Avenue stop, when we came across the green, vintage train going the direction we came from. It did not stop us from spontaneously running across the track and getting on the train, despite the direction it was heading towards.

Every year, the MTA expresses its spirit during the holiday season by releasing 1930s trains during the holiday season, every Saturday in December!

The train interior had a very 1930s feel. The seats were some sort of straw-like material that was ironically firm, but cushioned. The seats, themselves, were only wide enough to sit three people at their max. The doors read “Keep Hands Away From Doors,” which I found really funny because I pictured someone getting their hand getting chopped off if their hands did manage to get stuck (sorry for the gruesome image). If you looked up you would see a clean column of ceiling fans along the train cars, which you have to admit, is pretty awesome. The thought of having fans to circulate the air in the hot summer days inside the New York City subway system is pretty refreshing, being that not all current trains are consistently air conditioned. The windows were also allowed to be opened more than today’s trains!

However, out of all the cool features that the 30s train had, the advertisements were the most fascinating, for me. From used cars and cigarettes to Coca-Cola and Gerber, the variety of the ads are astounding for the confined space they had to be placed in. I would like to estimate and say there were about 30 different ads on one side of a train car whereas today, are ads are enlarged and reproduced in the same train. I like how most of the advertisements were colorful and drawn rather than a collection of photographs; it almost seems like ads were subtler and simpler.The little catch phrases like ” Say ‘Luckies’ are less irritating” and “You can’t have my number fella if you’ve dull white teeth!” within the advertisements were really cool to see because they were so authentic to the time period, which makes them all the more interesting. In the end, it was a great experience seeing the artwork of the 1930. It was interesting to see how advertisements have changed since then. I’m so excited to visit the New York Transit Museum again after that experience because it reminded of how much we can learn about our history in the art that is found in places we see as “everyday,” like trains, for example. Make sure to catch one of these vintage trains. Find out when and where here!

 

 

You Will Love This Jazz Trio!

As an aspiring jazz vocalist, I often am surprised at how many amazing jazz artists I’ve let slip under my nose, especially when I realize how helpful they are in my own efforts to understand and master jazz music. Saxophonist Rudresh Manhanthappa, a musician of Indian jazz, is one of them. Mitch and I seized the opportunity (extended to us by our very own Professor Smaldone) to see him at Flushing Town Hall. The two main things I learned from this concert are: 1) you haven’t heard jazz until you’ve heard Indian Jazz, and 2) Jazz. Is. Communication. Watching Rudresh and his trio “The Indo-Pak Coalition” perform was as educational as it was absolutely entertaining- it served as a wonderful reminder about how crucial communication is in jazz.

The evening began with a Q & A session between Rudresh and our emcee for the evening. He told his story of being born in Trieste, Italy, growing up in Boulder, Colorado, and attending Berklee College of Music and DePaul University for his Master’s. I wasn’t expecting him to be so down to earth; I certainly wasn’t expecting his clear American accent, or that his taste in music would be so eclectic given the specific brand of jazz that he plays. By the end of the twenty-minute session, I was so curious about what his music would sound like that I could barely stand it. It also helped that a couple of months ago I attended an Egyptian Music workshop hosted by Carnegie Hall – I recognized some of the musical terms I had learned from that workshop and didn’t expect to also find them in Indian music.

Rudresh left the stage to retrieve the other two members of his trio, and a moment later, the three of them walked out together. Aside from Rudresh, there was a drummer and a guitarist, and I wondered if the trio would sound empty with the absence of a bass player (spoiler alert: boy, was I wrong).

After a couple of minutes of tuning, the trio began playing the only song of Rudresh’s I had previously heard: “Convergence.” Within seconds, I knew the night would be entertaining. From the very first note played, the three of them were all about communication. To blink would be to miss at least three glances between the players. They were always looking out for each other, checking in on each other, and listening to what the other one was doing. Rudresh’s solos went by lightning fast, and he played with a comical bended knee stance that we said looked a bit like a videogame character. He clearly is a musician who has reached the level of expertise that he barely needs to think about soloing anymore; he just does it.

