Thursday, May 7, 2009
Ad Agency Visit
advertising agency
ad agency visit
Monday, May 4, 2009
On the visit to the advertising agency
I learned that these people are very good at what they do. The posters of the ad campaigns that were hanging in the meeting room were very clean. They were art in the sense that anything done well can be considered art. They were fine art in the sense that attention to detail is what puts the "fine" in fine art. They may not have been art if one considers art as something that comes about from a pure random vision with no time constraints, but it certainly is art.
I found it interesting that they had a small weight room or work out room in the building. I often need to do something physical to clear my head and put things in perspective. It seems to help to get the blood flowing to the brain and with it new ideas. I wanted to ask them if they had a pirate flag up on the roof, Apple joke, they seemed very progressive.
I learned that there is a lot of collaboration involved in each project, A lot of interaction between writers, graphic artists and the client. With any collaboration new things are created and learned even though it may be frustrating at times. One of my favorite things about this course is the interaction between somewhat kindred spirits and seeing the things they create, it feeds my idea factory and fosters my creativity.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Class visit to Advertising Agency - feedback
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
sale on Itoya presentation cases
Monday, April 6, 2009
artist statement (finally)

Friday, April 3, 2009
ARTIST STATEMENT

Joanna Spicer's Artist Statement
Photography has always been very special to me. I believe it makes you look at the world in a whole new light. It allows you to see the beauty that may normally pass you by.
I began shooting my own photography in my early teens. I didn't have the best camera, or knowledge, but I worked with what I had at the time. I was constantly reading about photography and looking to others for inspiration.
After many years I finally found my own personal style. I like to capture a distinct emotion in a photograph, whether it be a person, or landscape. I don't like to do much editing to my photos, because I believe they are the most beautiful in their natural state. I am constantly trying to create images that have never been seen before. I believe I bring something to the table that is unique.
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Danielle A's Artist Statement

I like to think of my work as larger than life because I try to amplify what people miss on an everyday basis.
My subjects are typically portraits. I strive to capture someone perfectly. I mostly work from old pictures of friends and family because I enjoy capturing memories. Occasionally I will do a simple posed painting of a person but I prefer having my subject in a candid moment. It’s just more interesting.
Oil paint allows me the flexibility of a lengthy drying time. I like having the option to step away from my piece when I get too frustrated to like what I produce and be able to pick up right where I left off instead of having to start over again.
My pieces tend to run rather large in size because I feel it allows me to capture my subjects in a more detailed manner. Some of the normally unnoticed details that are equally important get lost when you work small.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Hallie Edlund

I began creating art through drawing and through the years have diversified through many fields of creativity. I work in medias such as collage, bookmaking, printmaking, charcoal, watercolor, photography, and oil paint. I have received such awards as 1st place in the State level of the Reflections Art Contest in 2000 for the theme of “Suddenly I turned around and my friend was there to comfort me.” I have also placed at several school art shows, including several 1st place awards for oils paintings at the Westminster High School Student Art Show.
Currently, I am more concentrated on printmaking and collage art. I have created several large scale collage portraits out of magazine and paper. I use small squares and patches of color to create a more painterly effect when viewed from afar. The prints I create tend to have an animal theme and a humorous overtone. I like to use bright colors in my art to bring some of myself into my work.
Artist Statement

Art has always been a very personal experience to me. My mother is, and always will be, my inspiration to be an artist. She has made it her living for more than 20 years. Although the road has certainly been rocky at times she has never given up. My art is nothing like my mothers but she has taught me everything I know.
All of my art starts off on paper, whether in one of my many sketchbooks or on a napkin. List's of words fill the paper of possible ideas and soon it will come to me. As a art student, I have not produced a lot of finished pieces for myself but have enjoyed countless projects assigned to me. Everything around me inspires my work, my family, my friends, my environment, all of which make my art my own.
In the years I have been an art student I have explored many different mediums. One technique that I have grown to love is working with watercolor and with pen and ink. My watercolor pieces have a more playful, cheerful look. I am always picking up children books and admiring the illustrations. Another technique I have recently been interested in is the more graphic art.
I hope to explore many other forms of art in my life and hope to continue doing what has come very easy to me. Although personal to me, I hope to touch others with my work.
Artist Statement

Monday, March 30, 2009
Artist Statement '09

My artwork is all about things that do not exist in the world that we live in. I create the images in my paintings because I want my art to be imaginary and stimulating.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Artist Statement

