Tuesday, February 25, 2014
"Contemporary" is a Mere Convention
This Saturday I visited the Institute of Contemporary Art of Boston. Already partial to new developments in art and the trend away from tradition, I was drawn in by the unique architecture of the building from the outset. The pieces inside of the building were just as thought provoking as the facade, but I quickly saw a pattern being developed. Each piece and the building itself picked a specific, very small piece of the grand total of the "traditional view of art" and performed variations on it. Descriptions of the works always took note of exactly what the artist was trying to accomplish, whether it push the boundaries of the paint medium or to redefine a way of looking at some phenomenon. Every piece had a very specific point, whether it was aesthetic or contextual. The building itself was no more than a modernist, minimalist interpretation of classicism, balancing stark and solid geometric forms with an impending sense of dis-harmonic construction. Like new age sculpture, the ICA itself was built to tread the visual line between old solidarity and new fragility. The pieces inside were purpose driven, and often a very distinct historical aesthetic would come into play to achieve that purpose.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Putting Hospitable back into Hospitals
This is one of the sights in Dana-Farber that is asking for patient art. Behind it is the Dana-Farber patient information center, which makes it an ideal location. |
This wall, opposite pictures, could be better used for patient art as well. |
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Hopefully Not Half-Ass
A very aggravating sickness afflicted me this weekend, and a fever and cough drove me inside for the (I hope you'll understand, Prof. O'Donnell). However, I can still continue with the narrative of street art, in an albeit unconventional way.
This Wednesday there was an awesome snowstorm and we received probably 6-10 inches of snow. BU cancelled classes for the day, and being adult college students, many people decided to head to the Esplanade for a huge snowball fight and snowman-making extravaganza. When went out to see the remnants of the battle, pictured above, I was amused by the variety of snowmen that I saw. Some conventional, some unconventional, they all have a unique style that is surprising, given the generally limited materials (snow, carrots, sticks?) that a builder usually employs when building a snowman.
I tried to make it out and see the city, but only managed to get as far as Ruggles Bus Station on Northeastern's campus to photograph a mural hanging at the south end of the bus station. Before I could make a full tour of the campus, I had to flee the wintry conditions and nurse my cold.
Since I was stuck inside because of the damn cold and my damn cold, I decided to flesh out the idea that the snowmen are completely spontaneous art pieces, not necessarily created by artists. Essentially, the ice hotels of Scandinavia and China are built by professional snowman-makers! Boston's paintbox program follows this model, as many artists are able to participate.
Digging through the pictures on my computer, I ran across shots I took in Italy, this summer. Not only did thinking of warmth make things seem a little brighter, I also discovered that I had some very well documented instances of spontaneous "layman" art from my trip abroad. We never found out what or who was behind the stickers, but all over Florence street signs were altered with amusing, simplistic images. Additionally, I ran across some really cool graffiti and tag; Europe is a graffiti haven, and the contrast of rebellious new art to stately old architecture is something to behold, an aesthetic of precariously balanced opposites.
This Wednesday there was an awesome snowstorm and we received probably 6-10 inches of snow. BU cancelled classes for the day, and being adult college students, many people decided to head to the Esplanade for a huge snowball fight and snowman-making extravaganza. When went out to see the remnants of the battle, pictured above, I was amused by the variety of snowmen that I saw. Some conventional, some unconventional, they all have a unique style that is surprising, given the generally limited materials (snow, carrots, sticks?) that a builder usually employs when building a snowman.
I tried to make it out and see the city, but only managed to get as far as Ruggles Bus Station on Northeastern's campus to photograph a mural hanging at the south end of the bus station. Before I could make a full tour of the campus, I had to flee the wintry conditions and nurse my cold.
Since I was stuck inside because of the damn cold and my damn cold, I decided to flesh out the idea that the snowmen are completely spontaneous art pieces, not necessarily created by artists. Essentially, the ice hotels of Scandinavia and China are built by professional snowman-makers! Boston's paintbox program follows this model, as many artists are able to participate.