I at first thought the guitarist, Rez Abbasi, wasn’t very good because of the inattentive , unconfident look in his eye, and during much of the first song he didn’t appear to be playing much. I was soon told that the guitarist probably has the hardest part of the three of them: he is acting as a bassist and a guitarist; he is holding everybody together as the drummer and Rudresh venture into different feels and melodic ideas. The more I watched him, the more I realized he was doing. The show couldn’t have gone on without him. Of many of Rez Abbasi’s highlight moments for the evening, my favorite had to have been his lengthy guitar solo at the beginning of the second song in the set. The chords that he chose, combined with the different pedals he pressed, gave his solo such an addictive quality. I literally did not want him to stop soloing, and was internally cranky when he did. It vaguely reminded me of the style of Stanley Jordan, in that Rez was able to make his one guitar sound as if three guitars were playing at once. That is when you know you’ve got yourself a good guitarist!

My favorite artist to watch of the trio, though, had to have been the drummer Dan Weiss. I consider him to have been the coolest and most light-hearted of the group. He was constantly grinning as he played, and his presence was overall nonchalant yet sure of himself. His experimentation with different drum fills was evident throughout the night. When playing the traditional tabla drum, he sat cross-legged on the floor, occasionally contorting his leg to impulsively reach the hi-hat or bass drum pedal. In less than two seconds, he could lift himself onto his drum stool to play the kit. He made it look like so much fun! It was also quite cool that he spotted the two of us in the audience and smiled/looked at us several times. 🙂

Rudresh’s music is great for the Indian jazz skeptic. For anyone who thinks they won’t like Indian jazz, Rudresh (with this trio especially) is the artist to see. Rudresh doesn’t make his music too exclusively Indian or too exclusively jazzy. The drums are constantly rotating between swing feels and other typical jazz feels and beats found in the heart of Indian music. One can definitely tell that the songs are Indian jazz, but there are melodic ideas within Rudresh’s compositions that unexpectedly take the audience to different musical worlds: sometimes the guitar sounded rock-ish, for instance, and sometimes Rudresh’s solos sounded bluesy. This concert as additionally taught me that I like musicians who experiment!

Even if you decidedly despise Indian jazz, see Rudresh’s trio as a musician, jazz or not. The benefits or communication really show between the three of them. In my experience, it is very easy to forget to communicate to your fellow musicians, whether you’re playing in a combo, a big band, etc. For a genre that is a thousand percent more free than the rigidness of classical music, this isn’t good! Communication is key to keeping things running smoothly and producing really cool solos, and Rudresh Manhanthappa and the Indo-Pak Coalition are wonderful testaments of that. Go check them out! Rudresh is based in New York!

the Art of Light—A Building Transforms to A Pinball Machine in A Second.

I would not have discovered so many interesting art stuff if I did not come to Macaulay and take Art Seminar in Queens College. I feel thankful to this program because it exposes me to so many amazing art and brings me the great experiences that I could never have imagined; it also motivates me to discover art news in the Internet.

I find a interesting news about the huge pinball game which is projected onto the facade of a building. During the Festival of Lights 2011 in Lyons, France, “Carol Martin and Thibaut Berbezier, who form the experimental art collective CT light, made the installation, called “Urban Flipper” which create the projection. It utilizes every single element of the exterior of the the building of Celestins Theater and presents these elements as the obstacles of the pinball game. It allows the onlookers the opportunity to play the most spectacular pinball game in the world. That is really stunning; I wish I could have been there and play it or at least witness it.

When I saw the video for the first time, I was astonished; I was thinking that how could this be possible. But, Martin and Berbezier  just made it; their imagination is incredible. This is a great combination of art of light and game. The art of light seems like is developing and progressing rapidly. A couple of months before, I read the news about the Ground Zero Ceremony during which the the twin towers were “rebuilt” in the form of two straight blue light, which also amazed me. Usually, we only see light as an element accompanied to the performance on the stage, but now we see more and more light performance which is displayed independently. The magic of light, I believe, will continue to entrance us.

Just recall what I have written before about the art of firework, I feel that, today, multifarious arts are swarming throughout the world. Art is not restricted to paintings, sculpture, music, dance anymore; it has developed into new dimensions and it is absorbing more elements that will bring us more novel experiences.

