2013年5月1日星期三

Paper in Commemeration of the dead




Mexico-Day of the Dead altar
Tissue Flower for the Day of the Dead


Joss Paper burnt for the dead in China


Flower of Rememberance: Forget-me-not


Origami Foget-me-not Flower

my origami forget-me-not flowers pin on board



2013年4月24日星期三

Life, Death and Transformation


The artist role is to investigate some specific concepts in their local culture about the world with symbols and different materials. They try to communicate the idea with an expressive way through a piece of symbolic artwork, of which various media is explored and used, including those most common objects we can see such as wool, feathers, cotton, etc. Their ideas are simplified as mysterious symbols and patterns, which combine together become something aesthetic that attract peoples eyes. At the same time, they are the vehicle that embody and represent the concept, floating around the weird figures and sculptures. 

The artwork is the bridge connecting the supernatural world with the humans world by putting mythological creatures on ceremonial objects like the mask used by people. With the wish of transforming into supernatural beings with the ceremonial objects, people actually made those pieces for completing a part of their religious activity. In this way, viewers are also able to understand the peoples idea about the supernatural world by investigating the religion and culture. When looking at the symbolic patterns and forms come from different mythologies, we are demonstrated visually about the local culture and history.

The context is the indigenous cultures of the Americas, in terms of the concepts of life, death and transformation. Basically it is about how the American people explored and interpreted the most enduring concepts about the life and death cycle.

The concept of the artwork is to demonstrate the interrelated relationship between those three concepts. They connect with each other, go after each other and circulate with each other, which are never ended and always the biggest mystery that people want to know about the answer to it. 

Life-Death Figure by Huastac Artist

Paiyatemu Kachina by Zuni artist

添加图片说明

Ceremonial Vessel by Inca artist

Necklace with Charms by Tlinglit artist

Thunderbird Transformation Mask by Kwakwaka'wakw artist

Ai Wei Wei


Ai Weiwei: Dropping The Urn

It's the first time I heard someone break an urn that is from a really long time ago on purpose.Usually these kind of objects will be taken care of very well, since they are relatively valuable for its long extrodinary long history.However, Ai broke it and documented that process, then made it a piece of artwork. It can probably not be seen as art if someone just randomly breaks something, doesn't matter how much the value of the thing he breaks is. But here, there are  definitely some symbolic significantions we can find behind the Han Dynasty Urn. And it is because of these symbolic meanings that makes this become art.

So first of all,what is the meaning of the archaic Chinese urn.It is from more than a thousand of years ago China,which symbolizes the Chinese traditional culture.The culture, like the urn, is treasured by everybody else for its historical value,and nobody would even think about harming it. However,in the pictures we can see that Ai just broke it so easily and casually without any worries or concern.His act shows his disagreement with the Chinese traditional culture, and at the same time he also breaks people's ordinary thinking and values about an object.Now the urn is an artwork not merely because of its long age, but it has actually become a part of the symbolic act that the artist has done to express his concept about the traditional culture. There's a transformation of the artistic value of the urn happening when it's being broken by the artist.



Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (1995). Middle view of a triptych of gelatin silver prints, each print 49 5/8” x 39 1/4”. Courtesy private collection, USA.

2013年4月17日星期三

Brooklyn Museum Visit feedback

El Anatsui's work

Gli(Wall),2010

The artist's role here is to explore the neglected everyday objects and materials, then represent them in an innovative way to the public by emphasizing the object's properties or showing them in an unusually large scale. Through these creative forms of art, the artist temps to attract the publics attention to these neglected objects and materials, and at the same time, to communicate specific symbolic meanings expressed by them in an effective way. 
The artwork, mostly in a relatively big scale, or we can say in a big "group", reminds people of the existence of objects they  are so familiar with that they probably will ignore for most of the time: Strips of wood, wasted paper and plates, lids of milk bottles and so on. Such common materials are put one next to another into a large group in the form as a sculpture.  In this way, they are made to embody a new meaning given by the artist, and serve as a vehicle to communicate with the viewers visually about a particular message.
Anatsui started to get into the historical African art as an engaged outsider, and gradually his interest and focus went into the innovative use of local materials. So most of his work is abstract and conceptual so as to reveal his interesting ideas. In the showcase there is artwork dealing with the artists creative interpretation about an ordinary object and exploration of expressing a concept with a particular type of material. But both of these go toward the main theme of his work-reflecting the African history. His materials used are accessible objects in the local place (Nigeria), therefore viewers from other countries or cultures can at the same time get to know more about the peoples life here on the vast and mysterious continent. 


Gli(close-up)
 


Currents,undated
Anticline and syncline,1995

Conspirators,1997

Waste paper bags,2004-10

Gravity and grace,2010



2013年4月10日星期三

Heroic Act


Here's an article about heroic acts during a shooting happened in Colorado.

'Dark Knight Rises' shooting: Three heroes died in Aurora taking bullets for their girlfriends

In final acts of valor, Jon Blunk, Matt McQuinn and Alex Teves used their bodies to shield their girlfriends as accused madman James Holmes turned the Aurora cineplex into a shooting gallery.

UPDATED: MONDAY, JULY 23, 2012, 4:40 PM

 Jon Blunk and his girlfriend Jansen Young, whose life was saved when Blunk threw himself on top of her in the hail of gunfire at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora, Colo.