Digging through the pictures on my computer, I ran across shots I took in Italy, this summer. Not only did thinking of warmth make things seem a little brighter, I also discovered that I had some very well documented instances of spontaneous "layman" art from my trip abroad. We never found out what or who was behind the stickers, but all over Florence street signs were altered with amusing, simplistic images. Additionally, I ran across some really cool graffiti and tag; Europe is a graffiti haven, and the contrast of rebellious new art to stately old architecture is something to behold, an aesthetic of precariously balanced opposites.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Graffiti: The New Impressionism
As a Millennial influenced incessantly by pop culture (whether I want to be or not), I find it very difficult to understand the viewpoint that graffiti is not art - yet, at the same time, I can see to an extent where the other side is coming from. By this I mean that I understand a property owner's concern for their own property's safety. If I lived on Bay State Road, I would surely not want a tagger to spray "Sploog" or some other nonsense on my wall. However, if a tagger created a piece that looked even half as cool as the above incarnation of the beloved Boston Terrier (I prefer to think that he's Rhett, and not anybody's random dog), I would probably feel obligated to pay the person. It seems very difficult to deny that Rhett is art.
In the history of any artistic craft, be it architecture, painting, or sculpting, one can readily discern the competition between innovation and tradition; this is the tectonic region in which new forms of expression are born, mixing a little of both. It is very often that the artist who intuitively melds these competing desires (the desire of the artist versus the desire of all the other artists) is considered to be a seminal one.
So can graffiti really become a seminal form of expression, having as large an impact on culture as Impressionism, as my title suggests? I think so.
In my view, the debate over whether or not street art can be called such has arisen because of the way that the artists themselves do their work. I would seek to more clearly define the terms "graffiti" and "tag". Such a method might not eliminate the question at hand, but then again, will we ever have a perennial definition of what art is? Probably not.
First, we must define these terms; but in order to do that, we must look at the art that covers the urban landscape that we inhabit for purposes of discerning the intent behind the work. From observation, it seems logical to conclude that there are three main reasons why an artist makes the decision to break the law and "vandalize" a piece of property that they do not own, namely: aesthetic preference, attention seeking, and message communication.
Obviously, any piece of graffiti is born of any combination of the three, but we can use this idea that all graffiti is based on one of these three ideas to help define the word "graffiti" itself. By my definition, graffiti is street art that favors aesthetic preference and/or message communication over attention seeking, whereas tags are street art that favor message communication and/or attention seeking over aesthetic preference.
This image is a perfect representation of all three of these desires, and helps to visually explain what I mean by "aesthetic preference". In the above shot from Google Images, there are tags and graffiti commingled. Obviously, the only piece of graffiti on this wall is the Banksy piece in the middle, the image of "FOLLOW YOUR DREAMS" and the workman who pasted "CANCELLED" over the message. All the others are tags. It would be very difficult to argue that graffiti is not art: it has a composition, a message, a subject, etc., all hallmarks of a real piece of art.
However, the tags are a different story. Whether it reads "ORGA", "Mo Fuck", or is simply a heart shape, the trait that makes tags, tags is the lack of composition, which is to say lack of aesthetic preference. Tags are floating images without context, the tagger wants the viewer to appreciate the art for its own sake - the problem is, tags often cause the viewer to say, "I could do that."
This is, I think, the real way to split the umbrella of street art into two categories. In fact, it is from this distinction that I coined the aforementioned traits of street art. The taggers, among other reasons like having to move quickly to avoid patrols of pigs waiting to bust them for vandalism, do not favor aesthetic preference because they do not have one, or at least not one strong enough to form the basis of an entire composition. Although this sounds like a somewhat foolish way to divide graffiti and tag on the surface, it becomes more intuitive the more it is thought over. We do not call a child's drawings "art" because the child has no conception of "art", whereas we do call an adult's drawings that look like a child's "art" because the artist who drew them has at least some conception of "art". In the same way, most people could perform a tag, but very few can call themselves a street artist.
Abstract art is a prime example of this. Upon viewing, many who do not understand art say, "I could do that. It looks like he dribbled paint on a white canvas." From experience, I can say that these do not know what they're talking about. Abstract art seems simple, but in the end it all comes down to formatting. You can tell an abstract piece done by an artist from one done by a person dribbling paint on a canvas because the former displays composition whereas the latter does not.
Ultimately, I think that graffiti (not tags) can be considered the Impressionism of our era: it breaks social norms, it breaks artistic norms, it has influenced the way an entire generation perceives art. One need look no further than the success of Shepard Fairey's "Hope" campaign poster for Barrack Obama in 2008, or the wild rise to prominence of his OBEY clothing line. His style is firmly rooted in graffiti, and is prime example that not every street artist is a street rat.
Shepard Fairey's mural in Northeastern dorm International Village. The mural was created in 2009 for the front entrance of the building. Notice the blend of aesthetic preference and message communication... and the fact that Fairey's name appears in the composition not once. |
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