Saturday, 13 March 2010

POSTMODERNISM

POSTMODERNISM

Modern
Modernity
Modernism -      Experimentation
                                Innovation
                                Individualism
                                Progress
                                Purity
                                Originality
                                Seriousness

Postmodern condition characterised by-
                                Exhaustion
                                Pluralism
                                Disillusionment with the idea of absoloute knowledge

Modernism –
Expression of:
 The modern life/ technology/ new materials/ communication

Post-modernism
Reaction to:
The modern life/ technology/ new materials/ communication

Origins of postmodernism
-          1917 German writer Rudolf Pannwitz
-          1964 Leslie Fielder

1960’s                   Beginning
1970’s                   Established as term
1980’s                   Recognised style
1980’s+90’s         Dominant theoretical discourse
Today                    Tired and Simmering


Postmodernism

-After modernism
-Historical era following the modern
-Contra modernism
-Equivalent to late capitalism
-Artistic and stylistic eclecticism
-Globalisation of cultures

Modernism died on the 15th July 1972 at 3:32pm
Charles Jencks' joke-date

Friday, 12 March 2010

25th  November

ADVERTISING, PUBLICITY AND THE MEDIA

Times Square, New York -Advertising is bombarding our contemporary world

1990’s estimate -11thousand new tv advertisements every year x4
-25million print adverts made every year

SLOGANS/ SIGNS/ MESSAGES, advertising is inescapable and invades our subconscious.

Karl Marx (1818 – 1883)
Wrote-
Communist Manifesto – 1848.
Das Kapital – 1867

Marxism/ Marxist

Critique of consumer/ commodity culture-

We construct our identities through the consumer products that inhibit our lives.
You shouldn’t define yourself with what you own, but who you are

Stewart Ewen terms ‘the commodity self’

Symbolic Associations
-Perfume adverts
-Sex Appeal
-Sophistication

Perpetuating false needs
-Aesthetic Innovation
-Planned Obsolescence – products designed to break
-Novelty

Commodity Fetisham-
Advertising conceals the background ‘history’ of products. In other words the content in which a product is produced is kept hidden.

Reification-
Products are given human association
They may be perceived as funny, sexy, romantic, cool
All to create a closer bond with the owner and the product, to become attatched

Advertising works in a fashion to trick people into consumption.

Herbert Marcuse, author of 'One Dimensional Man' (1964)

John  Berger (1972) "Publicity (advertising) persuades us by showing people whose lives have been transformed"

Advertising perpetuates stereotypes.

It seeks to make people unhappy with existing material possessions.
It potentially manipulates people into buying products that they don't really need/want.

It encourages addictive, obsessive and greedy behaviour.

It encourages unnecessary production and consumption therefore depleting the worlds resources and spoiling the environment.

BOOKS TO LOOK AT

Focussing on specific examples, describe the way that Modernist art & design was a response to the forces of modernity


1.
Barnard, M. [2008] ‘Graphic design as communication’. New York, Routledge.

2.
Ilyin, N, [2006] ‘Chasing the perfect: thoughts on modernist design in our time’. New York, Distributed Art Publishers, Inc and Metropolis Magazine.
(Library Reference - 745.4)

3.
Hellige, H. And Klanten R. [2009] ‘Naive: modernism & folklore in contemporary graphic design’. London, Die Gestalten Verlag.
(Library Reference - 741.06)

4.
Pare R. [2007] ‘The lost vanguard: Russian modernist architecture 1922-1932’. New York, Monacelli Press. 
(Library Reference - 720.947)

5.
Meyer, U. [2006], ‘Bauhaus’. Munich, Prestel Verlag.

GRAPHIC DESIGN: MEDIUM FOR THE MASSES

8th November

GRAPHIC DESIGN: MEDIUM FOR THE MASSES


-Grotto and Bondone, Betrayal C. 1305.
Fine art- but symbolises, shows a graphic story. A media for the age.

