- words - typed VS hand drawn
- analogue waves VS digital code
- aesthetic of digital perfect VS analogue line quality
- hand drawn Vs hand drawn but edited digitally
- representation of sound waves
- analogue VS digital development technologically
- Analogue images - reproduced in 4 different ways
- digital code
- Wacom analogue but digitally
- Clock Wacom analogue/digital, edited analogue 2 ways
- hand drawn same image 2ce (differences)
- lino cut image printed multiple times
Saturday, 31 December 2016
Studio Task 2 Journal Pages list
Journal Pages
Study Task 3 - Revolver
Revolver- the Beatles
Descriptive Analysis
Descriptive Analysis
- Beautiful line drawings mixed with photographs collage
- simple outlines of the face - confidence
- hair has great line quality-tone
- eyes/face/ear collages from photographs adding depth
- very busy in the centre but space is left on the right
- black and white image
- faces express character - deferent angles McCartney "he knew us well enough to capture us rather beautifully in the drawings"
- focuses on the members of the band - shows their banta/friendship through the collaged imagery
Contextual Analysis
- Label- Parlophone
- August 5 1966 - 3 days later in US
- Grammy Award for Best Album Cover, Graphic Arts 1967
- 7th Album
- Paul McCartney " we suddenly thought 'hey, what does a record do? it revolves"
- Band loves a pun (not a gun)
- one of the earliest albums of the psychedelic era
- Klaus Voormann - spacey collage of drawings complemented songs that reflected their LSD experimentation during its production
- pen and black ink drawings
- collaged black and white photos taken by Bob Whitaker (to stand out in the muddle of colourful album covers) 'the artist chose black and white in an act of rebellion against the fashion for psychedelic covers'
- audience - Beatles fans - males and females interested in "classic" rock
- was payed £40- limit for cover art, didn't want to ask for more
Study Task 3 - Unknown Pleasures
Unknown Pleasures Information
Descriptive Analysis/ Contextual Analysis
Descriptive Analysis/ Contextual Analysis
· Inverted/super imposed image of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Astronomy
· diagrams from the book
·
· black lines on white background
(where Joy Division drummer Stephen Morris saw the design
· artist Peter Saville
· The image was computer generated at
the Arecibo Radio Observatory in Puerto Rico
The radiation
seems to come from local objects within the galaxy, and may be associated with
oscillations of white dwarf or neutron stars.
· Diagram first appeard with turquoise
background in January 1971 issue of Scientific American, and is credited to Jerry Ostriker
· made a second cameo in Graphis Diagrams in 1974
The pulsar
itself was first discovered in 1967 by Jocelyn Bell Burnell
Saville describes it as a “comparative path
demonstration of frequency from a signal of a pulsar.”
Each horizontal line, reaching a series of
peaks close to the middle of the graph, is observed data from a this pulsar,
and there are several of them stacked together.
Saville goes on, “What you’re seeing is a
comparative chart of the frequency and the accuracy of this signal.”
So this image, perceived as so simple, is not
really simple at all but the result of astronomical readings that led in part
to humanity’s understanding of this one component of the cosmos.
release on Manchester’s Factory Records in June 1979
has captured the imagination of a
diverse audience, ranging from reclusive adolescents sulking in their bedroom
to celebrity scientists socialising with friends
At the time Saville created the
album cover, he had recently graduated from Manchester Polytechnic with a first
class degree in graphic design and was art director and co-founder of Factory
Records.
subtle combination of graphic
techniques and typography to express sonic qualities of the album in addition
to its enigmatic title, song lyrics, and stylistic choices made by members of
Joy Division.
Saville’s elegantly understated
design work and the emergence of post-punk aesthetics, it is worth taking a closer look at specific ways in which the
album cover casts light (and shadow) on scientific culture and practice of
radio astronomy.
based on a scientific diagram of
an astrophysical object known as a pulsating star or ‘pulsar’.
the repetitive features of the
pulsar diagram reminded him of Morris’ machine-like drumming style.
originally referred to as ‘CP
1919’ before being dubbed ‘pulsar’ by science journalist Anthony Michaelis, was reported in 1968 by the astronomer James Hewish and his colleagues
in the scientific journal Nature.
the article in Nature visualized the regular pulsar
radio emissions acquired with a radio telescope using diagrams that consisted
of two or three jagged lines or pen traces of the pulses.
