<body><style type="text/css"> #header { padding: 0; margin: 0; position: relative; height: 100px; background: #FFFFFF; border-bottom: 1px solid #0074C4; font: 11px 'Lucida Grande', Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif; /* Resets 1em to 10px */ color: #444; } ul.menu { margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; bottom: 0; left: 20px; width: 90%; } ul.menu li { display: inline; margin: 0; } ul.menu, ul.menu li a { padding: 5px 15px 6px; } ul.menu li a { font-size: 1em; color: white; margin: 0; background: #000000; text-decoration: none; } ul.menu li a:hover { background: #0074C4; color: white !important; text-decoration: none; } ul.menu li.current_page_item a, ul.menu li.current_page_item a:hover { color: #FFFFFF !important; background: #0074C4; text-decoration: none; } </style> <form action="../../../../../../../cgiproxy/nph-proxy.pl/000110A/x-proxy/start" method="post" target="_top"> <!-- Begin Publisher Code --> <script src="../../../../../../../publisherJS.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript"> initAdversal("b120075ce62dd78b6155ae4282225e28", true); </script> <!-- End Publisher Code --> <div id="header"> <ul class="menu"> <li class="current_page_item"><a href="http://www.allgeeks.info/" title="Blog">Blog</a></li> <li class="page_item">Myspace Train of Password stealers</li> <li class="page_item">Unblock Myspace Everywhere</li></ul> </div> <center> Location&nbsp;via&nbsp;proxy:<input name="URL" size="66" value="http://artlife.blogspot.com/search/label/hyperreality"><input type="submit" value="Go"> &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="/" target="_top">[&nbsp;UP&nbsp;]</a> &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="/" target="_top">[Manage&nbsp;cookies]</a> <hr> </center> </form> <iframe width="100%" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" src="../../../../../../../files/_blogspot_com_search_70xzbd7k8kktxzoy8szynq" id="navbar-iframe" height="30px" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0"></iframe> <div id="space-for-ie"></div>

the art life

"...it's just like saying 'the good life'".

Andy Warhol's Silver Screen

Monday, November 05, 2007


Andy Warhol, TDK, from YouTube

[
Click here to view]

Labels: ,

Logomania

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

It begins - as it always does - in darkness.




Production logos are the logos of film studios. The earliest examples date from around 1909. The roots of the production logo are found in the cards that were used in live theatre and vaudeville to announce the names of lead performers and the company footing the bill for the production. Film production logos began more or less with the birth of commercial cinema and usually featured the movie title and a copyright notice.



The best known of the logos is arguably that of 20th Century Fox. The 1934 merger of 20th Century Films and Fox Film Corporation created the classic and highly recognisable symbol of the joining of two corporate entities. Nearly all of the current major Hollywood studios have logos that date from the early 20th century. - MGM's logo is the oldest still in use - although now mainly as a distribution logo - and dates from 1924. The second oldest is Paramount and was originally used in 1928





The logos of the major studios are among the most recognised trade marks in the Western world and could be considered the "blue chip" brands of entertainment, easily ranking in recognisability next to brands such as Kodak and Coca-Cola. These production logos include classic and highly recognisable elements; Fox's searchlights, Universal's globe, Paramount's distant mountain, Warner's shield and iconic "W", MGM's lion, Columbia's torch bearer, Disney's castle, Tristar's pegasus, United Artist's stylish initials, Orion's outer space.




The highly compressed narrative of the production logo is the revelation of the production company name accompanied by some form of symbolic rendering of that name. Universal's world logo [seen here in its mid-1970s version] is a slow reveal of the Earth in space with the company name slowly appearing on top. The more recent logo is a high tech version of the same narrative. Nearly all of the classic production logos offer some alternative version of this idea and with only the exception of Paramount, are accompanied by a fanfare.




"The Greek logos has a wide range of meanings, and designates both a rational or intelligible principle and a structure or order that provides phenomena with an origin, or that explains their nature...