The Ultimate Love Story Coming to Broadway

The author of the The Notebook, Nicholas Sparks, has recently announced that his novel which claimed its spot as the contemporary ideal love story when it was adapted for film, is now coming to Broadway. The Notebook follows two young adults who come from different worlds and backgrounds, but fall in love regardless. It was the tear jerking romance of our generation when it came out in 2004. To keep the city relevant, he revealed that the setting will be altered to take place in Manhattan. Casting is going to be difficult considering actors will have big shoes to fill, namely Rachel McAdams’ and Ryan Gosling’s.

As popular as this love story is, it’s hard to imagine the show retaining the same level of profoundness as the movie if the actors are going to be dancing and singing about the stage. Imagine the famous “I wrote you everyday” scene set to a swooning orchestra instead of the pitter-patter of rain. That’s not to say that there haven’t been romantic dramas that retained seriousness once they enter the world of Broadway. But, sometimes it’s not always better to have a soundtrack to everything. Maybe the revamping of this classic love story will sit well with the elements of a musical or maybe some things should be left alone in their greatness. Perhaps, the phrase “if it’s not broken, don’t fix it” applies. It will not be known until critics get their seats to the much anticipated show which has not a release date yet.

 

V for the 99%

Graphic novels have been used in many different purposes by those creating them. Some are there to make a statement. Some are for pure enjoyment. Some, like Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta, are critical of government and too much centralized power. Art is, and has always been, an excellent medium though which an artist gives over a message. What is unique about V for Vendetta is how it is currently being used, not by the artist, but by the public.

Odds are that by now, you have seen at least one Guy Fawkes mask involved with some sort of protest group, whether you know what it is or not. It has become the symbol of many groups demanding change, including Anonymous, WikiLeaks , and many of the Occupy Wall Street protestors. It has jumped from the graphic novel into the real world in a very strong way, and the creators of the book have taken notice. Alan Moore, the author of V for Vendetta, has been quoted as saying, “I suppose when I was writing V for Vendetta I would in my secret heart of hearts have thought: wouldn’t it be great if these ideas actually made an impact?  It feels like a character I created 30 years ago has somehow escaped the realm of fiction.” David Lloyd, the artist who drew the book, visited Occupy Wall Street to see the masks in action.”The Guy Fawkes mask has now become a common brand and a convenient placard to use in protest against tyranny – and I’m happy with people using it,” he noted. “It seems quite unique, an icon of popular culture being used this way.”

But what is the mask and where did it come from? It starts back in 1605 when Guy Fawkes, in what has come to be known as the Gunpowder Plot, attempted to blow up parliament on November 5th. In England, this day has become Guy Fawkes day, on which children would create stuffed effigies of Guy Fawkes (wearing a Guy Fawkes mask, of course) to burn in memory of the Gunpowder plot. The mask was then used by Alan Moore in V for Vendetta as the mask worn by the titular V, who, while fighting a post apocalyptic fascist english government, actually succeeds in blowing up parliament. The mask was then used in the popular 2006 adaptation of the novel, which changed the focus from a fascist regime to big government and bug business. It is the movie adaptation that has likely inspired the recent political uses of the mask.

The idea of a group coming together and wearing all the same mask is pretty advantageous. The group becomes a collective as apposed to a scattered assortment of people, with their statement literally written on their faces. In the case of Anonymous, it also kept their identities a secret. What is most fascinating is the almost unsolvable issue being posed to Warner Brothers, the producers of the film. On the one hand, they most definitely do not agree with these groups. On the other hand, sales for these masks have skyrocketed since they have started being used by them. It’s almost ironic how Warner Brothers is making so much money off protestors who are directly against the kind of capitalist greed that Warner Brothers is participating in by taking their money.

For more on this, check out these two articles on the topic.

Maybe Books Aren’t Doomed After All…

For years now, many have been wondering about the fate of physical books after E-readers made their debut. After the Amazon Kindle came out, people began seeing the possibility of finding new ways to read and help the environment (myself, included). Now, someone may argue that E-readers are decreasing the value of physical books and EVEN literature when their being placed in machines. They might argue that you don’t get the same effect when you don’t have a physical book in your hand. I completely agree with them! However, being a Kindle owner myself, I can argue that it helps the environment by using less paper (sorry I had to go there, but it’s the truth). It’s also less expensive if you’re an avid reader because E-books are cheaper. And honestly, I read more often with my Kindle. How, you may ask? I can read or have MULTIPLE books at a time (something not everyone can do) while commuting and traveling wherever.