The composition and colour pallete
(or lack of colour) created the impression of a black background that
accentuates the ambivalent feature made up of recursive white lines. Again, the
reverse cover is completely black except for minimal text printed in small
white typeface.
During his studies as an
undergraduate design student, Saville developed a keen interest in typography,
particularly the work of European typographers
The front cover is completely
devoid of text, adding to the anonymity of the pulsar image, and minimal text
is featured on the reverse side of the cover, inside cover, and record labels.
Interestingly, the Helvetica
typeface on the Unknown Pleasures album was introduced in the 1950s. Helvetica has been used by
designers to because it lacks ornamentation or overt reference to other fonts. Swiss
It is ironic that Ian Curtis
experienced episodes of depression and the typeface used on the cover of
Unknown Pleasures was the same as packaging used for the drugs widely used to
treat depression. Minimalist graphic design and typography used by
Saville on Unknown Pleasures are
consistent with the clinical precision and functionality of packaging designed to
convey information without ornamentation or overt
reference to other graphical styles. In many ways the typeface is an ideal
choice for the sombre and introspective post-punk era, worlds apart from the
furious annihilation of mainstream culture and commercial packaging unleashed
by designers such as Jamie Reid with his album cover design for the 1977 Sex Pistols single God Save the Queen.
en.oxforddictionaries.com
Pulsar " A celestial object, thought to be rapidly rotating neutron star, that emits regular pulses of radio waves and other electro-magnetic radiating at time of up to one thousand pulses per sencond'
en.oxforddictionaries.com
Pulsar " A celestial object, thought to be rapidly rotating neutron star, that emits regular pulses of radio waves and other electro-magnetic radiating at time of up to one thousand pulses per sencond'
Study Task 4 - important words
Read through my essay and my notes and concatonated words which I felt were important:
- aura
- reproduced
- accessible
- photograph
- women-objects
- experiences/location
- digital-no quality lost
- original - see first time
- clever replicas
- editing
- analogue, scanned, enhanced
- digital, fast
- unpredictable
- alchemy
- alluring
- craft
- versions
- quality
Friday, 30 December 2016
Elektronische Musik
Elektronische Musik
- The title comes from a 1949 thesis by Werner Meyer-Eppler called Elektronische Klangerzeugung: Elektronische Musik und Synthetische Sprache. (Electronic sound generation: electronic music and synthetic speech).
- Karlheinz Stockhausen collaborated to become pioneers of it in Cologne
- There was a CD called Elektronische Musik 1952-1960 by Stockhausen (by this time quite a famous avante-garde composer)
- 2 CD collection called Deutsche Elektronsiche Musik which is a compilation of German electronic music between the 1970s and 1980s which has become a collectors item
- Band sunder that went on the loose banner of Kraut Rock (Can, Faust, Neu)
Thursday, 8 December 2016
Study Task 2 - Triangulation Start
- Read them
- Makes notes
- Identify common themes
- Summarise
- Context What are they saying about the overarching theme?
- Link to this title
- Analogue is coming back into fashion
- Analogue has certain qualities that can’t be got elsewhere
- The past is starting to repeat itself
- People have seen them as radically different
- Machine and handmade are radically different
- This is much more complex than the title suggest
- Analogue is the soul
Walter Benjamin research
https://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/walter-benjamin- art-aura- authenticity/
Marxist fashion
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Benjamin
5 July 1892 – 26 September 1940
Combining elements of German idealism, Romanticism, Western Marxism, and Jewish mysticism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Work_of_Art_in_the_Age_of_Mechanical_Reproduction
- Written at a time when Adolf Hitler was already Chancellor of Germany, it was produced, Benjamin wrote, in the effort to describe a theory of art that would be useful for the formulation of revolutionary demands in the politics of art.
- He argued that, in the absence of any traditional, ritualistic value, art in the age of mechanical reproduction would inherently be based on the practice of politics
- One of a key group of European intellectuals of the time
- He looks at the changes in societies values over time, the manner in which human sense perception is organised, the medium in which it is accomplished, is determined not only by nature but by historical circumstances as well
- Benjamin’s main points were that art had a uniqueness, an aura that can never be reproduced.
- He believed there were some advantages to reproduction but mainly that the original was the key, the source, the most important thing. So digital would have been awful for him!