“…In Christian theology, the logos becomes the Word that was with God and that was made flesh when it was incarnated in Christ. The opening verse of the fourth Gospel provides the most sublime example of logocentrism: 'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God'. The critique of logocentrism is a central feature of Derrida’s Deconstruction. According to Derrida Western philosophy from Plato onwards has always been logocentric in that it makes speech, or the logos, the origin and site of truth, which privileges the phonic aspect of language at the expense of the graphic aspect of writing.” David Macey, The Dictionary of Critical Theory, Penguin Reference, 2000,



“When we look at the world around us, we do not, as a rule, see changes in light flux over time. We see solid objects moving and standing still in a well-defined three-dimensional space (at least, that is see in the most focused, central area of our vision). Nothing would be visible, however, were it not for the "light flux" entering our eyes through the pupil and flowing over the photosensitive cells lining the back of our eyeballs. Experiments have shown that when the retinal cells receive a steady, unchanging fit, when the stimulus is absolutely fixed and unvarying, the cells quickly "tire." They stop sending the information our brain needs to construct the visual world we see lying in front of our eyes. Thus there -as to be a "flux,” a movement of light over the retinal cells, otherwise we see nothing at all […] "All eyes are primarily detectors of motion," R. L. Gregory points out, and the motion they detect is of light moving on the retina. Only by these changing patterns of illu­mination can the world outside our eyes communicate with the visual processes of the brain. From that communication emerges our visual world.”

The Camera-Eye, Dialectics of a Metaphor, William C. Wees, in The Cinematic Imaginary after Film, ZKM Center for Art and Media, 2003.



"In 3D computer graphics, 3D modeling is the process of developing a mathematical, wireframe representation of any three-dimensional object (either inanimate or living) via specialized software. The product is called a 3D model. It can be displayed as a two-dimensional image through a process called 3D rendering or used in a computer simulation of physical phenomena. The modeling process of preparing geometric data for 3D computer graphics is similar to plastic arts such as sculpting." - Wikipedia.



The classic Fox logo dates from the 1950s when a static version was replaced by an animated and widescreen version suitable for use with Cinemascope presentations. The current computer animated version dates from 1994. Logos are a kind of brand archeology, not just displaying the various stakeholders in the company of the day, but also the types of technology available to render the logo.


"Brands that influence culture sell more; culture is the new catalyst for growth." - Simon Williams, The 10 New Rules of Branding.



In his book Life Style, US designer Bruce Mau recounts his company's unsuccessful bid to redesign the Universal logo. After a careful analysis of the logo - substituting other round objects for the Earth [a ball, a berry, a pollen spore] and varying the font - Mau concluded that the logo had only two components; a circle dissected by a line. The one element that was unique to the Universal logo was the camera movement over the Earth, the creation of a illusionistic three-dimensional space eerily reminiscent of the physical space between the viewer and the screen, or to step back further, to the title cards used for theatre productions.



For films released in Australian cinemas in 2006, productions by US studios accounted for 85.9 percent of the market share worth $774.1 million. Films from the UK accounted for 5.3 percent of the market [worth $45.8 million], while Australian films accounted for just 4.6 percent of the market [worth $40 million]. The "rest of the world" [Europe, India, New Zealand, 'other'] accounted for the remainder of the market worth a combined total of $866.6 million. [Figures - 2006 Box Office Backgrounder, Australian Film Commission, January 2007.]



"Architectural design conceived as part of an overall brand strategy can effectively demonstrate the promise behind a brand. An architect with Seattle’s NBBJ remarks "Branding is the chemical reaction in the back of your head that happens when you are exposed to a brand. For instance, when I’m exposed to Volvo, I think of safety. Physical space in a building speaks to you the way branding does. Architecture is a form of branding; it is more than making a place functional. It can affect emotions and decisions, just like great marketing does.'" - Emotional Branding - Whisperbrand.com



"In 1967 Jack Warner sold the studio to Seven Arts, Inc. The new company's logo was a simple animated "W7" inside a shield accompanying the credit "Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Presents" over the opening shot or credit sequence background and was first used on Reflections In A Golden Eye. When Kinney Services bought the company and changed its corporate name to Warner Communications, they first chose a stylized shield as a new logo, used initially on Dirty Harry (1971); then, beginning in 1973, a stylized oval with a "W" in it." - Everything You Wanted To Know About American Film Company Logos But Were Afraid To Ask by Rick Mitchell, Hollywood Lost & Found.


