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Showing posts with label General. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General. Show all posts

VIVAnews -leading up to Ramadan, the burial place of the public (TPU) crowded the citizens. They nyekar into the tomb of his family or relatives. VIVAnews.com monitoring based on TPU Menteng Pulo, Casblanca, South Jakarta, Saturday, July 30, 2011, since the morning is already well populated residents.

The number of vehicles that come out in traffic on the road vehicle made from Kampung melayu Casablanca choked up. Not only that, the vehicle was parked on the shoulder of the Pilgrim's way also makes it bad. And yet to be seen is the officer who set up the traffic.

According to Metro Polda Jaya officers TMC Gangsar, Briptu some of the roads capital does have a density. "Average density today because there was a nyekar activity," he said when contacted.


Density also occurs in Kalibata and Tanah Abang around the rubber a bivouac. He predicted this would happen until the afternoon. To that end the riders are advised to avoid the path of its location near the cemetery. "The officers have been directed towards the location, "he added.

Peliculas Online

A Project Proposal

 

For those of you that have no special plans for this Summer, like saving the planet or curing cancer, here is an alternative idea.

 

The Neverwurzorwillbies

A Modern Ancient Civilization

 

I would like to embark on a team project this Summer to create/recreate the modern/ancient lost or never found civilization of the Neverwurzorwillbies. This culture never existed nor will it, but I don’t want to let that stop us from finding and documenting all of the facts about them. If you are interested in helping in this project, please read on.

 

The Neverwurzorwillbies:

They are or were an ancient modern tribe/civilization that left us many clues about their existence but no concrete information about much of anything. We have no idea of where they came from or why they disappeared.

 

The Project:

We will create all of the archeological evidence of this culture, including the artifacts, maps, religion(s), customs, habitat etc.

 

We will “discover”* the objects that they left and interpret their meaning to enable us to get an understanding of their culture. These objects will give us the needed clues to piece together a culture that has, until now, gone totally unnoticed.

 

For this project we will need:

Dreamers

Story Tellers

3D modelers

Photoshop Gods

Artists of all kinds

Cartographers

Linguists

Rune readers

Nuclear Physicists

Liars (no politicians please, we do have some standards)

Geologists

Cosmologists and Cosmotologists (practically the same thing)

Anthropologists

Archeologists

Web Designers

Psychologists and probably a psychotherapist or two

And of course, one Woodchuck

 

If you or anyone you know or anyone you think you know is interested, please have them contact me, I am considering this as either a giant independent study project or actually as a class.

 

 

* “discover” may include photoshop compositing, 3D modeling, or other means of outright fabricating a document of fact that may not in fact be so factual.

Until you email me from the account you want to use, all you can do is comment. Once you email me, I can register you as an author and you can make regular posts, including pictures.
Sven mentioned last night about getting your own domain name and putting your artwork up on a website. I brought a domain name from godaddy.com last month for $9.99 and it comes with free hosting. Now here is where a program such as iWeb 09' comes into play:
iWeb 09' comes on every Mac and is part of iLife 09' (it is also in iLife 08'). It is designed for people who want to make a professional looking website thats easy and fast to make and publish on the web in just seconds! I am using it along with my domain name to put up my own works. For those of you who are intested in learning more about the application I have provided a link to it on Apple's website. I would be more than happy to help any of you learn the program and set up your own website. Just email me @ NYRob94@mac.com or reply to this post. (For those of you who have a mobileme account from Apple they provide you with a domain name and host it for you!)
Hopefully this helps some of you,
Rob
Hmm.....
We will meet in FA 321 at 5:45 and depart shortly for the camp, anyone who needs a ride should be there by 5:45. PLEASE bring something you can roast on a stick and a beverage. We will start the evening with food and move on from there. The topic for the night:

The Fine Art Gallery Circuit
including, galleries, shows, competitions, studio set up, Co-ops, art dealers, and an all important foray into Targeting.

Hope to see you all there, this should be a good one.
Professional Practices at College Camp got off to a great start last Friday with over 20 students and one old guy. The sudden snow storm made the normally 5 minute trip into a memorable experience. We all got to make fun of Robert and his fine demonstration of winter driving skills. This one was an overview of different types of graduate school programs and some job possibilities with a head start on goal setting. People even politely sat through Sven's "Rules to get the most out of life" speech.  This Friday we will launch into the heart of the matter with, "The Fine Art Gallery Circuit". Every thing you ever wanted to know about selling your artwork and making a living off of your work. This will include not only everything you need to know about galleries but also Art Dealers, Art Shows, Competitions, setting up a studio, and a first look at Targeting.

