Sunday, April 4, 2010

Icelandic Artist!



Oh my god I love this woman. Her name is Sigga Bjorg Siggurdardottir.
Say that five times fast.

She lives and works in Glasgow and Reykjavik, and has been doing art since 2002. And that's all I can find on her.

To me her artwork is almost those adorable frightening creatures from your dreams...

their little outfits, gaping mouths, leaking faces, missing limbs, humorous actions, pointed feet... love it.
check out her website, super awesome.

Monday, March 29, 2010

anya liftig subverts marina abramovic

check out this interview with an artist who dressed up and totally infiltrated another artist's performance piece over the weekend! too cool.

Friday, March 26, 2010

amy cutler rocks my socks




Amy Cutler is super cool: brooklyn artist, does very narrative / folktale and detailed paintings

"While I absorb references through the media there are always underlying personal meanings in my paintings. Often it will be a year or more before I feel like I fully understand why I selected certain images and painted them the way I did".


http://www.tonkonow.com/cutler.html

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Jennifer Linton!








http://www.jenniferlinton.ca/


So this wonderful artist, Jennifer Linton is definitely worth mentioning on this blog.

The images you see are from her recent alphabet series in pencil crayon (2007), which works off of the concept of the children's alphabet book as translated for adults, focusing on issues related to emotion and politics, from a personal, feminine perspective.

I really hope you check out the rest of her series on her web-portfolio, as well as her other work, it's really fab.

Other topics she explores in her other work include menstruation, pregnancy, gay and queer imagery, religion, consumerism, and the expression of emotion.

She harkens back in her imagery to symbols such as pomegranates, apes, and severed heads which tend to remind me of both Frida Kahlo and Artemisia Gentileschi.

She works mainly in pencil crayon, but also has some ties to printmaking techniques.

But I could talk all day, check her out for yourself...

Just for some Painful Laughs...

The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist:

  • Working without the pressure of success.

  • Not having to be in shows with men.

  • Having an escape from the art world in your 4 free-lance jobs.

  • Knowing your career might pick up after you're eighty.

  • Being reassured that whatever kind of art you make it will be labeled feminine.

  • Not being stuck in a tenured teaching position.

  • Seeing your ideas live on in the work of others.

  • Having the opportunity to choose between career and motherhood.

  • Not having to choke on those big cigars or paint in Italian suits.

  • Having more time to work when your mate dumps you for someone younger.

  • Being included in revised versions of art history.

  • Not having to undergo the embarrassment of being called a genius.

  • Getting your picture in the art magazines wearing a gorilla suit.

  • (This list was taken from http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/feminist/)

    Wednesday, March 17, 2010

    new & improved

    thanks so much for all your help, ladies - here's the new & improved version. i'm way happier with this one :)

    Tuesday, March 16, 2010

    sorry, so many posts!!!

    new introduction to write-up, tell me what you think!

    Our objective in our presentation is to address extreme feminist art through a specific dialogue: the revulsion and disgust of the audience. From shock to distaste, extreme feminist art ignites ideas, uncertainities, and repressed thoughts to the viewer. Our title, “Feminist Aesthetics of Disgust” emphasizes the importance of the viewer and their reactions to art work. The definition of disgust is a “strong repugnance, aversion, or repulsion excited by that which is loathsome or offensive” (OED). Michelle Meagher, an Albertan professor on feminist cultural studies, calls disgust “…a habituated emotion linked to and reflective of cultural paradigms…disgust is an attempt to render oneself distinct from that which disgusts”. Extreme feminist art involves the intimate, personal, and fragile thoughts and ideas that is present in the viewers' life: if the viewer acknowledges this presence, the viewer will become vulnerable. We chose to examine four different artists who, through their own (dis) taste, create disturbance and cross boundaries.

    bouncing ideas for introduction / conclusion...

    PS: we should probably explain why we decided to have the theme of
    'disgust' as our main theme in our write-up... what would be a good definition?
    what does disgust mean?
    OED: Strong repugnance, aversion, or repulsion excited by that which is loathsome or offensive, as a foul smell, disagreeable person or action, disappointed ambition, etc.; profound instinctive dislike or dissatisfaction.

    In the essay about jenny saville, Michelle Meagher calls disgust: "... a habituated emotion linked to and reflective of cultural paradigms" (32).
    She also describes how disgust in art is socially constructed...when we feel disgust, we do not recognize why, nor how our revulsion is created, "disgust reveals something about the way our social orders are structured and how we variously inhabit those social orders...as a gut reaction, disgust is an attempt to render oneself distinct from that which disgusts--disgust is that embodied practice of cringing, backing away, highlighting one's separation from an object"

    Bouncing ideas

    So disgust is the reaction to our artists' work... we are asking the viewers, why do you cringe? why do you feel repulsed? What reasons do you wish to avert your eyes? Even more so, these works of art that cause us to feel uncomfortable, they are threatening to our privacy...we feel things in association, we understand what they portray
    (saville's 'bigness', coble's self-mutilation, kiki smith's intimacy with seeping,leaking, private spheres, galindo's abrasive reclamation involving women and violence)

    and that is something intimate, personal, and fragile. If we acknowledge this presence, we become vulnerable.