Because I’m a fast reader and can read a 600-page book in a couple of days, I love that I can go on vacation and not have to worry about how many books I can take on my trip. Don’t get me wrong, I definitely have not completely converted to fully E-book reading; I have a good-sized collection of printed books, but it definitely has changed how much I read. Why am I talking about this? Apparently, many people are feeling the same way about E-readers. There’s a universal idea that E-readers are handy to have and very convenient, but as more and more of them are being commercialized, for example, in the holidays, people are becoming less attracted to buying them and buy physical books instead. Maybe after seeing the second-largest bookstore chain, Borders, go out of business, made people fear the fate of books and made them go back to the “old ways.” What ever happened, I think it’s a smart idea to balance it out. For example, when at home, I prefer to have an actual book in my hand, but when out and and about, I use my E-reader.  Here is an article that talks about people are buying actual books for the holidays rather than E-readers this year.

Speechless and Heavy and Warfare

One of the most powerful social tools at our disposal is art because art has a voice, at least in our urban New York society.  At MoMA, I had the chance to watch a short film shot in Afghanistan.  At what appeared to be a co-American and Afghan alliance for serving a hot lunch to the community, there was an outdoor sort of “soup kitchen” where people waited on line for some food then went to sit down at park-like picnic tables.  Out of nowhere, in the midst of individuals enjoying their lunch, shots were fired; and, the whole place cleared out in about a minute, save the American armed forces shooting back at the perpetrators.

What was so moving about the piece was that it portrayed the Afghans accurately…as people, like us.  There was one clip shot outside of a building with an older Afghan man and a young American soldier.  The Afghan man was asking the American soldier various questions, such as if he was married.  When he answered that he was not married, the man asked if he at least had a girlfriend, to which he also answered no.  Plus, he had no children.  This cracked the man up.  Another scene showed a group a Afghans and a couple of armed American soldiers talking about either soccer or volleyball.  Although hesitantly reluctant at first, the soldiers agreed to play the sport with the other young men.

My two friends and I left that room, and all I was able to repeat was, “Man, that was heavy.”  One of my friends likened the war to the lesser of two evils.  Which is worse, to allow a country to be severely abused by an inhumane dictator, or cause extra attention and warfare by entering “the enemy’s” territory?  (This is not to say that the country is the enemy; it is not.  The group that our troops are fighting simply resides there).  This is one of the complications of war.  Where do we stand?  What are our boundaries?  How can you engage on a personal level with some citizens while grasping a machine gun in case another shoots at you?  I do not understand war.  I do understand the potential that lies in an artist’s craft to influence others, though.

Everyday Beautiful

After learning the background behind Islamic art, I was somewhat leery about viewing the Met’s exhibit because I received the impression that it ran rampant with underlying, grotesque meanings.  I actually enjoyed the exhibit for a few reasons, including the detail present in everything, whether it was a textile, a piece of pottery, a book, or an arched entryway.  The armor was interesting, too, especially the one headdress adorned with long strands and feathers.  If I had to pick one aspect that stuck out to me the most, though, it would be the architecture.  My friend and I continuously walked through the exhibit and glanced at the windows, doors, and arched walkways, noting how much we would love to incorporate them into our future homes.  One of my favorite architectural pieces was the white arching structure located in a bright courtyard, with a petite circular fountain in the center.  The detail in the archways was exquisite and imperceptibly intricate.  In high school, I always found it interesting to learn about the Arab influence on Spanish society, and the Met certainly included some of these influences in its exhibit.  Furthermore, I found the brightness and density of the colors used in the tiny paintings incredible.  Most of the time, I associate eras around the sixteenth century with darker colors, much like what we have been exposed to with Renaissance artwork.  However, this was a pleasant contrast to the somber European works, with its bright turquoises and Turkish porcelain blues.

This exhibit helped me realize what I love about the Met- it offers history with art in a demonstrative manner.  It does not attempt to impose its artistic views on visitors like other museums.  More “trendy” museums have their place, as well, but the Met provides a pleasant alternative to the hip artistic culture because it leaves room for the spectator to make his unbiased decision.  Additionally, some might even claim that the Met portrays life as art.  After all, a large percentage of its pieces on display are articles from the everyday lives of our ancestors.  I wonder if people back then saw their everyday lives as art.  Hey, I wonder if we do.

