Monday, February 29, 2016

'Murica

As I awake that morning every year, a sense of anticipation overtakes me.  I put on all the garb I picked out the day before, prepare for the food I’ll be consuming, the sun that is going to turn my skin into a shade like unto an apple for I’ll forget to reapply the sunscreen.  I know I must savor every moment of this day for it is one I enjoy more than Christmas, more than my own birthday.  The 4th of July.  The time that my patriotism shines through most, when I recall the ideals that made this country great, remembering our founding fathers as well as all the soldiers who sacrificed their lives for us.  My country.  America.  My home.  
I marvel at the circumstances that surrounded the establishment of this country.  The founding fathers created a government that really worked, that was divined by God.  A country that would be full of freedoms, liberty, and justice.  Equality, a melting pot of all the cultures that I’ve come to fall in love with.  It is meant to be a country for all people.  It’s supposed to unite the countries of the world, giving people a place of refuge, a place where they can be who they are and share their culture with us all.  It was created by immigrants and should allow all to partake.
Though I love my country very much because of the foundation on which it stands the principles of freedom, equality, and justice, I know it doesn’t have the same rapport it used to or the same ideals.  Americans, to quote my grandfather,” are too fat, dumb, and happy.”  The American image is one of obese white males who only care about guns and McDonalds, naïve to the issues facing the country and the world.  People on the outside looking at America see these people who are entitled and over proud of a country that has veered so far away from the principles it was founded on that it just makes us look like bigots. 
I wanted to extrapolate the difference between my pride for my country and how differently I see it from how the world sees it.  I took the iconic picture of George Washington crossing the Delaware River because it was a pivotal point in our success in the Revolutionary war and envelops a man that had the right vision for our country.  I was hoping the images I superimposed on the image would be more offensive, but it sort of turned more humorous like the “Untold adventures of George Washington” imgur account.  Yet, it still works to bring the message across with the use of humor.  It was interesting the correlation with my topic and the reading talking about creating an idea into a cult.  Essentially the idea of America could be the greatest cult there is, people dress up in the garb, everyone knows the quotes of the America characters, and they pick apart the original story.


Monday, February 22, 2016

The Hand in the Salt

Sculpting is a unique art form in that it can take the thoughts of the artist, the vision that an artist has and put it into a tangible 3D object.  These objects can simply represent something else like emotions or an idea.  My inspiration of creating this hand came from my constants thoughts throughout the past weeks on hands themselves.  The design of hands, the functions of them, what they can represent in and of themselves has taken ahold of my fascination as of late.  From these thoughts I was able to form a hand I pictured in my mind, all the little lines, the bevels of the veins on the hand, the intricate details were represented through the sculpting of the material in my hands. 
Though one of the greatest aspects of this medium is being able to actually take the medium into your hands and shape it into an object that others can touch and feel all the details, it does have limitations.  The object itself can’t have the depth of focus like a painting nor can it move like a movie.  These objects created through sculpting can represent great ideas or thoughts however.  For me, I thought it was interesting to take this inanimate material and animate it in a sense into something that is so familiar to most people.  Along with this, like in this picture where I’m essentially having a handshake with my creation, it represents the camaraderie with the human race.  Hands are our way of contact with others, where we can give a pat on the shoulder in reassurance or hold hands with our sweethearts.  It represents the basic needs of human nature. 


Reading over Scott McCloud’s little comic strip on comics, reminded me of how old sculpting is as an art form.  Just like he talked about, comics in our day are similar to the “comics” of ancient Egypt, my sculpture resonates with those of ancient Greece.  The times of Michelangelo’s David and others can be seen through not only my little sculpture, but other artist’s works for the fathers of this art form will subsequently be shown throughout the generations since them. 

A quote from Philip Guston expressing his thoughts on this art form, I feel fits well to what I was explaining with this work,” painting and sculpture are very archaic forms.  It’s the only thing left in our industrial society where an individual alone can make something with not just his own hands, but brains, imagination, heart maybe.”  Though it wasn’t necessarily imaginative to create a hand, the thoughts behind creating it, produced a unique perspective into the hand itself.  Ultimately it created an ironic aspect for it was hands working that modeled this hand representing the work and glory that hands can do. 