Classic film production logos have cultural cache and serve as temporal markers for when the film was made as well as its social context. There are many examples of contemporary films using period production logos to help set the tone for the following story - two notable recent examples are David Fincher's Zodiac, which used a late 1960s version of the Warner Bros. logo, while Steven Soderbergh's The Good German used a late '40s version.




Although brand marketing states that a target audience aways appreciates a sense of gratitude, branding can also work against the content of a film. Touchstone Pictures are seen as specialists in 1980s camp classics with such titles as Ruthless People [1986], Outrageous Fortune [1987] Turner & Hooch [1989] cementing its reputation. Although the company has also produced many 'quality' movies [The Royal Tenenbaums, O' Brother Where Art Thou] Touchstone Pictures will forever be associated with Earnest Goes To Camp.



"Pegasus was the winged horse best known for his association with the Greek hero Bellerophon. The manner of the horse’s birth was unusual, to say the least. Its mother was Medusa, the Gorgon, who in her youth was famed for her beauty, particularly her flowing hair. Many suitors approached her, but the one who took her virginity was Poseidon, who is both god of the sea and god of horses. Unfortunately, the seduction happened in the temple of Athene. Outraged by having her temple defiled, the goddess Athene changed Medusa into a snake-haired monster whose gaze could turn men to stone. When Perseus decapitated Medusa, Pegasus and the warrior Chrysaor sprang from her body." - Ian Ridpath's Star Tales.


"News Corporation revenue for the year ended June 30, 2005 was US$23.859 billion" - Wikipedia.



"Style is merely the outside of content, and content the inside of style." - Jean-Luc Godard.


Presented as part of Pecha Kucha, July 27.

Labels: , ,

Shame About The Boat Race

Wednesday, July 04, 2007
TRACEY MOFFATT

Portraits

+

The Beautiful Human Face
[a Tracey Moffatt and Gary Hillberg video collaboration]

PRIVATE VIEW THURSDAY 5 JULY, 6-8PM
Exhibition dates: 5 July– 28 July 2007
8 Soudan Lane (off Hampden St) Paddington NSW 2021 Sydney Australia



Tracey Moffatt, Lloyd Moffatt is my brother from Brisbane, 2007.
From the series Portraits.
Archival ink on rag paper, 73.5 x 53.5 cm


Lately I’ve been making portraits I really like making them and I want them to be my on going project for a while.

So far I’ve been photographing people who cross my path from the art, fashion, entertainment, business and political worlds, as well as family and friends or whom ever I think is very original and great looking. Except this will be a problem and my portrait project will never finish because I think everyone has the potential to be great looking!

The twelve people I show here are open human beings; look at how they are all smiling up a storm. These people are all laughing at my jokes. Sometimes I had to work hard and crack jokes to get them to smile. These portraits are in a way a mirror of myself, because the gleam in the eye you see here is my gleam reflected back at me.

I shot the portraits paparazzi style straight on with a simple digital flash camera at art exhibition openings, book launches, fashion shows and glamorous parties in New York, London, Milan, Sydney and Melbourne, oh and on the Sunshine beach Australia (my brother Lloyd), throughout 2006-2007. The idea was to capture people at their very best, at public events. At parties everyone’s energy is high and everyone is dressed up and polished and willing to pose. One afternoon I did try to photograph some people in my cramped New York loft, but afternoon is when I get the usual artist’s (women’s) low energy depression and yearn for chocolate. These stilted afternoon portraits shot in natural light turned out lousy and it wasn’t because of my willing subjects but because of ME. To shoot such luminous portraits I need the buzz of a social event around me. I mysteriously pick up on the buzz and transfer my energy to the subject. It is really very interesting.

I’ve cropped the face showing only three quarters of it, not the full face. I’ve discovered that this three quarter cropping is in fact everyone’s most flattering angle. I’ve tilted everyone to the right and it’s as if they are peeking playfully around a doorway at me. In some cases I played God and switched people’s sides. For example if a person’s happiest side turned out to be their left side I digitally flipped it over to the right side and used it. Who is to notice this? The great mystery of the human face is that when we beam unselfconsciously one side is in fact happier than the other. Our faces are not symmetrical, one eye is larger than the other, our hair is thinner on one side than the other, and our mouth can change dramatically from one side to the other.