The More Genuine, the Less for the People?

In an article from the New York Times about some new tunes, readers are able to sample innovative musical selections from four current, unconventional artists.  The first artist is actually a pastor of a church.  I found this particularly interesting because the author of the article found the lyrics quite moving, and the manner in which he describes the artist’s musical methodology is intriguing.  It is certainly refreshing and encouraging to know that music “made in churches” can have an impact outside of the building’s walls.

Another artist from the article creates more jazz-like music that is rearranged in irregular positions.  For instance, one song sounds like it is beginning in the middle of a song.  After all, who said that we have to start at the beginning?  Who said that there needs to be a “beginning”?

The third artist is actually an Australian duo that has created a nice jumble of jazz and electronic styles, to put it simply and broadly.  In a sense, you would expect to hear this music in a hipster community, yet even in that setting, it would probably still be a bit startling to hear.  And the last band seems to have found a way to hipster-ize pop music.

I found these artists interesting because most people are probably inclined to merely shrug their music off for various reasons.  It is comparable to abstract art, though.  Think of de Kooning’s work.  There are some pieces that we “get” and others that we would like to keep looking at.  Recently (and partially due to our class), I have become increasingly dissatisfied with the current music available, both in English and Spanish.  This article and a lot of what we have experienced in the art world this semester have taught me that, in order to satisfy this dissatisfaction, artists need not create for others–unless, of course, money is a huge obstacle.  Create with what is in you; get it out.  Be less concerned with what others will think of the piece than with how to successfully make intangible feelings tangible through sound, texture, and sight.  One of the artists from the article says, “You end up listening to music that you like. We ended up liking music because of the sound and not because the band was hip or trendy at the time.”

What music can do for you.

As well all know, this semester was primarily focused on art, dance, and music. Many of us appreciate music for a wide array of reasons and each one of us has a preference for the type of music we listen to. We all have different experiences associated with each genre and different emotions that result from our favorite songs. Music can make us happy or sad. It can inspire us or relax us. Music can cause a sense of connection between those of a culture. It can be used for ceremonies and holidays. Lyrical music, particularly, can make people realize that they are not the only ones that feel the way they do and that others have gone through the challenges that they are facing. Music can affect our moods drastically and it can offer a temporary escape from reality. Music is truly a beautiful thing.

However, emotions are not the only aspects of an individual that music can affect. Data collected from music therapy clients shows that music can affect us physically. Music can shift states of consciousness, it can enable communication between the left and right brain hemispheres, and it can create brain waves associated with creativity. Music can also improve long-term memory and help with learning. This can explain why people can remember the lyrics of a song they like instantly but have trouble remembering other facts. Music can help a person heal, focus, and essentially improve their well-being. So, go listen to your favorite tracks and appreciate what music can do for you!

http://www.livestrong.com/article/157461-how-music-affects-the-human-brain/
http://www.livestrong.com/article/157875-the-effects-of-music-on-the-human-brain/

The World’s Largest Coffee Beans Mosaic

Having discussed about mosaic picture in class, I grow some interests in this form of art work. I randomly find the news about an Albanian artists Saimir Strati who creates the world’s largest coffee beans mosaic; and this piece enters the Guinness World Records this Monday.

This 25.1- square-meter mosaic consists of five people from different background. “Strati used 140 kg (309 pounds) of coffee beans, some roasted black, some averagely and some not roasted at all, to portray a Brazilian dancer, a Japanese drummer, a U.S. country music singer, a European accordionist and an African drummer”(Reuters).

I like this mosaic because it express an important message about international harmony. This mosaic is not like other random things that enter Guinness World Records only for their weirdness and huge scale. It has important message that the artist Strati want to spread to the whole world: “One world, one family, over a cup of coffee.” Yes, we can tell this message through his portraits of five artists from around the world. I don’t know why, but I just love this mosaic as soon as I see it. It is not beautiful in an elegant, but it is so sincere and honest. It portrays the diversity of our human society. Each race and each culture has its own unique feature, no one has the right to degrade any of them. We are all brothers and sisters, living on the same home—-the earth.

Link to the post on Reuters

Coffee Bean Mosaic by Albanian artist Saimir Strati (picture from Reuters )