    ^Is this what extreme feminist art does? It makes us vulnerable?

    presentation report!

    WGST 398 Presentation:

    Feminist Aesthetics of Disgust

    Title

    Objectives-Our objective is to address extreme feminist through a specific dialogue: the revulsion and disgust of the audience. From shock to distaste, extreme feminist art ignites ideas, uncertainities, and repressed thoughts to the viewer. We chose to examine four different artists who, through their own (dis) taste, disturb and cross boundaries.

    Each person talk of their artist, their themes, and the investigative processes:

    1) jenny saville

    2) kiki smith

    3) mary coble

    4) regina galindo

    As a group, we met weekly to discuss our progress in researching and analyzing the artists. From a vast selection of artists, we decided to choose four so we could be specific and detailed in our presentation.

    Monday, March 15, 2010

    HELP ME 2

    hey guys,

    so after a series of technical fiascos and a bunch of weekend tomfoolery that did not involve doing homework (fail), i have complete what looks like the first draft of my art project. thanks so much for helping me hash out the ideas in our lunch meeting? it's turned into a wee video after all...could i trouble you to watch it and let me know what you think? i'm a video noob, so any recommendations on image & audio quality and critical discourse and all that jazz are much appreciated.

    i tried to embed the video but the size is all wrong, so here's the link:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euASq6ltcG0

    lunch meeting tomorrow?

    Saturday, March 13, 2010

    HELP

    HELP

    I'm stuck. I don't know if I should concentrate on Jenny Saville or Jessica Lagunas. Lagunas is the woman who did the videos of her putting on makeup (lipstick all over face and chin) and she also did series on menstrual blood, dotted pretty patterns on clothing, dresses, mattresses. Another thing she did was a video of her plucking her pubic hair, called, "return to puberty".

    I'm torn because Saville is interesting because it's through paint, medium we haven't talked about, and Lagunas because her videos are extremely unsettling...grooming and aesthetics of women (excluding the menstrual patterns)
    they both are involved with beauty and ideals....
    which one do you guys think I should do?

    Tuesday, March 9, 2010

    March 9th 2010

    QUESTIONS TO BE ADDRESSED:


    What does this work evoke?


    what is it made?


    How does it relate to our topic


    what is the artist trying to prove or proving


    Are there any critics or


    what is the history or connection between the artist and the artwork?


    Are there any questions....

    -did any of the artists presented make you uncomfortable ... why?

    -concepts


    extended resources for people to check out.



    Friday, March 5, 2010

    AAHH

    hey, i'm in library today til around 12 30. Did you all get the email joan borsa sent?
    "Hi All,

    Is your group still focusing on some aspect of extreme body art, monstrous femininity, the abject or unruly bodies? Would you be able to present on March 17? I would like to hear back from you by Fri noon as I want to confirm readings for next week. If you are within the realm of monstrous femininity are you addressing Orlan's or Saville's work? I would like to assign the readings on Orlan and Saville to match your presentation day -- assuming you are still covering this topic. Look forward to hearing back from you."

    Would you say our topic IS monstrous feminity? It's a really good slogan. and if so, are we ready for march 17? i don't know if i will be... this art proejct and my 20 page essay...shit... but if we have to i can do it. We need to reply...!

    Thursday, March 4, 2010

    Ruven Afanador




    OK so I finally found that artist I kept talking about, who did a series on flamenco dancers. And he also did a series on bull fighters! He plays alot with gender, as you can tell from the bull fighters. They're beautifully effeminate.

    Here's some photos!

    and here's his photography site!

    http://www.art-dept.com/artists/afanador/


    think I'll go with Kiki Smith and stick with the theme of bodily fluids...
    thoughts? suggestions?



    K I think I found some interesting artists.


    1) Kiki Smith - works with bodily fluid to bring out a sense of revulsion in viewers...such as blood, shit, pus, milk etc. etc.


    2)Victoria Van Dyke - raped at 11yrs old, her memories caused her to create some highly disturbing art... such as this pic.



    Tuesday, March 2, 2010

    MISSIONS

    RESEARCH.


    Emma is researching Regina Jose Galindo.

    Katie is doing an artist focusing on bodily fluid.

    Leah is Mary Coble.

    Cassie is doing Jenny Saville or an alternate artist dealing with distortion of the image.

    All are having a grand ol' time.

    Saturday, February 27, 2010

    Extreme!!!!


    Check it out! This artist fights tigers! If that isn't extreme, I'm not sure what is...