1922, William Addison Dwiggins
‘In the matter of layout forget art at the start and use horse sense. The printing designers whole duty is to make a clear presentation of the message- to get the important statements forward and the minor parts placed so that they will never be overlooked. This calls for an exercise of common sense and a faculty of analysis rather than for art.’

Herbert Spencer
‘Mechanized Art’

Max Bill and Josef Muller-Brockman
‘Visual Communication’

Richard Hollis
‘Graphic Design is the business of making or choosing marks and arguing them on a surface to convey an idea’

Paul Rand
‘...graphic design, in the end, deals with the spectator, and because it is the goal of the designer to be persuasive or a least informative, it follows that the designer’s problems are twofold: to anticipate the spectators reactions and to meet his own aesthetic needs’

Josef Muller-Brockman
‘Whatever the information transmitted, it must, ethically and culturally, reflect  its responsibility to society’

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
-Arsistide Bruant, 1893
-La Goulue, 1890’s
For mass production- colour used if chosen but could look like fine art without type.

Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Peter Behrens, AEG, pre First World War technology
German – showing modernism.

Saville Lumley – ‘What did you do in the Great War?’
-Traditional as opposed to German poster

First World War posters
Britons, 1914
Uncle Sam, 1917

Kandinsky – Abstraction
Lissitsky – Geometric, triangles linked to Kandinsky.
‘Beat the whites with the red wedge’ -Cheap to print

Oskar Schlemmer – Bauhaus Logo, 1922
(German)

Firsts school to each Graphic Design. 1922- when Dwiggins first said the term Graphic Design.

Herbert Bayer, Kandinsky 60th Birthday, exhibition.

Piet Zwart

Cassanare – French
1927 poster, stared to sign work. Being recognised as well known designers

Ludwig Hohlwein
Reich’s  sports day, 1933                               Traditional
                                                                                Shut down Bauhaus, go back to ‘real art’

Ludwig Vierthaler
Degernate art, 1936

Bauhaus techniques
Off set type, selected by Hitler as degenerate art, abomination of talent

G. Klusik Russian, colour used.

Book of VW adverts.

Paul Rand, 1962 abc                                        197 IBM- CORPORATE


Ken Garland       – Peace Logo
                                -First things first manifesto.

Desingers Republic- Sheffield Designers, take their own ground rules.

Primal Scream, Julian Hoss
2000, emulating Russian Constructivist style.

Oliviero Toscanni
Barbara Kruger – I think therefore I am
                                ---> I shop therefore I am. Selfridges. 

THE DOCUMENT

9TH December

THE DOCUMENT


-Joseph Nicéphone Nicépce (1826)
                ‘View from a window of La Gras’
-Capture, record the world.

-James Nachtwey
‘I have been a witness, and these pictures are my testimony. The events I have recorded should not be forgotten as well as the historical and must not be repeated.’

Frances Firth (1857)  ‘Entrance to the Great Temple’

William Edward Kilburn ‘The Great Chart Meeting at the Common’ 1848

Neutral -distance from photo- recording historically
                -no one is looking- so it seens he’s not influencing anyone.
                -just historical

But the photographer always has a reason.

The decisive moment
-          Photography achieves its highest distinction – reflecting the universality of the human condition.

Henri Cartier                      Bresson, 1932.

The essence of recording the world in one second in just recording it as a document it is the art- one second later it wouldn’t be there.

Jacob Reiss – American Slunms
(1888)                   -not authentic, the compositions. The people are posing. Would have taken a while to put together, probably paid.

Louis Hine – Sociologist- actually records and analyses
1908- child labourers.
-Left wing- to expose the underclass.

FSA photographers (1935-44)
Farm Security Administration

Dorothea Lange – 1936
                Look of 3/4 distance – thinking ahead. Concerned about the future, as Presidents do.

Archive shows photographers way of thinking – kept by the FSA.