Art is not just c r e a t e d,
Artist Statement

I fell somewhat accidentally into photography several years after graduating high school. In the beginning, my work began by blindly mimicking any and all pictures that fled through my head, making most of my early film pieces highly biographical. The darkroom is still my favored editing and development process because of the personal interaction and imperfections it allows for. More recently however, I’ve begun working digitally, especially when shooting overseas.
I strive to portray desperation and spontaneity in all my photos, while focusing on the similarities that exist between various lifestyles. For me, art is the re-creation of an already obvious truth, ones specifically we would often rather not confront. Everything we visually observe on a daily basis is filtered through personal beliefs and mental processes. A process of distortion. Does a single being actually see the world as it objectly exists - it doesn’t objectively exist period. To capture and conceptualize this distortion is one of my highest goals. “For what we see here is but a shadow of the world to come”. This phrase puts spiritual meaning behind behind every shoot I do and guides the perspectives behind all my photos. What I view behind a lens is highly motivated by angles, blank space and the emotions of individuals. If I can document even a moment of their deeper reality, my job is done.
Printmaking, an Adventure in Experimentation

Artist Statement

Photography started for me when I was young and was inspired by my dad who always took pictures as a hobby. His dad was also interested and experienced in photography. One Christmas I was given a used Canon AE-1 35 mm film camera, the exact same camera my dad and grandpa had, and with it the chance to become a third-generation self-taught photographer.
Since then, my photography has evolved, leaving behind film and moving into the digital world. Digital editing brought in a new way to accentuate emotions and gave me the ability to portray a deeper, more provoking, or confronting image.
My art also grew to incorporate my love of words. Words, whether single-standing, in a poetic stream, or together in a story have the power to be bold, gripping, and moving. But what words cannot express on their own, I hoped to compensate in the visual. A picture is worth a thousand words. What would happen if you combined them?
Capturing people through my lens is the third form of my art. There is a unique ability in the human face to express things beyond words all together in a much more intense way.
I hope through each of my photos to go beyond the “feel good” art and create something that is stirring and provoking. Something that stretches into the deeper areas of the heart, beyond the drone of life, to reach what is not always touched.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
My Photography, My Art

Art I like, a lot of different mediums I enjoy, but photography I love. My work centers mostly on people, as they are, in all of their complexities, my biggest inspiration. I love witnessing when someone is honest to themselves, as it shows in their ideas, their actions, their words, all fueled by their emotions. It is the moment where they express whatever it is that makes them unique, and I try to capture that with my camera, subtle as it may be.
Sometimes my work is intentional—seeking out the right scenery for the right person to best fit an emotion; and sometimes my work is something found. Either way, my pictures are not blunt representations of a single emotion that we describe through a word, but rather, the moment of feeling each emotion.
As I’m often reserved in person, I allow my pictures to speak for me. While I’m trying to express the emotions I see in other people, it’s often a reflection of what I want to say, and the emotions I can best relate to. Sometimes the entire thing is contrived to fit what I can’t seem to say right otherwise. My pictures are often dramatic through contrast, angling, and sometimes style so I can present the mood the way I feel it—since I often can’t express it in words.
I like not what’s lit to speak alone, but the shadows and highlights together; my shadows are often just as important as the lit areas. With them I create moody shapes to simplify the picture, allowing the focus to be clear. The black is a deep black to convey more depth. Without it, both the picture and idea feels flat and incomplete.
My work is a constant metamorphosis of myself as I learn and grow and change—my visual representation of my life through someone else’s. And although constantly shifting and changing, my purpose in photography is still the same.
Artist Statement
Friday, March 20, 2009
Art and Photography

Thursday, March 12, 2009
Unrefined

The beginning of my fashion design journey, started with costuming. My enthusiasm for costuming was fueled by attending anime conventions and wanting to dress up like certain video game or anime characters (cosplay). As my skills grew, my desire for creating original designs grew with it. A few years after I discovered cosplay, I stumbled into the world of Elegant Gothic Lolita, which is a subculture fashion trend in Japan. I religiously searched the web for any and all examples of this newfound love and discovered other Japanese fashions, ones I loved just as much if not more than EGL.
I delved deeper and deeper into the fashion trend, but I never found my niche. After exhausting myself in the rigid and strict rules of Lolita design, I exploded. In order to free my mind from the structure of my EGL designs, I tore apart a yard of red velvet and collaged it onto my dress form. I wanted to be free of patterns and embrace raw edges; I wanted to be as far from Lolita as possible. I wish it had been that easy. After fussing with my ‘dress collage’ for weeks, I was so frustrated I put it aside. A month went by, two months, three, six. It loomed over me, taunting me on my dress form. I refused to make anything new until I had conquered this ‘Red Beast’. (Yes, I had named it so, and it still retains the title.)
I had had it. The Red Beast had kept me at bay for too long. The next few weeks were spent battling with the voice in fashion that I was so driven to discover, and it was embodied in a red velvet dress. I never felt completely victorious over my Red Beast; I blame that on my perfectionist nature. It didn’t turn out exactly as I had envisioned, but we now have a working, even friendly relationship. I no longer try to control the Red Beast’s ‘look’; instead I let myself be influenced by it’s ‘Unrefined’ nature.
Now I look for new materials that inspire me to cut up and collage together for my line of Unrefined.