Monday, December 31, 2012

Studio wall


Having trouble getting images on my webpage's sketchbook, so I wanted to share this here....still sorting out the studio to some extent, but getting work done a little at a time...these are transcriptions of passages from the readings I assigned my students this fall, or things I found while I was researching the Intro to Visual Studies class.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Yet more graphic violence...

Some time ago, I notices that hazard signs had become more specific about the consequences of misuse or ignoring warnings...I wonder if this is response to some kind of lull brought on by less explicit signs. Here are a few examples of rather specific hazard signs...










Friday, December 28, 2012

More graphic violence


from the Retronaut...do they have a category for gruesome deaths?

Friday, December 21, 2012

Today's news - Kraftwerk Victorious

Could the Economist have found a more dire photo? Oh right, this is Kraftwerk,,,
So it seems that the German courts have gone where few dare tread and ruled on a case that involves sampling and appropriation. According to a December 18  post on the Economist's website:

Like all of these sorts of things, the narrative is tricky. It seems that in a 1977 song, Kraftwerk created a sound in a song called Metall Auf Metall that caught the ears of producers Moses Pelham and Martin Haas, who used it in a 19997 song called Nur Mir. This being the latter quarter of the 20th century, Kraftwerk sued. The case has been working its way through the German courts for a dozen years, and finally the German Supreme Court ruled in favor of Kraftwerk, saying (in the words of the Economist):

The question at the heart of the case is how far sampling the work of other artists—a mainstay of modern hip-hop and techno—is permissible when creating new music. The answer given by the Supreme Court is that it is only permissible if the same effect could not have been produced by the new artist himself. After various demonstrations by expert witnesses, crashing metal on metal and using instruments such as a 1996 Akai Sampler, it was shown that an imitation of the sound-bite would have been possible in 1997.
So, if I understand this correctly, the decision has to do with what is technologically possible, not what the use of another recording might mean. This a bit of a bummer for those of us who are hoping for a more open culture and less choking control on those things that are already in the world.

One remediates (my new word for using another's images, words or sound in another work) often because one wants to be in conversation with the original work - not just because it sounds cool. The whole point is for readers, viewers, or listeners to recognize other's voices as an integral part of making your own voice. We are, all of us, patched together from borrowed pieces of codes, little snippets of other's identities that surface from time to time. Trying to control that is like trying to stop the tide from coming in...it's not a question of what a machine can do, but what a person needs to do something...

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Writing makes worlds


Super interested in Joshua Foer's New Yorker article on article on Ithkuil inventer John Quijada. Like all New Yorker articles, it's a two day investment for me these days, but found a lot to groove on in the first section, which gave an overview of invented languages and seemed like a complement to Joanna Drucker's Alphabetic Labyrinth, which I have been struggling with for about a month. Most interesting me - because it connects up to some work that's going on in the studio - is the reference to ideas put forward by Descartes and Leibnitz (which I am still trying to wrap my head around) that suggest numbers may be a more precise mens of constructing written language than phonetically-driven formula we use. 

The use of numbers to replace words may have first come to my attention with the CD 10-codes of the 1970s (I remember a plastic trash bag you were supposed to hang in the car that I insisted on memorizing because it had a list of these codes...and it should be immediately obvious that we had no CB radio in the family). But I remember Target getting some bad press for selling shirts that were emblazoned with an 88 some years back, and then I started to realize that written language might work a few different ways...

Anyway, looking forward to finishing this, and I'd be happy to hear from anyone who is a native Esperanto speaker or has other language issues to share...

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Imagery


Loving the song Dumb Ways to Die, I was amused to find this image in a collection called 30 Ways to Die by Electrocution

New work

I often put images of things one the studio desktop on the sketchbook page of my website...and I'm nto sure why I am using this instead...but I am.

The book factory has had a slow start this year. I think it's the chaos of the new studio. But I am working...

small books getting done...
I have also been working on some new paintings...I hope to have some images of them to post soon, but here is a small piece I made for a fundraiser that I think might suggest where things are going...

We/You/I See...gouache on paper, 10 x 8 in.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Sing along


KCRW playing a cover of this song with Aimee Mann...which is nice, but this is such a pleasure as is...

Changing direction

Bridget Riley, Squares in Motion, 1961

I have decided to close my Facebook account for the time being. I have noticed a number of things that bother me about interacting with Facebook that I want time to sort out. I will miss the easy connection to family and friends that the application provides, but I will try to keep up through letters, email and phone calls.

Another thing I will miss is just sharing interesting news reports and images that come across my field of vision, so I will use this forum for re-posting them.

Here's an interesting story from the Pacific Standard that reports that we respond to visible stimuli - starkly contrasting patterns shown to test subjects led to more decisive behaviors. I expect I will be painting my office a number of shades of grey...