Monday, May 14, 2012

Thursday, May 10, 2012

menil building




this building is very contemporary its has a lot of line qualityand repetition and rhythem.  I would say that it symmetrical design thebuilding is agray with white accent it kind of remind you of a little community just sit there like one of the old county town that I pass though when we go to Planterville.  The bottom picture remind me of waves from the sea  it like they are suppose to be rocking back and forth and the beams would be something like a boat.  It is really a nice building to go to see.





Menil Building



FotoFest

Olga Tobreluts, Hercules, 1995. Courtesy of the artist

I like this photo the focal point of this would be the man holding the apple.  The photo has atmospheric perspective where the sky gets darker the futher it goes back, also the sands seem to get light the further it goes back.  I like how the artist put the red then the black next to the pale man, then the green trees are really green but the grass is lighter than the tree.  It to me balance with the rock on the left side and the tree on the right it is asymmetrical balance.   I also like the way that the man hair is the same colors as the boarder of the picture.  The rock if you really look at it look to me like a animal or a rabbit. This man is very muscler ans well proportion and the is represesentation form of art.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Menil Collection RePost 4/23/12






Menil Collection Building Basic Info:
Artist’s Name: Renzo Piano
Date: 1982

Part 1:

The formal (visual) Analysis the museum campus has grown to include two satellite galleries to the main building: The structure seems to have utilized insubstantial and brace, among other materials in the assembly building has a sort of wonderful design and flow of the building many windows, giving it funky edge than other places I have seen in the Museum District..  It does have a balance and level of visually clarity to help you follow the curse and openness of the building. Two other buildings founded by the de Menils, but now operating as independent foundations complete the campus:
This Menil building has a nice structure and it seem unique in a weird way, I had a total different design in mind. Me and my boys went to Menil Building; the boy’s said that the trim looked like waves in the ocean.
Part 2
The reason why Renzo Piano designed the building, the solution was a roof of 'leaves' of thin ferro-cement which would span both the free areas as well as the display rooms of the flat building, and to which additional lights could be easily attached. Above this, a sealed superstructure contains the 'treasury'—an air-conditioned storage space for works of art not on display. The traditional timbering of the outside walls is a reference to the surrounding houses: 'Demonumentalization' was the motto.  The effect when you looking from the outdoors, it make you tunnel effect like you are surrounded by grass and forest, trees and naturals.
Work of Art
Artist’s Name: Picasso
Title: The women in red armchair
Date: 1929
Material : oil base warm colors
Size: 802x1088

  1. This oil on canvas painting portrays a woman in a pastoral the focal point of the work is the central figure, a woman in a red dress." The women seem to leaning to one side. When you looking at the picture more to the right. "They consist of line, shape, space, color, light, and dark, which artists arrange in many different ways to achieve broader categories of design. These, in turn, consist of balance, order and proportion, and pattern and rhythm." The painting made me feel glamour and sexy
  2. Nonrepresentational Cultural origin: Spanish  

Sunday, May 6, 2012




Andy Warhol (1928-1987), Big Campbell's Soup Can 19¢, 1962


The focal point of this painting would be the red background on the word Campbell. To me, this is representation art. It is an outline on a flat surface. There's a little shading at the top of the can. My daughter says that if you stare at it for a while, it looks like a one-eared dog. The vantage point of this can is the yellow dot in the middle of the can. There seems to be neither a time or motion going on. It's more like an icon than a symbol to me. Anyone else would look at this as just a can of soup, but it's art.

Untitled, Julie Mehretu


This painting caught my eye because the first thing i saw was a cat's face. Then I started seeing the circular motions of the painting and saw a lot of positive space. The focal point of this painting seems to be the bold black lines. The colors in this painting are the red, green, black, yellow, pink and blue. The texture seems to be 3-D; it seems to have a time and motion feel to it. There's a rhythm to this painting because  the strokes look a if they could be repeated over and over. To me, this painting is more abstract because of the name.  For these reasons, I like this painting.