Remember, you did not have to be at the first one to make sense of the rest so please come. I am considering a makeup session for those that wanted to come to the first session but could not make it. How about Wednesday or Thursday night in the lab? Let me know if you are interested.

As I prepare for another Semester, endlessly tweaking syllabi and trying to make “the perfect course”, setting up the website (yes it’s there and you can check out your course sites now). I find myself thinking, “How can I get them excited. How can I get them inspired. In all of the Art courses I took, I never even thought about “finishing enough work for an A, I usually had far more done by the mid semester than any teacher would have ever required. This semester, I have scaled back some of my aspirations for student projects by dropping a couple of projects from each course, but I still want to give a challenge to the student who wants more. It amazes me when I hear students talking about “not having enough time”. There is absolutely no time in your life when you will have as much time as when you are in college. It all depends on how you use it. I prefer to use the example of my signature file that says. Remember, there are 24 hours in the day, and then there is the night too. But enough of this jibber jabber. I tried to figure out what it was that inspired me when I was an undergraduate student. It didn’t take long actually, So here is how it happened to me.

 

As many of you know, I was an egghead as a child, the only problem was that I had no real desire to do anything that society told me I should do with it. I didn’t want to be a scientist, but I didn’t know what else I wanted to do either. Through a series of random events I ended up playing volleyball for a Junior College in Long Beach, California. I absolutely loved it. I went from being a wallflower, afraid of my own shadow, to being a world class athlete in just a short period of time. When I was a sophomore in High School I was 6’4” and 118 Lbs. That sets a new definition for skinny. A couple years later I was 6’5” and 172 Lbs. Volleyball led me to the University of Hawaii where I was totally immersed in the volleyball team and culture. I was a good student but the classes were a distant second when it came to my attention. They had me in business classes and then communications classes, all of which I excelled in, but decided I would have to shoot myself it I was going to do any of those things for a living. That is when I discovered the Art department. I changed my major and have never looked back since. I think one of the main reasons I was so inspired and worked so hard was because for the first time in my life I knew what it was that I wanted to do. Not exactly all the details but I knew it involved art. From then on, nothing else mattered, I lived in the studio all day and most the night. All my old friends thought that I had left the planet because I was never seen anymore.

 

I understand that many of you have not yet figured out what direction you are going in your life and you don’t have to do it now either. But when you do, I hope you will go after it with all the passion and energy you have. It is the thing that will sustain you when you are my age.

 

Now, Speaking of Age, here is where I was heading with all of this. When I was at U.H., I had a mentor, his name was and still is, Lee Chesney. Today he is 89 years old and he continues to work in the studio for a full days work and usually that is 6 days a week. Most of us would have a very difficult time keeping up with him. He has as much energy now as anyone I know. The reason for this energy I’m sure is his passion for what he does. I have included two things here. One is a painting of his called Passion Roost, and the other is a copy of an essay I wrote for the catalog of an exhibition by Lee, last year. Lee inspired me then, and still does today, I hope you can find a source of inspiration. I know I have gone on for ages here, and I truly appreciate those of you that made it this far, thanks for your patience. I hope you will do great things this semester.

 

Sven

 



Lee Chesney

 

In 1979, fate landed me at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Little did I know at the time that it would have such a profound influence on my life. It began strictly as rumors when I was in my foundations classes in the Art Department. There seemed to be a professor there that was by all accounts, larger than life. He was away on sabbatical at first so I never got to meet or even see him until I was a Junior. Once he returned it was still difficult to actually meet him because there was always a crowd around him wherever he went. He tended to walk while turning circles from place to place surrounded by a group of 7 to 10 students. He would answer each ones questions in turn and then turn towards the next student in the direction he was eventually heading. The only difference between this scene and a star in Hollywood is that there were no cameras and the subject of all the attention actually took the time to answer everyone’s questions and cared about the people asking them. The professor was Lee Chesney. After meeting him, I understood why he always had a crowd. He has an intense personality and is absolutely driven in what he does. He leaves you with the impression that he can see straight through to your inner soul yet has a twinkle in his eye that tells you he likes what he sees.

 

On his home turf of intaglio, Lee Chesney is a technical god. I have never been able to find a question regarding etching or engraving that he could not fully answer. In fact he often answered questions I never thought of asking. I also learned that you don’t casually ask a question unless you have properly prepared yourself by eating a full meal and visiting the restroom because a proper answer usually takes a good afternoon. If you have time on your hands, you might ask him about the differences between a scraped or burnished plate. After the explanation explores the subtle tonality changes in the ink film related to the different retention of oil and therefore the different technique necessary for wiping said plate, the conversation turns technical.

