Thursday, January 28, 2016

Process Piece Workshop

Process Piece (40 pts.)

Students will work in pairs to produce a 1-2 minute audio piece documenting some type of process. In this case, a process is an act of human labor with a beginning, middle and an end. Ar tist statements should should include a discussion of both form and content in their creations, as well as both the process and the product of their own creative efforts. 

Let's talk about Process for the sake of Process:

Mandala (Sanskrit: मण्डल, lit, circle) is a spiritual and ritual symbol in Indian religions, representing the universe.





Now let's talk about something more abstract:



Robert Morris, Untitled (Pink Felt), 1970



Marina Abramović and Ulay, Relation in Time, 1977


Now let's workshop your pieces.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Round Robin Workshop


Round Robin (20 pts.)

Each student will collaborate on a series of five ‘tiny stories.’ By ‘tiny story’, I mean a narrative (with something that might resemble a beginning, middle and end) of less than 30 words, accompanied by an illustration (drawn, photographed, computer generated, etc.). By ‘collaborate,’ I mean that each student will complete the series’ 1st tiny story, forward it to a second (pre-determined) student, who will complete the 2nd tiny story in the series, who will then forward that 2nd story (NOT 1 & 2) to a third (pre- determined) student who will continue the process until each student has contributed 5 tiny stories, each to a different series. Then we’ll see how they turn out. Artist statements should include a discussion of how form and content, narrative and theme, individual story and series correlate and compliment each other. 

Speaking of narratives formed from a disconnected image,

Here's a thing I found called "Two Monks Inventing Things"




MONK #1: ok i KNOW i can do this
MONK #2: you definitely can
this one’s a freebie
it’s just other monks
think about what we look like and draw it
MONK #1: ahhh i want to peek but i feel like thats cheating
i honestly cant remember if we have shoulders and chests rn

MONK #2: give it your best guess





MONK #1: what do birds eat
MONK #2: other birds mostly
MONK #1: like different kinds of birds, or something else
MONK #2: no birds only eat exactly the same kind of birds that they are




MONK #1: how many people would you guess fit in a church
MONK #2: like at a time?

MONK #1: one, probably?

MONK #2: yeah probably one, or almost one but not quite





MONK #1: how tall are most women
MONK #2: tower sized but normal heads
MONK #1: cool thank you
MONK #2: here to help
MONK #1: ooh while i have you though
most dogs look –
MONK #2: emotionally destroyed
MONK #1: got it, ty






MONK #1: so when a dog and a bird make out
MONK #2: right
MONK #1: it’s usually the bird that’s on top
right?
MONK #2: yeah
usually
MONK #1: great


Here's another thing:

"Exquisite Corpse Party Game"
Requirements: Paper, Writing Stick, Friends
  • Get a piece of paper.
  • Everyone write a tiny story or narrative on their paper.
  • Pass it to the next person, who will draw an image based on the tiny story the person before wrote.
  • Fold the paper, so the original story cannot be seen by the next person.
  • Pass the paper.
  • The next person writes a tiny story based on the image (but not the first story).
  • Continue until everyone has gone.







Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Music Mosaic Workshop

Music Mosaic (20 pts.)


Each student will create a series of 8 - 12 images that visually complement a piece of instrumental music (‘instrumental’ means without lyrics. Also, no lm scores. Sorry folks). Images may be drawn, painted, photographed or created digitally, but must be the creation of the student (not thieved from Google Images) and must be created for the purpose of the assignment (not sampled from mission photos. Snooze!). Ar tist statements should in- clude a discussion of how both the form (line, color, composition, etc.) and content (representation, narrative, etc.) of their creations correlate with their chosen piece of music. (Students will also include a link to their chosen piece of music in their blog post.)

Here's an example of a narrative, or at least a physical representation, being created from the metaphysical: a song.





Here's a song: