Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Thursday, February 21, 2013

More Art

The BYU art museum really is a great place to go. Sure, they have your expected religious and LDS art, but they have a bunch of interesting modern exhibits as well. And while you're not going to find any nudes (I think), some of the pieces displayed are pushing the envelope in a different way. (I talked about another exhibit that they still have up here. It's Andy Warhol and Takashi Murakami.)

Their current exhibit is "We Could Be Heroes: The Mythology of Monsters and Heroes in Contemporary Art." It's an interesting exhibit because the pieces all seem very mismatched. You have photography, paintings, videos, sculptures, large inflatables, etc. None of the pieces really have the same aesthetic feel. Some concentrate on comic book characters, some on real-life "heroes," and some on Big Foot. I guess what really ties them all together is the artist's exploration of what it means to be a hero or monster. 

A piece that really stuck out to Colby and I was this untitled painting by Michael Whiting. The rest of Whiting's artwork can be found on his website here.


























The story goes that Whiting found this piece at a garage sale or something like that, and then painted a pixelated robot into the original scenery. What's awesome is that it works so well, you almost can't even tell. I mean yes, there is a giant futuristic robot in the middle of this Victorian (?) romanticized pasture, but the colors, the softness, and the direction that all of the nature and characters seem to point to fit in perfectly with his addition.

And who could not love a bubblegum pink pixelated robot? Especially in the middle of all that nature - he just looks like he belongs. There's definitely a lot of great humor to this painting. 

Again, maybe this piece of art mostly appeals to Colby and I because of our love of science fiction. But this painting also makes me want to find garage sale crap and turn it into something awesome. If only I were artistically inclined!

So props to Mr. Whiting and the BYU art museum. (You can check out the museum's website here.)

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Another artist I like ...

... is Michael Summers. Colby and I went to San Diego for our honeymoon (woo!), and found this artist in a gallery in the Seaport area. Which is gorgeous, by the way, and I want to live there forever now.

Here are a few of the pieces we saw:

"Right as Rain"

"A Mother's Love"

Pretty cool, right? He's got this awesome surrealist thing going on. I love the contrast of colors.

My favorite one is this robot one: 

"Be Still My Heart"
It really isn't surprising that this is my favorite one, considering my love of sci-fi. But still!!! I love the contrast of nature with technology, as well as the colors again. Plus, the pitiable robot is so appealing.

Also, it may not surprise you that I like this artist if you saw my other artist highlight on Takashi Murakami. They are kind of similar in a way. Do you see it?

So Merry Christmas and go to San Diego, my new favorite place!

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Artist Highlight

So Colby and I recently went to a museum that was displaying a small amount of work by Takashi Murakami, an awesome modern artist from Japan. 

I don't know anything about art, by the way, so if calling him "modern" is wrong, I apologize. I just mean that he's still alive. 

A lot of his stuff is really weird and surreal, and it's heavily inspired by Japanese anime styles. You can tell just from looking at it. 

Anyway, we really liked this piece:


Pretty cool, huh?
Colby decided that the reason why he liked it is because it was the only piece in there that acknowledged the oddity of the world Murakami had created. He's a pretty wise man, that Colby. (I think I probably agree with him, though. While I appreciated a lot of what the artist was "saying" about commercialism, consumerism, and marketing, a lot of it was probably just too much for my aesthetic taste.)

I also apologize because I don't know the names of any of these pieces and Google isn't being very helpful ...

While we're talking about Murakami, I'm going to show you this picture I found online of an exhibit he did in Versailles, France: 

This is one of the characters he's created, "Kiki"
How weird is that? The clash of cultures is SO AWESOME, and so surreal. Just bizarre. Loving it. Just kind of geeking out right now.