Menil Collection Visit

The work of art that I chose from the Menil Collection was a relief sculpture from ancient Egypt around 1320-1200 B.C.  The work is a low relief sculpture depicting the Egyptian god Horus with his traditional staff and headdress.  The sculpture portrays Horus in the precise, flattened view that the Egyptian sculptors traditionally used and seems to have been created for the purpose of worship or the glorification of Horus, as the hieroglyphics inscribed into the limestone near Horus say "The beautiful Horus, the great god, lord of heaven, one who is foremost in Bahet(or Edfu)."  The sculpture also depicts many symbols that I have seen often in ancient Egyptian reliefs such as the ankh, but I am not sure what the meanings for these symbols are.  I unfortunately could not find an image of, or take a picture of this sculpture, or I would have included an image in my post.

The Menil Collection building was created by artist Renzo Piano in 1982.  The building seems to have utilized concrete and steel, among other materials in the construction.  I think the building has a sort of modern design and features many windows, giving it a much different design than the Museum of Fine Arts.  The elements on the outside of the building seem to bring a balance to it, making the building have a calm feel and in my opinion, making it seem more inviting.  I think that this was why Renzo Piano designed the building the way that he did, because to me the building for the Menil Collection is more inviting than the buildings for the Museum of Fine Arts; I think this may help more people go to see the art who may not otherwise because of the way some people have turned looking at art or going to a museum into something just for some people, when art should be for everyone.

Artists that Draw: Suh Se-ok

For this assignment I chose the artist Suh Se-ok, and his work titled "People". In the 1950s, Suh Se-ok began to encourage other artists inside and outside of the Mungnimhoe movement, which he was the leader of, to break free from the traditional styles and let their work become more abstract.  This abstractness is present in much of Se-ok's works, especially in the pieces such as "People"; he uses a blend of traditional ink painting and calligraphy to create this work, which seems to depict a chain of people linked by holding each other's hands.  The work was made by the drawing of the Chinese character for people with a bamboo brush and ink from traditional ink painting styles from Asia.  I believe that he uses the element of drawing in drawing the characters to help bring a more abstract feel to his work that might have been lost if he pursued another medium and not drawing.

Friday, May 4, 2012

The Menil Collection







           I really can’t say that anything about the building stood out to me except the forms that were made on the ground.  I have to say that the figures in the ground were the only thing that looked interesting to me and actually made stop to look and think about the design.  Like I said, I didn’t feel as if anything else about the building was special.  I have seen architecture that has made me stop and say to myself, “how in the hell did they do that”, such as the house that was made on the waterfall by frank Lloyd Wright.  As far as the rest of the visit I would also have to say that nothing really stood out to me either.  I decided to do my blog on Richard Serra‘s hand videos which feature human hands doing a variety of actions.  The first is Hands Tied, 1968, the second is Hand Lead Fulcrum, 1968, the third is Hand Catching Lead, 1968, and the fourth is hands Scraping, 1968.  The reason that I wanted to do my blog on these art works is because it’s the only thing in the museum that caught my attention for more than ten minutes.  I actually felt like a dumbass for staring and waiting for something else to happen.  Honestly nothing else caught my attention for more than thirty seconds at the museum.  Everything aside I really enjoyed my visit and I will probably being going again and I also donated some money, not a whole lot but some.  



Richard-Serra-Hands-tied-SFMOMA




Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Untitled

Untitled

Abraham Walkowitz  (American (born Russia), Tyumen 1878–1965 Brooklyn, New York)


To me, this painting is abstract because of the title, but it looks like a shark because of the teeth, the round circle of the eye, and the position of the mouth. There's a lot of negative space in this painting but you also have  a little positive space near the tip of the nose, near whatever it's eating on, and the bottom of the mouth. To me. it looks more like an outline. It does have rhythm and has both scale and proportion. It has a form of light because, to me, it shows the contour of a fish. It seems as if this picture has no balance and the focal point seems to be the teeth. I just like it because it's weird.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Menil Art Review

 Menil Collection
Artist: Renzo Piano
Date: 1982

The Menil had a unique effect to it because it didn't seem like a very large building from the outside, but when you went in it seemed very large on the inside. In terms of size, from the outside it didn't stand out much from the surrounding neighborhood because it was not too tall like other museums. Also some houses in the surrounding area echo the "Menil Gray" of the museum so that it doesn't overpower the area. The roofing design was genius as well because it used natural light to illuminate the gallery without exposing any works to direct sunlight which gave everything a more natural look along with the gardens. The wants of the Menil's was the main focus of Renzo Piano's design, but he did not do exactly what they wanted. Piano, instead, tried to satisfy their wants through unique ways such as the ferro-leaf roof to let in the natural light, and blending the size and color with some of the surrounding houses. Overall he tried to incorporate some of his own ideas of green architecture into their museum to serve their purpose while connecting the building to the environment. The effect of Piano's design is very humble and ordinary on the outside while having a very unique experience inside with the natural light not usually seen in other galleries, which is typical of green architecture style.