Magnum Group
Founded in 1947 by Cartier-Bresson and Robert Capa.
Ethos of documenting the world and its social problems.
Internationalism and mobility – whenever there was something that needed recording, someone could be there.
Robert Capa – ‘Falling Soldier’. Spanish Civil war
Is it fact? But shown to be fact.

Nick Ut (1972) ‘Accidental Napalm Attack’
Exhaustion of the photographers ability to change the world.

Ron McCullin (1968) ‘Shell Shocked Soldier)
Banned from Falklands war, didn’t want to show the reality. Positivity.

Conceptual Art- failed,
Photography used to document art, and art was sold
Now Photography is Art, and conceptual art is no longer relevant.

Bertolt Brecht (1931)
By trying to reconstruct reality is the only time you get anything useful.

Gillian Wearing (1992-3)
‘Signs to say what you want them to say’

Jeremy Deller (2001) The Battle of Orgreave
Complete reconstruction.

Jeff Wall Dead Troops Talk
Construction of reality- with photos merged together.

Lukacs- ‘Theory of the Novel’
Narration vs. Description

Monday, 1 February 2010

MODERNITY & MODERNISM

11th November

MODERNITY & MODERNISM

Modernist project - 1760 – 1960----------> postmodern world

Modernise- to improve

Forward thinking

(new labour)

(tate modern)

Artists in 1851- called the Moderns, but were not modernists. They had a traditional syle.

Paris 1900, the first modern city. Urbanisation – made it dense, quicker.

L’expositon in 1889, invited the world to see different exhibitions – to show off the new, including Eiffel Tower. All buildings just tryng to be new- in terms of industrial

Enlightenment = period in late 18th century when scientific/ philosophical thiking made leaps and bounds--------> Secularism - A secular society

Urbanisation, the city is new for their lives, different from rural work to factory work, work in shifts

Communication networks, meet new people. -Railway

No standard world time, shift from the impact of the railway

Shopping, cinema- revelling in the new. Everyone who lives there is living in the new

Enlightenment – embrace new knowledge and science

New thinking and reject old views, including religion

Impressionist painting – ‘Paris on a rainy day’ 1877

For artistic movement, painting this new urbanisation – who love the city. The subject is less about the people , but experience of every day, the modern streets, umbrellas, lampposts , the floor.

Haussmanisation

Paris 1850’s on = new Paris

It was old, medieval- narrow streets and run down housing. Riffled with crime.

Napoleon hired Haussman to rebuild the city, knock it down and start afresh. New large boulevards, long streets - Easy to police, to control. It as a city can now house modernity. Shown in paintings, impressionist.

All people living the sums were kicked out, literally forced into the outskirts of the city.

Painting more subject of the city, not the people in the painting. But only showing them gazing at the city itself.

1893. Scientists worried the new fast life of modernity would send people crazy. They did tests, shows there was a real concern.

Class division of modernity. If rich just stroll around the city, showing your wealth. New Fashion started. People become a communicator, a status symbol- something important.

Lives revolve around work.

Degas 1876, L’absinthe. Drinking in a dive bar, social rejection. Left behind and hates her work. Modern style of painting - like photographs, idea of cropping style

Kaiserpanorma 1883 -Sit in seats, that is this round block, show slides- of the world, even erotica.

Technology becomes fetishised, watch the world rather than actual experience

Lumiere brothers

First films,

Eiffel tower

Trains going past.

Modernism in Design

Anti-historicism – not to look back, have to be new or showing new thinking or styles. –To replace.

-Truth to materials, all modernists like to let the materials of their trade speak for themselves.

Eiffel tower looks completely industrial because it is. They revel in it.

Form follows function. The beauty comes out just at the end of how the product works.

Technology is embraced.

Internationism – modernism a neutral language, everyone understands these new objects- skyscrapers, square chairs. Accessible to all.

Bauhaus cutlery- for follows function, no design. There is just truth to the materials.

Subjective experience- the experience of the individual in the modern world.