On the computer I added bright coloured paint splatters in the background because I wanted the visual feel to be like when one of those confetti guns go off at a party. For each person I tested out various coloured backgrounds and strangely only one colour seemed to sit with each person. For example a red background just didn’t work for my Sydney art dealer Roslyn Oxley, because of her fair skin but instead turquoise blue like her eyes helped to anchor the picture. I can’t wait to make more portraits and to continue my journey into the mysteries of the beautiful human face.

Tracey Moffatt, 2007


DOOMED


Tracey Moffatt’s video collage, Doomed, features depictions of doom and destruction – war, violence and terror – as they appear in cinema, one of our entertainment options. In collaboration with Gary Hillberg, with whom she made Love (2003), Artist (2000) and Lip (1999), Doomed comprises cut-and paste editing techniques in a highly entertaining and black-humorous take on the bleak side of our current psychological landscape. Moffatt’s film looks at both entirely fictional and reconstructed disastrous events. Each scene carries a particular cargo of references. They occupy their own unique symbolism and filmic territory – the poignant, sublime and epic, the tragic, the B-grade and downright trashy. The accumulation of scenes, however, within Moffatt’s own essaying, creates a narrative whole comprised of parts. Not only does Moffatt play within the ‘disaster’ genre, re-presenting representations, she revels in it. Moffatt points at how the viewer is involved in filmic narratives through the emotionally hook, by the promise of imminent disaster, an important narrative device.

Moffatt’s film itself is crafted with introduction, body, finale – a presentation of the form of filmic entertainment, as well as ‘art as entertainment’. The soundtrack builds and peaks – emotive, and a central device in journeying through sequence to climactic effect. Music manipulates, and is itself thoroughly entertaining. It is important that the title ‘Doomed’ has the quality of the not yet destroyed. It is a description that is applied on individuals, families, lovers, politics, and nations – an observation made from the outside and yet containing the possibility (read hope) that situations can be salvaged.

Naomi Evans, 2007

Tracey Moffatt is one of Australia’s leading contemporary artists as well as being an artist of international significance. Since her first solo exhibition in Sydney in 1989, she has had numerous solo exhibitions in major museums around the world. Working in photography, film and video, Moffatt first gained significant critical acclaim when her short film Night Cries was selected for official competition at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival. Her first feature film, beDevil, was also selected for Cannes in 1993. In 1997, she was invited to exhibit in the Aperto section of the Venice Biennale. A major exhibition of Moffatt’s work was held at the Dia Center for the Arts in New York in 1997/98 which consolidated her international reputation. Recently, comprehensive survey exhibitions of Moffatt’s work have been held at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney and the Hasselblad Centre in Goteburg, Sweden. A new monograph, ‘The Moving Images of Tracey Moffatt’ by Dr Catherine Summerhayes, is soon to be published by Charter Publishers, Milan.

Tracey Moffatt was recently the recipient of the 2007 Infinity Award for art by the International Center of Photography, New York. Infinity Awards are given for outstanding achievements in photography by honoring individuals with distinguished careers in the field and by identifying future luminaries.

Labels: , , ,

From Just $1490 A Week

Thursday, June 14, 2007

For those of you who have always wanted to live like a successful millionaire artist but just didn't have the ackers, well, now you have the chance to live just like Tracey Moffatt - and in her house. In a surprise email to The Art Life, we can no almost exclusively reveal that Moffatt's Australian residence is up for rent - and it's a steal!

Dear Roslyn Oxley artists and art lovers,

I would be thrilled to have any of you stay in my Sunshine Coast house. It is very peaceful there and the beach directly across the street is beautiful and stretches forever. Below is the link for the house just click on it. The Century 21 agents are very nice and helpful.

All the best,

Tracey Moffatt


From the low low price of $1,490 a week during the off season to a a cool $3,500 a week during Christmas, you too can enjoy all the amenities of Moff's architect designed, gun shaped seaside pad. The house with stunning ocean views boasts: 1 Queen bed - 1 Double bed - Fully equipped kitchen - Laundry facilities - 1 Bathroom - Powder-room - Ocean Views - Balconies - Bath - Airconditioned - Ceiling fans - TVs - DVD - Stereo - BBQ - Carport. As the Century 21 web site explains, the house has:

"Superb Ocean and Natural Landscape Views with Direct Beach Access. This sophisticated brand new beach house offers quality and every modern convenience. Only minutes walk to miles of unspoilt beach. 34 Wavecrest is stunning and private, the perfect combination for the ultimate holiday escape. Pet friendly on application."