"Untitled"- Richard Serra
Artwork
Artist: Richard Serra
Title: Untitled
Date: 1972-73
Materials: Paintstick on Paper
Size: 37-13/16" x 50"

I chose this piece by Richard Serra which is one of his many paintings in his vast collection of black and white paintings. It is not as large as some of his other works but still plays with some of the same factors of space as does the larger ones. His paintings cause the viewers to look at the room in a different perspective and how his drawing changes it with its presence. In this drawing he leaves parts of the white paper to kind of asymmetrically balance the contrasting space and makes you notice the positive and negative space just in the drawing. In his all black drawings however, he plays with the positive and negative space in the room by placing these large works in rooms of all white walls. In this he plays with the viewers perspective to make them imagine his drawing as a endless dark abyss in the wall. The materials Serra uses are also more typical of smaller drawings rather than large works. Most of his drawings, I believe, would fall under the category of nonrepresentational art because he is not trying to represent anything necessarily; he is just exploring and studying the elements that would make up a drawing. I found that Richard Serra's work might be very similar to that of Pat Steir, who shows different types of line that can be used in drawing. Serra's version is done in a more abstract way than Steir because maybe he wants the reader just focus on each element of line simply without the other complexities of drawing. He also said, “There is no way to make a drawing—there is only drawing,” which further proves why he does not label his drawings as "lessons" as in Steir's work.

Menil Visit


Menil Collection building Basic info:
Artist’s Name (if available): Renzo Piano
Date: 1982


Formal (Visual) Analysis –Describe the building visually and be as descriptive and detailed as possible. What are the size, colors, materials, etc?

- The building was not as big as other museums. It has a soft gray color with white panels on top of the building. It doesn’t have any extraordinary designs. However, the lawn was beautiful with a few designs on the grass. I enjoyed the environment that surrounded The Menil.

Finding Meaning- Why do you think Renzo Piano designed the Menil building in the way that he did? What  effect does it have on you looking at it from the outdoors and experiencing it from the inside?

- I think Piano designed the building with the intentions of making the building blend with the houses that surrounded the building. The houses weren’t fancy or elegant. He didn’t want to design something that will not fit in the area. When you look at it from the outside, you see a simple, not too big or small building. However, when you go inside it is big.



Work of Art
Artist’s Name (if available): Rene Magritte
Title: The Rape
Date:         1934
Materials: Canvas
Size:


Formal (Visual) Analysis –Describe the piece visually and be as descriptive and detailed as possible. What are the size, colors, materials, or sounds? 

- The piece with quit hilarious. From a far distant, you see a women's strange face. When you walk closer, then you'll see what it actually is. The eyes are the boobs, the bellybutton is the nose and the middle part with the pubic hair is the mouth. The hair is just added on top to make it more realistic.


Finding Meaning- Use titles, text, symbols, how the subject matter represented (abstract, representational, nonrepresentational), role of the art, the cultural origin, or any other info you can to try to find the meaning of the work.

-By the title id say is representational. Rene Magritte was a Belgian artist who drew realistic and illusions paintings. The Rape is few of his examples. It represents the anatomy of the women’s body and transforming it as a picture of a face. The breasts are the eyes, the stomach and bellybutton is the middle section of the nose and the middle part with the pubic hair is the mouth.     