- John Berger drew on ideas from the essay for Ways of Seeing. Bergers point, which he made far more explicitly than did Benjamin, was that the modern means of production have destroyed the authority of art: For the first time ever, images of art have become ephemeral, ubiquitous, insubstantial, available, valueless, free.
- Benjamin was concerned by the mechanisation of art but Berger went one step further and said that photography changed the nature of art altogether. It’s to do with time manner and place. You don’t need to go to see art. Art is everywhere. And it is uncontrolled, varied. If it comes through certain media like TV or film then the addition of sound can also manipulate how you feel about things.
- Ironically we are suing reproductions- photos- 0f the original to try to get people to come and see the originals.
John Berger research
Ways of seeing 1972
https://demeliou.wordpress.com/2012/11/25/a-quick- analysis-of- john-bergers- ways-
of-seeing/
- Between 1500-1900 the oil painting was main medium of visual art, from 1900 onwards the photograph became the main medium of visual art.
- In parts of the book Berger addresses the way the portrayal of a women’s body in art (painting and photographs) has changed over time from the Renaissance onwards.
- Men look at women, while women watch themselves being looked at.
- Pretty much what Berger is getting at is the historical objectification of women by men.
http://culturalstudiesnow.blogspot.co.uk/2011/05/john-berger- ways-of- seeing-summary- 3.html
- Analyses the manner in which men and women are culturally represented, and the subsequent results these representations have on their conduct and self as well and mutual perception.
1. Historical representation of women by men allows for the objectification of women.
Men make images of women. Women are to be looked at.
2. Also Berger was really interested in how photography changed the meaning of
art…..(this is important for you cos it links into the analogue, digital argument)
David Douglas
- He says analogue has become very versatile due to digital. Replicas are very clever and there are so many ways of editing things. It’s difficult to make a distinction now as to whether something is analogue or not analogue. He goes on to say that if something is repeated it’s repeated but he compares this to a wave so even if waves are breaking they break slightly differently each time. Douglas questions Benjamin’s whole idea of aura.
- He asks the question is aura only attained in the original or do we feel it each time we personally see something new ‘here is where the aura resides not in the things itself….revise’
- Referring to digital he talks about quality. You can make as many different versions as you want but you don’t lose quality. Douglas payed on Benjamin’s title- he clearly wanted to converse with Benjamin. He was triangulating himself…he was questioning himself through Benjamin
Phil Taylor
- Believes everyone can be an artist. Nowadays you can create good quality things at home. We are all impatient and digital is fast so that’s why people like it
- arts really easy to access, to find cos of technology and doesn’t need to be an event, a visit anymore. This links closely to Berger’s view .For the first time ever, images of art have become ephemeral, ubiquitous, insubstantial, available, valueless, free
Common themes from all 4
Authenticity and aura All 4 concerned with this in their different ways
and are all concerned about the easiness of mechanization and digital- they seem to appreciate this less than the qualities of the original- whatever the original is. They don’t all agree on the meaning of original. E.g. Douglas says original is the first time you come across something. So for Douglas the first time you see something might be a time when you see its aura. The aura is present because it’s your first time. He argues against Benjamin and says ‘what begins to emerge in the 1st digital decade is a fine grained sensitivity to the unique qualities of every copy’. This is directly in opposition to Benjamin.
Benjamin believes the location of a piece of arts original use value makes it authentic and
when it’s separated it has a different function. Berger says that digital can distort the
original. It can have had so much done to it that it changes the way you think about it. It is
different to when you see its analogue in its original ‘home’. Taylor says that digital is fast
and that it is easier to find art digitally and that this might discourage us from seeing the
originals in ‘their home’, or as Berger might call it their location. Berger believes ‘the days of
pilgrimage’ to art venues are over. Taylor is arguing however that it’s a good thing that art
is everywhere and can be seen and accessed by everyone whereas Berger argues this has
changed the way we see art and that somehow we have lost something.
Analogue has become popular again because of vintage authentic desire, especially with
young people,
‘there is undoubtedly a draw toward the more intimate and perhaps authentic relationship
an artist can have with….
The alchemy of analogue is more unpredictable and therefore more
alluring
context date, time of writing, summary of text
x 4
then a paragraph that summarises main points and refers one of these people to another
x4
then another joining section where they are all talking to each other
then link to title
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