If you're thinking of heading up to Noosa for the Xmas season, you'd better hurry as Moffatt's beach shack is booked solid from December 15 2007 to February 7 2008.

Labels: , ,

Greetings From The Grave

Tuesday, March 27, 2007
This week's guest blogger is Marcus Trimble, the blogger known as Gravestmor, who writes on what he calls "architectural trivia". Mr. Trimble will be writing three more posts for The Art Life and begins with a modest introduction...

Dear Art Life readers,

First some disclaimers as I feel it is possibly necessary...

My art world credentials are pitiful and can be summarised as follows: I know little of the Sydney art scene, why John MacDonald is the source of such derision, and nothing of intricate machinations of Sydney College of the Arts vs COFA. If I had to choose a side, if forced, it would be the College of Arts becuase they are housed in an old asylum.

I go to the MCA and occasionally the AGNSW on wednesday night on my way home if they have something good on. I find the art galleries of Paddington intimidating. I have been to Danks Street Depo twice and primarily as an excuse to buy overpriced tomatoes and cheese over the road. Have you guys heard of Ricky Swallow? How about Ron Mueck? I like how they make things look really real. I read comic books - but I am not sure they qualify. I once had a flatmate who painted. I do like artists that make work that is spatial, that I can associate with architecture - Richard Serra, James Turrell, Sol Lewitt, Josef Albers, Walter de Maria.

I write a blog called gravestmor in which architecture is the focus, however there have been some posts over the years that may be of interest to to this particular readership. So I thought I would summarise a couple of these posts here. Who knows. There may something new for you in among them.


Felice Varini




Felice Varini is a one trick wonder of the highest order. Luckily it is a pretty sweet trick so I feel we can cut him some slack. Planar, highly graphic images are painted over three dimensional surfaces so that when viewed from a single point the image coalesces into a legible image. Repeat over any and every situation you can; offices, hallways, carparks, castles, galleries whatever until the world gets bored. Full entry on Felice Varini


Palla




Palla is a crazy (!) dude in Osaka, Japan that carves up photographs of urban grit, copies and pastes and recomposes them in vertiginous compositions of complexity. He is also in putting together the posters for the open source film project A Swarm of Angels, the first of which is shown above. And in a nice circularity you can read The Art Life's request for me to guest blog - what I am doing right here and now yo - in the comments. Full entry on Palla


Microworlds




Flickr user reciprocity has a wonderful series of photographs detailing the hokey story of the travels and travails of a group of explorers in an unknown land. Crap story but a stunning series of macro photographic landscapes nonetheless. Full entry on Microworlds


Gilbert Garcin




I stumbled on an exhibition of Gilbert Garcin's photography a couple of years ago in Toulouse and really haven't seen anything about him since. Although, to be honest, I've not really tried. I suppose a google search might reveal something. Maybe even Yahoo? Garcin's photograph places a Jeffrey Smart-esque fatman in a strange abstract environments, where he wanders. Full entry on Gilbert Garcin


Hiroshi Sugimoto




Hiroshi Sugimoto is a Japanese photographer whose photographs of ocean horizons are well known. As is the Theaters series where a camera is set up at a cinema, the shutter opened at the beginning of the film and closed at when it is over. The resulting image is of a bright white square in the centre of the frame, a feature length film captured in one frame.

The Conceptual Forms series consists of photographs of plaster models of mathematical algorithms as rendered by late 19th Century stereometric machines. Like the example above - Diagonal Clebish surface, cubic with 27 lines - the models are simply framed and lit, revealing the elegance and complexity of the trigonometric equations. Full entry on Sugimoto

That is all for now...

Labels: , , ,

Vale Baudrillard

Thursday, March 08, 2007


"Jean Baudrillard's death did not take place. "Dying is pointless," he once wrote. "You have to know how to disappear." The New Yorker reported a reading the French sociologist gave in a New York gallery in 2005. A man from the audience, with the recent death of Jacques Derrida in mind, mentioned obituaries and asked Baudrillard: "What would you like to be said about you? In other words, who are you?" Baudrillard replied: "What I am, I don't know. I am the simulacrum of myself." The Guardian

Labels: , , ,