 

He has the respect of the most significant printmakers of our time, including Stanley William Hayter, who told me and a group of printmakers at Atelier 17 in 1984, that Lee Chesney was the best printmaker he had ever met. Very high praise considering the long list of artists that have walked through those studio doors.

 

If the plate is the symphony and the print the performance, Lee Chesney is both a gifted composer and a masterful performer. His compositions are often extremely complex and filled with such subtle nuance and detail that one can spend hours examining an image and always find new treasures waiting to be discovered. His process includes both an additive and subtractive process, where he buries bones for later resurrection. Working in intaglio is working in two different directions at the same time. On one side is the plate and on the other is the resulting print. Although the public usually only gets to see the print, the plate is where the bulk of the work is involved. There are countless trips to the acid bath along with many  hours of handwork including engraving, scraping and burnishing, each process used to inflect a particular tone or quality to the surface that will be reflected in the finished print. It is in this painstaking attention to detail that the idea is transformed into image. To be a printmaker, one must love the process or they will never have the patience and stamina to master the necessary skills and techniques. Lee’s love of the process is clearly evident in each and every print, from the subtlety of a softground texture to the bold raised white carved by a scorper. Although the plates are truly masterpieces of their own, to see them without looking at the final prints would be as senseless as driving to Niagara and not getting out of the car to see the falls. The consummate skill continues in the inking and wiping of the plate, until all comes together in a perfect print. His prints are easy to pick out in a room, they have an incredible range of value from the whitest whites to the blackest blacks. Upon close inspection, you will find the blacks will have textures in them that suddenly change your original conception of space. His imagery seems to change with the viewing distance. Like a Kandinsky Improvisation, his imagery dances across the page, leading the eye to new discoveries each subsequent time it is viewed. It is as if the print changes a little each time it is seen.

 

Recently, Lee has been mostly painting. His paintings display the same range of value expressed in dazzling hues of brilliant color as his sumptuous black and white etchings and engravings. Like the constant variation of blacks in his prints, the colors in his paintings are never left to flat shapes but are more reminiscent of a lithographic touche wash. The ever changing color works to intensify the harmonies and contrast while playing with our sense of space.

 

Like Bonnard, I’m afraid Lee would not have been happy with the 64 color box of Crayons, just as he would not be happy without the incredible range of value afforded by the intaglio process. No other artist shows the breadth and virtuosity of the intaglio print. We look to artists to inspire us, when I view Lee’s prints I get the sudden desire to mix up a batch of Dutch Mordant and sharpen my burin.

 

I will be offering a free workshop called "Professional Practices" at the College Camp. It will take place on 4 nights, all Fridays, with the first one being January 30th. The other dates are February 6th, February 13th and the last one is March 6th. Here is the blurb about it:

Professional Practices, or how to survive and make a living in the field of art.
Come sit around the toasty fire and roast things on sticks like the earliest cave painters.
I taught this as a course in Texas and I think it was one of the most important courses we taught. What will you learn? 

How to:
  • get into graduate school
  • get into galleries
  • get a job in the arts
  • get an internship
  • commercial applications
  • get your act together
  • be ready to graduate and move on to something other than "would you like fries with your order"?
  • Write a resume
  • Build a resume
  • Make contacts
  • Network
  • Grants
  • Grant writing
  • Taxes
  • Copyright
  • Targeting
  • Set up a studio
  • Oh, and of course, the all important shmoozing.
Who should attend?
Anyone who has not graduated, OR does not have an art job, OR has no clue what they are going to do after they graduate, OR what they should be doing now, OR does not plan on living with their parents for the rest of their lives, OR anyone that wants to go somewhere in the arts, Or anyone that does not want to settle for just any job. In other words, all of you.

Open to all students
What will you get out of this? Lots of useful information that I wish someone had taught me in school.
What will you not get? college credit, goodie points or extra credit. But you may find a few new friends.

What to bring? Your own edibles. We will have a fire to roast things on so bring your tofu dogs or cats and anything else you want to eat or drink (College Camp is a No-No- for alcohol).
Something to write with and on, for taking any notes.

I hope you can come, please RSVP via email to sven.anderson@gmail.com so I have some idea how many people to expect. If you don't RSVP you can still come.
If you don't know where the camp is or need transportation, let me know and we can work something out.
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