    (found this cartoon on facebook)

    Thursday, February 25, 2010

    Some feminist extreme art...

    I found some interesting artists, some are culturally making a statement as well as in terms of female body.. is culture something we want to approach? ex, Renee Cox comments on the stereotypes and assumptions of african american woman in society

    Renee Cox--African American artist--works include themes on religion, African stereotypes, women's place in society, sexuality and race...photography, self-portraitures

    https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/renee_cox.php?v=1898

    http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache%3Av2a4mSmDHDUJ%3Awww.reneecox.org%2Fpress%2Fmamaartist.pdf+renee+cox+critic&hl=en&gl=ca&sig=AHIEtbQuUmjNNtnk17g2iWrgl60CeAwVPQ



    Mary Coble--works focus on themes like lesbianism, gay rights, homosexual restrictions,--self-harm, performance art. tattooing.

    https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/mary_coble.php?i=2308

    http://thenewgay.net/2008/04/artist-profile-mary-coble.html


    Wangechi Mutu--race, sexuality, vaginal references...collage work, magazines, dismembered bodies

    https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/wangechi_mutu.php?i=1595


    Regina Jose Galindo--Guatemalan, political, abuse of women, rights of women. performance art, photography

    https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/reginajose.php?

    Hannah Wilke--female iconography, video performance, body art, performance art, photography, self portraits



    http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/hannah_wilke.php

    Wednesday, February 24, 2010

    meeting with joan

    Men & feminist art: the topic is good, but it's too broad. let's pick something we're really curious about and committed to.

    Options:
    -extreme feminist art (Orlan & Co.)
    -cultural feminist art (Chitra Ganesh)
    -focus on a particular artist (Ana Mendieta, Louise Bourgeois, etc.)
    -compare & contrast two feminist artists

    Local feminist art is also too big and not realistic with the time that we have...

    So far nobody is focusing on just one or two artists...

    Other groups are doing Barbie art, graffiti art...

    What kind of contribution can we make to the class? This isn't just a project; it should open up some doors for us & our own interests.

    Maybe pick three different artists over a distinct period of time that take things into different directions and developments? Developing a lineage of feminist art, and how artists have been influenced by each other?

    Joan suggests we focus on a particular artist or group of artists, or extreme feminists in art. Between these two, there's probably enough to choose from for a presentation even though we have other ideas. These are really solid and manageable and can be carved into distinct units for each group member while still leaving room for depth, complexity, and criticality.

    Katie is interested in the evolution of the self portrait; Cassie in extreme feminist art/shock factor/carrying a message; Emma is thinking; Leah is ok with either two but Joan thinks we should eliminate one tonight.

    Consensus: find max. four extreme feminist artists to focus on & synthesize into a presentation

    What does extreme feminist art mean to each of us?

    Emma: The body scroll (1970s) Kara-Lee Schneeman (sp?) Internal/external; hidden; risk; performative; nudity; gutsy, with an audience. Not just extreme in a spectacular way but extreme in a way of pushing the boundaries to push your point. Giving birth to something? Taboos around vaginal imagery and referencing the body and the interiority and biology etc. fear of essentialism...but this was a very successful piece. Why? What is its currency still?
    Cassie: Orlan
    Joan suggests Linda Benglas with the strap-on. In "Art Forum" as an ad. Think about the time period and the daringness.
    Leah: where art-making becomes extreme in that it is harmful (cutting artist)
    Joan: So far we're all talking about EXTREME BODY ART.
    Emma: woman living for 48 hours naked in a glass box like a house (performance art)
    Katie: Joan suggests to Google and look up "extreme body art"
    Emma: Are we ready to look at the images that come along with this territory?
    Leah: Each pick a topic/artist to focus on something within our comfort level?
    Cassie: Extreme can be a number of things; sexual, etc.

    Joan: "Out of Step: Cathy Sisler's Risky Deviations" video
    alcohol & drug addiction, fear of speaking in public, etc.
    extreme story in public view
    Our notion of extreme as we go along might get more focused; we might drop the notion or find subcategories. It is a useful notion to start with though! Artists who are pushing the limits.

    Emma: Would men's versions of extreme body art be entirely different?
    Cassie: The sperm tree :)
    Joan: Lisa Streifler, U of R

    post-class topic vote

    majority in favour of further exploring "can art be unintentionally feminist?"

    survey says yes.

    Tuesday, February 23, 2010

    Meeting Summary


    OK!


    Upon approaching our meeting today I was really distraught due to a few burning and circular questions. These included:


    What is feminism?

    What is the difference between pro-feminist and feminist in terms of male involvement?

    (for a short definition of pro-feminist see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro-feminism)


    Can art be unintentionally feminist in nature?

    What is feminist art?


    What is pro-feminist art? and,


    Art and perspective? ah? eh?