Rape - Rene Magritte

Monday, April 23, 2012

The Menil Visit The building

    1. Part formal (visually  analysis Describe the building visually and be as descriptive  and detailed as possible.
What are the size color and materials. etc....
 The menil collection was opened to the public in 1987 .The Menil was opened to house the exhibit and preserve art work of Renzo of John and Dominique De Menil. .The Menil collection building has many different Foundations.Outside the building designs are   very different from the Fine Art building . The architecture of this building had a whole different design in mind.The building had lots of glass windows surrounding the building .I saw rectangular shape windows and I saw square shape windows. The  Menil building has a balance far as the windows .there was unity all around the building. The color of the outside  building was like a mint green ,and it is considered to be a cool. color. I loved the color green .The outside was like siding .I thought it would have been made of brick . The outside of the building had concrete pillars.,all around the building.The pillars were painted white .The architects used paint and  they used lots of cement ,glass sealer for the windows. This Menil building really different ,I had a total different design in mind. The white trim just add finishing touches to the building .When you observed the building the  way it is design you will know this building is not a modern design building.However,I like the covering of the building. ,so when walking around the sidewalk ,you are protected. inclement weather.The building is well kept and the land scapping is beautiful.. The building had high glass windows aswell. I enjoyed the visit I will be going and the time I will take my grand children.
 





   

Menil visit Pablo Picasso woman in a Red Armchair.

I visited the Menil Collection . There were so many drawing and art works to chose . I  looked around until I ran across this particular piece of art work. This piece of drawing caught my eye,because I loved the artist
Picasso . When I fell in love with the piece of art I didn't know Picasso was the artist of this drawing. The art drew my attention ,because the name  ,The name of the art is Woman In Red Armchair 1929.The materials used was oil base paint and a canvas board.Wide and thin paint brushes.The painting constisted of cool and warm colors. I thought the painting had a low light effect .Picasso used thick and thinn lines in this painting. There balance in this painting .The orginal size of this painting is 802x1088 . This painting is Nonrepresentational. .The colors used in this painting were Grey,Orange, Black, White,Pink ,Brownand Tan .I think the orange made the painting the warm feeling ,but I could not make sense of the painting .I call this painting representational . Pacasso is a great artist I just love his art work.

Comtempary Art Musuem

Ready Made Art Show-Cineplex
I went to this musuem to see the Ready made art show ,and was told this was no longer here on display.The showing of the Cineplex was there as you stepped down the staris you come face to face with a flashy light display that hurts your eyes,and seems to suck you into it.The telephone everybody answers the phone they show a number of people actors and ordinary people answering the phone.On an area where you sit and look at a long position of dots, wiggly lines orange, black and white. The music is hypnotic to draw you in. The pictures and display up staris are also very weird.

Sandra Thomas
Art APRECIATION 1301

The Menil Collection

Sandra Thomas
Art Apreciation 1301
April 22,2012


The Building: As you stepped out of your car the first thing you notice is a large red jack, then you see the large building.The building is huge the colors seem to be greenish-gray hues, tall white pilars seem to hold the building up it remains you of an old victorian home in the south.The white rails on the top of the building looks like a balcony, the green trees seem to grow right into the building itself. There are mazes embedded in the ground that makes designs ,and the white sails look like solar panels used to collect wind. The giant pengelium gray in color hanging on the front is slowly swinging when the wind blows. The flooring all troughout the building was a beautiful mahagony wood floors with vents showing.There are several building where the people go see the many beautiful display of art.
Artist:Renzo Piano
Date:1982


I have chosen two pieces to showcase.
1.Work of Art
Artist:Moscow
Title:Entry into Jerusalem
Date:Early 16th Century
Material:Oil paint on a panel of wood
Size:11in by 14in
This is a beautiful piece that shows Jesus coming in on the colt-donkey into Jerusalem. Their are people watching on both sides, the apostles and the people of that city they are spreading down cloths down on the ground before him.These cloths are beautiful green and red, all throghout the picture there are complimentary colors of red, green, yellow and browns. Every one on this piece are brown skinned, with wool hair dark brown in color. the colors are so bright and beautiful.