Monday, February 8, 2016

Historical Story

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B_RPsR220rfeM3N5b1JiNFYyU2c/view?usp=sharing
      We began playing around with the thought of a Japanese man in America knowing about the attack on Pearl Harbor and trying to warn everyone.  We had too many problems trying to figure out how to start it, then we thought of the bombing of Hiroshima.  As this idea began brewing between our discussion, we saw a potential script.  We thought it would be interesting playing around with the idea of a Japanese man living in America, working for the military, knowing about the bombing of Hiroshima and have this conflict of which country he would be loyal to.  Would he be loyal to America, his new home, or Japan, his homeland?
       We saw correlation with our script to the "After the Deluge" reading through both showing life as normal at the beginning.   People in both times are going about their business, but word comes to them that something big might be happening.  Some are more skeptical than others, but soon it becomes evident that this normal life they have been living is going to be drastically changed.
       We found an article that would help propel his choice, “After Internment: Seattle’s Debate Over Japanese Americans' Right to Return Home” by Jennifer Speidel.  In this she mentioned some of the hatred for the Japanese in America after the internment camps in which is when our story would take place.  There were so many people who despised these people, would treat them very poorly.  Adding this aspect to our script with the one soldier attacking Tadashi, only heightened his reason to help his home country of Japan, but by so doing betraying his new home.
       Differing from most films about this time which show the perspective of the Americans’ side of the war, our story is from the perspective of the Japanese.  It is similar to Letters from Iwo Jima which is the standpoint of the Japanese during the war.  Showing both of these sides is crucial to humanize these horrid acts these countries inflicted upon each other.  It gives this sense that there was heartache for all, but especially for those citizens who didn’t want to take part in their country’s fight.  Our script shows the struggle for those Japanese citizens living in America who felt the impact of both the Pearl Harbor attack and the Japan bombings.
       When delivering such horrific news as the Hiroshima bombing, there isn’t need for any flourished or prophetic language to deliver it.  We just needed the facts.  “This Day in History” on the History Channel website provided the needed information for August 6, 1945.  It gave us the name of the bomb, which was crucial for our dialogue in providing at first skeptic remarks and then to a clear statement of destruction.  The simple delivery of them meant for a greater impact on our main character.  

Monday, February 1, 2016

The Process of Elimination


We focused on a process of elimination, exploring the cognitive happenings of people (us) as the decision was made as to where we should go to eat. Even though things like this are widely known as “processes” it is not often pondered as it happens. This sort of casual, friendly and non-spectacular conversation is the sort that anyone would overlook; nothing big happens, we don’t, by the end of the conversation, come out with anything tangible. It is, however, a definite clear process—and one that is really quite elementary. Interactions with other humans tend to all be processes in their own right, this is simply one form they can take.
The process itself seemed, at first, a little worrying to us. We thought that the presence of the phone that was recording, the knowledge that we were having a conversation, would somehow impede our subconscious willingness to be normal in this situation. However, it became very clear very quickly that there was nothing special to this. There was no reason to worry about being insincere; it was very natural. The product, while not immediately tangible, was a decision made mutually through the collaboration of two people in civilized, friendly conversation. It highlights how familiar we all are with processes in a general sense. It is likely a natural thing for an artist to hear “find a process” and assume that it’s a hard thing to do, because we’re all artists and since when is anything easy? But in reality, most everything we do is some sort of process, even if the product is just a decision about pizza places.
Though we didn’t necessarily have in mind the videos that were the preparation for this assignment, the product turned out to be much like Dean’s little video.  Each process wasn’t fantastical in nature, nothing overtly special, but very simple and a phenomenon that occurs often in everyday life for people.  Whether it’s the struggle of having to gather a family together to read the scriptures or the struggle of making the decision of where to eat.  There are always factors involved that can halt the process, one person can derail the whole event by disagreeing, but in so doing it adds to the process, making it a part of life.
        When we had the completed product, we both discovered a mutual appreciation for the webseries Good Mythical Morning.  What the hosts do on this daily Youtube show is have a conversation about a plethora of subjects, improvising the entirety of what they say like unto what we did.  These internetainers opening is always “Let’s talk about that”, leading into this process of a conversation that can have many disagreements, or they’ll even be debating over a final decision like what the world’s ugliest animal is.  In this sense, we saw that our process was of the same fruition as the daily episodes of this show.  


Heather Moser

Grace Taylor