Tuesday, December 17, 2013

James Turrell- Roden Crater

There is an extinct volcanic crater in the Arizona desert that Turrell has been working on since 1974.  To me it seems like he's trying to create a cosmic and spiritual experience for the pilgrim who makes the trek out to the desert.  In a lot of religions, devotees have to make a long trip through barren land to get to an amazing mecca.  Roden Crater feels like that kind of place.  I can't wait until the second phase is complete and it opens up to the public.




 Check out this link for more info on Roden Crater.



James Turrell at LACMA

I went to this show last night and I feel like I went somewhere else. Remember that white room that Mike TV goes into in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (the original version)? This exhibit kinda feel like that at certain times. Other times it felt celestial and made me think of the afterlife- or at times he invokes a giddy curiosity about what could out there. Its an amazing, trippy show- if you want to experience something other-wordly you should definitely check this out before April 6th.









To see more of his work, here is a comprehensive catalog. There are a lot of public works that you can go visit!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Niels Shoe Meulman














NSM is a Dutch artist who first coined the term Calligraffiti- a blend of calligraphy and graffiti. I love that he's taken an old world technique and fused it with a street artform.  He is also a performance artist who creates calligraffiti on a large scale. Here is a video he did with Mos Def for Louis Vuitton.

Monica Dengo







Monica Dengo is a calligraphy artist who goes beyond just writing. Her words are many times illegible but the gestures themselves are the art. She creates a style that is a hybrid of markings and words.

Maggie Taylor






Maggie Taylor was also one of the artists at the Annenberg.  She's a photographer who then takes her images and creates bizarre dreamscapes. With Photoshop, anything is possible as Maggie clearly demonstrates.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

The Annenberg Space for Photography:Digital Darkroom-Brooke Shaden




Brooke Shaden's photographs look like stills from a film or a painting from another era. Each picture creates an imagined story of a time that feels very far away. Shaden uses Photoshop techniques so seamlessly that things look surreal yet feel like they belong.

For those of you that are lynda.com subscribers, Shaden has a tutorial on how she creates one of her photograph- from capturing the image to compositing and retouching.