New York – Flatiron Building, 1903. Alfred Stieglitz

New York building on the system of grids. Its systematic, there is a science to it.

George Grosz and John Heartfield DADA, bombarded by information. Instructed – media becomes increasingly important.

Gacoma Balla, 1912 ‘speed of a motor car’. Abstract sense of a experience of the modern world.

Futurist Tpography, new systems

Onomatopoeia MARINETTI

‘Ornament is crime’ – Adolf Loos

Would be backward thinking. Simple geometric forms appropriate to materials

Bauhaus building- concrete, modern. Truth to materials. Whole wall is glass. New thinking and functional.

Interdisciplinary, everyone taught everyone. Futura, invented in the Bauhaus. Sans Serif.

New materials- concrete, new technologies of steel, plastics, aluminium, reinforced glass.

Products to be made quicker and need to be cheaper – Marcel Breuer – chair

Skyscrapers- the ultimate of the modernist- form following function – not decorative.

Le Corbusier LC2 chair.

Failed modernist buildings, estates- new slums.

As they ignore the human, the interaction.

Internationalism

A language of design that could be recognised and understood on an international basis. Utopian Aspect- should be international, anyone can use the objects.

Harry Beck, London Underground system 1933. Neutrality to its internationality.

Herbert Bayes – ditch capitals.

Times New Roman, Stanley Morrison 1932. Most definitely not modernist, but historicist. British empire and roman empire. Imagined version of the two. Nationalist.

Fraktur font, medieval and gothic. Reference to German superiority.

Modernity 1750- 1960. A social and cultural experience.

[ART] The Mass Media and Society

2nd December

[ART] The Mass Media and Society

PRINT- at the age of around 1450 came the Gutenberg press

The Late age of print- term from media theorist Marshall McLuhan. This incorpoartes this expanded media, and concept of literature age which changed to Computer literacy

Government funded <--------Computerate as opposed to illiterate

Computers, electronic books/ e-books to replace the printed book?

Computer media -hyperlinks - hypertext -hypermedia

This new fluidity of using these links amongst virtually everyone.

Definition of mass media

‘modern systems of communication and distribution supplied by relativity. Small groups of cultural producers but directed towards large numbers of consumers.’

Thinking critically about the mass media

Negatives

Superficial, trvial

Viewing figures measures success

Popularity, won’t ever be experimental, or controversial not to upset the viewers- get stuck in a rut.

Audience is dispersed

Audience is disempowered

Thinks voting is empowering but with scams, and by actually voting what can change.

Encourages the status quo- the conservative popular consensus

Encourages apathy- can’t change the world

Power held by the few motivated by prodit of social control (propaganda)

Bland, escapist and standardised

Encourages escapism, seen as a drug which is anaesthetises us

Positives

Not all is low quality

Social problems and injustices are discussed by the media

Creativity can be a feature (Channel 4, trying new things)

Transmission of high art reaches a broader audience

Channel 4, showing turner prize, can watch the proms)

Democratic potential

Artists use of the mass media

-‘Art in the Age of the Mass Media’

John A Walker

Can art be autonomous? (exist on its own in a vacuum, be subject to its own laws)

Should it be? Some people think yes to keep its purity.

Richard Hamilton- Fine artist revelling in mass media- cinema

Lichtenstein- mocking artists elitists brush strokes

Warhol- Ambulance disaster, this apathy which has desentized us- things that could of shocked us.

Pollock standing above society, being elitist

-put on stone roses cover to bring him in to the masses.

Marcus Harvey

1963- mugshot of Mira Hindley

Childrens handprints to make up the face to represent the murders

With the title ‘Mira’, it implies an intimate relationship. But only knows her through the process

‘sick exploitation of dead children’

Not to glamorise her, but about press photographers. All desperate for a shot of her.

Meditation of medium- pixelated, using tones

Joke on newspaper style imagery.

Press attacking Harvey, but what they are guilty for.