    During discussion of these issues and the conflicts arising from them, we stumbled across the notion of appropriation. With talks of appropriation we also started to talk about postmodernism, and how that type of cultural borrowing/ appropriation may be a different thing entirely in that it is trying to create something that is different from a source by referencing and mixing rather than copying. For example, a cowboy wearing a punk collar (or punk wearing a cowboy hat) is different from both cowboy and punk.


    Under the lose heading of negative appropriation we talked about the example of the Oil of Olay Commercail type media. In this something that is designed and scripted by a man is represented as the perspective of a woman speaking to women. This would be a woman appropriating a masculine dialogue, as well as a man appropriating a woman's dialogue, but subverting the outright contradiction of this by having it represented through a woman.


    Acting and the performative dialogue may become a useful tool in trying to untangle the obstacles we are facing to this problem.



    Speaking about the Oil of Olay reference has me thinking about your example, Leah, where you were talking about how you admired the spoken word style of a poet who's perspective and context highly differ from yours and that you would feel silly trying to create yourself. Consider this- if you wanted to appropriate, technically you could write this style of poetry, and have someone else read it who you thought fit into the context of narrating your piece. That would be a style of sneaky appropriation yes?


    Next on topic became a discussion on how we could define for ourselves what feminist/women's art could be conceived from.


    We asked ourselves:


    - Is it the material?

    If so, how does Patrick Trayer explore this?

    -how does he employ the material? Is he appropriating or providing a contextual dialogue? How is his use of the material interpreted by others and by himself?
    - Is it in the action? Or, in a different manner of speaking, performative?

    If so, how does Adrien Stimson explore this?

    Also, along with the notions of appropriation, how does he confront appropriation's ties with a colonialist style discourse?

    Performative representation, cross dressing, style of cultural dress

    -Is it in how the figure is represented?

    If so, could Cassie's example of William Blake be used in discussion?

    -Is it a specific manner of dialogue?

    This needs more thought... ideas please!



    Other Thoughts:


    -subjectivity and personal perspective as pro-feminist notions

    -cultural politics, exclusion and inclusion, and their relation to feminism

    -Madonna and her constantly changing image- where the simulation of the real becomes more real than the real itself.

    -Is feminist art simply the challenging of dominant themes and oppressive context?

    -how deconstructivism and postmodernism apply to feminist art. Can the current meanings of traditionally female materials be not changed but placed in a conflicting conjunction/context in order to disrupt their contemporary or stereotyped read. Perhaps an example of this could be some of Vivienne Westwood's work.



    Other interesting thoughts that may or may not relate to our topic:


    Is there feminist architecture?

    Why is the sky blue?





    Thanks for reading folks. Enjoy the brain fodder. And just a reminder to post any and all thoughts to the blog, as well as update your facebook status with your location when you are on campus to enjoy some great company studying as well as increase the chance of random thought collision for this project.


    Over and Out.




    questions from research meeting #2

    Emma: What is the difference between pro-feminist and feminist?
    Can something that is unintentionally feminist be feminist? Does it count if it is unintentional? YES...
    Men & feminist art: promoting & connecting similar views as feminism but from their individual perspectives. Building bridges but not trying to self-represent for someone else, because that would be false.
     
    Katie: What exactly is feminist art?

    Leah: will look into the concept of voice appropriation

    Emma suggested a meeting with Joan to sort out some of our concepts. We've got a really good conceptual framework, but let's get some examples to fill it in. In the next week or so, think about looking for examples of male artists who either are feminist/pro-feminist OR can be interpreted as representing some of the research questions we've been asking.

    Tuesday, February 9, 2010

    ra ra ra

    "Feminist art is not some tiny creek running off the great river of real art. It is not some crack in an otherwise flawless stone. It is, quite spectacularly I think, art which is not based on the subjugation of one half of the species. It is art which will take the great human themes — love, death, heroism, suffering, history itself — and render them fully human. It may also, although our imaginations are so mutilated now that we are incapable of the ambition, introduce a new theme, one as great and rich as those others — should we call it 'joy'?"
    Andrea Dworkin, "Feminism, Art, and My Mother Sylvia," in a speech, April 16, 1974, at Smith College, Northampton, Mass

    ^ quote we might be able to build off of? (for proving -male-feminist-art can be possible?)

    Also, discovered one of the old masters of art, William Blake, was indeed a feminist--was friends with Mary Wollstonecraft-- however i don't know if his feminism is expressly portrayed in his art...would he be a good example? or maybe not?

    here's one of his paintings... he did a lot of mythological and biblical references, yet, when he did such controversial goddesses as this one (Hecate--when roman times hit, they labeled her as a monster [bringer of death etc...]) they are not shown as such. but i'll keep researching him, I've just skimmed his paintings so far, maybe i can find some that apply better.


    http://bedsofpurple.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/hekatewilliamblake.jpg

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