Posts

Vernacular type

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  Let me just start off by saying this project has been my absolute favorite project. I love that I got to go out and explore a new place especially during class time; and to be honest I knew about The Square before this project but thanks to this project I finally got that little push I had been needing in order to go out and actually explore it. I will be honest though the day my classmates and I went out to explore the weather was absolutely horrible. It was rainy and way too humid for my liking.   We started off at the San Marcos Courthouse then we all went our separate ways to take our photos; I started off by walking across the street and took a photo of a movie theater, then proceeded to walk the entirety of The Square. Which, by the way, was a great workout. Like I said before I am so glad I was finally able to explore it. I found so many stores that I was dying to visit but because I had a lot of photos to take and I was technically in class I couldn’t exactly walk in...

Color walk.

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As someone who is trying to grow spiritually I listen to a lot of podcasts and follow a lot of men and women who are on the same journey as I am, and almost all of the podcasts I have listened to have suggested trying to find the beauty in the world. I appreciate Mother Nature and all of her colors and her strength, but sometimes you get caught up stressing about the future and staring at your phone screen to get caught up in the latest news or drama that you miss all the beauty she has to offer. This world is beautiful but I think that all the evil going on in the world overshadows all of its beauty.  When I started this Color Identity project the colors that came to mind are the colors that Mother Nature has to offer for example: the color of a tree trunk, the color of leaves, flower petal colors, the color of leaves that have fallen off trees, building colors, etc. It was less about the color wheel or man made colors that we have been learning so much about and more about the co...

Interaction of Color- Josef Alber

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I don’t think I ever noticed how differently everyone views color I mean obviously I know that some people are colorblind so they either can’t see a specific color or they mix up their colors. For example, I don’t know if you have ever seen the T.V. Show New Girl on Netflix but in season 3 episode 1 Winston finds out he is colorblind by pointing out that Nick is wearing what he sees as a green shirt, but to everyone else it’s a brown shirt. When I read the part of “Interaction of Color” that states “If one says “red” (the name of a color) and there are 50 people listening, it can be expected that there will be 50 reds in their minds. And one can be sure that all these reds will be very different.” (1. Color recollection- visual memory Josef Abler). I think that those two examples do a good job of explaining how everyone sees colors differently because the way that Winston saw green while everyone saw brown, and the way that someone listening to the radio can hear the word “red” and ins...

My take on camera obscura

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 A lot of my recent blog entries have been about camera obscura and I have just been using professional artists’ and their take on it, but I have made my own camera obscura and my professor created a, very, large camera obscure. And let me just say it is so much better than the definition makes you think. Is it a little confusing still? Yes, but oh my goodness it is cool. I mean you take one tiny, well light, hole and one very dark room and you have an image, not only that but the image is upside down. In my opinion “cool” doesn’t even begin to describe it I think Zoe Leonard described it perfectly it is a “natural phenomenon.” I even created my own camera obscura out of cardboard box and tape sadly I didn’t take any photos during the process of me making my camera obscura but I did take a photo of the final product.  Here are some photos that I think are really neat: (all of these were taken by me in my classroom) This photo is my final product (well almost final I am still w...

Zoe Leonard interview

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Zoe Leonard: You see I am here after all . 2008 “The film Niagara reveals an incredible fear of the power of female desire, which could be beautiful, certainly, but the implication is that the nature of female desire is so inherently destructive that if it is unleashed, everyone is going to die.” In all honesty when I saw the word “feminist” in the interview my mind did not automatically think “Yes that is the word I think about when I hear Niagara Falls”; however, upon further reading I realized that it is not such a weird word to use to describe Niagara Falls. This quote mentions a movie, that I will admit I have never heard of or seen, that puts into perspective how abnormal it is for women to express desires. Last semester I took an English class and I read an article that talks about the something similar about how it is “socially unacceptable” for women to express their desires out loud because that is something that only men are “allowed” to do. This quote reminds me of the art...

Zoe Leonard’s take on Camera Obscura

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Recently in my Core 2 class we have been learning about camera obscura, which if we are using the googled definition is: a darkened room with a small hole or lens at one side through which an image is projected onto a wall or table opposite the hole. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura#/media/File:1755_james_ayscough.jpg However I think that the definition given to us by Google does not capture how cool camera obscura is; but an artist who does is Zoe Leonard. Leonard lives in New York City and uses a good majority of her environment as the main subject of her art work; in a video about her exhibition “Observation Point” she mentions that she decided to start working with camera obscura because she felt that a lot of people where too focused on asking her why she was still doing digital photography instead of other mediums of photography. Leonard wanted to bring back what she describes as a “natural phenomenon” because she felt that photography was in a moment of “flux” and sh...