COURTESY BLUNK FAMILY

Jon Blunk and his girlfriend Jansen Young, whose life was saved when Blunk threw himself on top of her in the hail of gunfire at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora, Colo.

Three survivors of the Colorado movie-theater massacre escaped with minor wounds, but were left with broken hearts because their heroic boyfriends died saving them.

In final acts of valor, Jon Blunk, Matt McQuinn and Alex Teves used their bodies to shield their girlfriends as accused madman James Holmes turned the Aurora cineplex into a shooting gallery.

Blunk’s girlfriend, Jansen Young; McQuinn’s girlfriend, Samantha Yowler; and Teves’ gal pal Amanda Lindgren made it out of the bloodbath — but they would have been killed had it not been for the loves of their lives.
PICTURED: THE COLORADO SHOOTING VICTIMS

“He’s a hero, and he’ll never be forgotten,” a tearful Jansen Young told the Daily News of Blunk. “Jon took a bullet for me.”

She was too distraught to speak more, but her mother called Blunk, 25, who had two young children from a previous relationship, “a gentleman.”

“He was loving, the kind of guy you want your daughter to be with, and ultimately, she’s alive because of this, because he protected her,” Shellie Young said.

She said Blunk, a security guard, had served in the Navy and had recently filled out papers to reenlist with a goal of becoming a Navy SEAL. “To her, he was a hero anyway because he wanted to serve his country,” she said of her daughter, who was left with shrapnel wounds to her side. “He said that all the time: ‘I was born to serve my country.’”

Jansen Young, 21, said Blunk took her to see Friday’s midnight premiere of “The Dark Knight Rises” to celebrate her graduation from veterinarian school. As the black-clad killer burst into the theater and unleashed tear gas and a torrent of indiscriminate gunfire, Blunk selflessly protected his girlfriend.

He pushed Jansen on the ground and under her seat, then threw his body on top of her, the mother said. “He was 6-feet-2, in incredible shape, which is why he was able to push her down under the seats of the theater,” the mother said. “He pushed her down on the floor and laid down on top of her and he died there.”
HERO22N_6 copy

VIA FACEBOOK

Alex Teves pushed his girlfriend, Amanda Lindgren, to the floor to shield her when bullets began flying in the movie theater and was struck himself.

She said her daughter instantly fell in love with Blunk when they met at a local mall, where he worked as a security guard. “She just plain fell in love with his good looks,” the mother said. “She walked up and handed him a piece of paper and said, ‘Here’s my number.’”

“She just found it incredible that someone would spend eight years of their life in the Navy.”
Blunk’s estranged wife, Chantel Blunk, 26, of Reno, Nev., said he died fulfilling a lifelong dream. “He always wanted to be a superhero, he’s wanting to save someone or do something greater,” said the mother of Blunk’s kids, Hailey, 4, and Maximus, 2.

Blunk was scheduled to travel to Reno Saturday to see his children and resolve some marital issues, she said. “My daughter can’t comprehend it, and keeps wanting to call him,” said Chantel Blunk. “I try to tell her that her daddy loves her and will always be there.”

Randall Blunk, 47, of Reno, said his son had served in the Navy for more than five years, mostly aboard the Nimitz in the Persian Gulf. “He’s a badass. That’s just how he was. He’s not afraid,” Randall Blunk, who raised his son as a single father, told The News. “I love my boy, I just loved him.”

Jansen Young told her mother she could feel Blunk holding her tight as chaos reigned in the movie theater. She said she heard a woman nearby screaming, “I’ve been shot!” and recalled the “boom, boom, boom” of gunfire and smelling gunpowder.

“There was kind of a break in between each gunshot,” Jansen told the “Today” show. “Every gunshot, I was like, ‘This is it . . . I’m done for.’ Jon gave me one good push against that concrete again and then . . . I didn’t really feel his arms against my back anymore but I knew he was still there.”

When the shooting subsided, she realized Blunk was shot. “I started shaking him and saying, ‘Jon, Jon, we have to go . . . it’s time for us to get out of here,’” she said, adding that she tried to pull Blunk by the shoulder, but he didn’t move.

Equally heroic was the 24-year-old Teves, who hurled his girlfriend to the floor as bullets whizzed through the theater.

“He pushed her to the floor to save her and he ended up getting a bullet,” said his aunt, Barbara Slivinske, 57. “He was gonna hit the floor himself, but he never made it.”
MCQUINN YOWLER

MATT MCQUINN VIA FACEBOOK

Heroic Matt McQuinn, 26, and his girlfriend, Samantha Yowler, who is recovering from a gunshot to her knee.

Samantha Yowler had a similar story of horror and heroism about her boyfriend, Matt McQuinn, whose last living act was to shield her from death. Yowler, 26, survived with a gunshot wound to the knee and is in fair condition after undergoing surgery.

McQuinn’s family credited his quick actions for saving Samantha’s life. Witnesses said he dove on top of his girlfriend as the shooting started and that Samantha’s brother, Nick, who was also in the theater, helped get her out of harm’s way. Nick Yowler was unharmed in the shooting.

With Corinne Lestch and Natalie Musumeci
whutchinson@nydailynews.com