2. Work of Art
Artist:George Segal
Title:Seated Women
Date:1967
Material:Plaster, Wood chair
Size:Life size

This piece was very odd indeed I thought there was someone in this plaster it looked so life like.The color was white all over and the chair was an old wood one with a vinel material, a burgandy color.This seated women remains you of the piece The Thinker,she has her hand up under her chin and the elbow resting on the top of the chair. She has a good pose and she is sitting in the center of the floor. The period that this piece was made was during a time when plaster was very popular to use.This women is all totally white.A very nice piece of work.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Menil Visit

Menil Collection building Basic info:
Artist’s Name (if available): Renzo Piano
Date: 1982
The building itself looks like a modern greenhouse. Not sure what the building is all made of but it is a gray colored building with light blue windows. The outside has artwork in the grass and around the building to lure visitors in. The stores that surround the building looks like houses until you walk up and see the signs.  The floors had an erie creek to it I can imagine it would be a horrible stay at night. The place had a really laid back feel to it considering there were atleast 15 people sunbathing with beach towels in the grass and playing with their dogs.
 





Work of Art 
Artist’s Name (if available): Emerson
Title:N/A
Date: 2010
Materials: Paint stick on Handmade paper
Size:N/A
The first thing that I noticed on this one was that it reminded me of a black burning sun,  Balance of the artwork is shown with the same splatter like pattern on the paper's edges before it collects into a massive mold. This piece looks as if it were inspired by an eclipse. The artist gave it texture by building up the paint all the way around it in a 3" - 6" thick mound of paint. The color of it is black and it gives off dark art traits almost as it were a meteorite blocking off the sun as it crashes down.

Menil Collection Visit Due 4/23


Picture taken by Julian Diaz.

Menil Collection building Basic info:
Artist’s Name (if available): Renzo Piano
Date: 1982

There is a very modern feel to the building. It's painted a greenish gray with light teal colored windows that contrast against the green and plentiful landscape. The residential neighborhood surrounding the building almost makes the museum seem as if it is a college. I believe that Renzo Piano designed the Menil building to be attractive on the outside, modern contemporary on the inside and blend in with its surroundings. To me the building felt like an art gallery but with an airy urban feel. The deep dark wood floors I found very pleasing to the eye and it made me feel as if I was in an expensive loft in a high rise. Another thing I really found beautiful were the garden areas that could be seen through windows of the gallery. I remember reading in the description of the Menil building's history that De Menil wanted her collection to be displayed in the light. The large windows overlooking the garden and outside greatly produced enough light to highlight the african art in one room.







Work of Art 
Artist’s Name (if available): Richard Sierra
Title: Abstract Slavery 
Date: 1974
Materials: Paint stick on Belgian Linen
Size:114 x 212 inches


 The first thing you notice besides the painting being completely black is it's massive size. I believe the artist chose to make this painting large to help you capture the large time period in which slavery occurred. You stare at the painting, notice the title, and you can instantly begin to piece together it's meaning. When I look at "Abstract Slavery", I associate black with not only the dark history that surrounds slavery as a whole but the dark skin of my people, who were once field slaves, forced to work under the blazing sun picking cotton or be beaten. Among other colors, black is such a sorrowful color (used in funerals and other mediums to signify death or sadness) and the vibe of this painting says to me that in order to tell about slavery visually, the easiest way to capture the gruesome and inhumane treatment of blacks during that time period was to paint an entire canvas black (to show darkness). To me black stands for all the tears, pain, anger, frustration and meaness that went on during slavery.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

extra credit blog entry with ready made sculpture show @ contemporary arts museum

Right after I left from the Menil  Collection I went over to the contemporary arts museum of houston to view the ready made and assembly art exhibits. The building is huge just like the Menil collection building still can't get any 3G in any of the buildings so obviously no pictures could be uploaded let alone taken. I did find interest in the Marcel Duchamp ready made art not only because I think he should be the curator since he started in the 1915s or 1920s but gave inspiration to other artist such as Bill Bollinger ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->>>>

who created an piece of art from a cage material. As I looked at this piece of art the title of the exhibit came to me "It is what it is. Or is it?"
and knowing that mr marcel duchamps idea of having the person who is looking at the piece of art think to themselves is this art or something else like he shows us as an example in our text book on page 504 "The Fountain" 1917 its a urinal from China makes you think ok this is a urinal to urinate in but is it something else? and thats the same presence Mr. Bollinger was trying to portray in his sculpture.

Menil Collection Visit due 4/23


As soon as you walk in the Menil Art Museum there is a woman who greets you to the left but straight ahead as you enter there is a piece of art so you don't have to search for one, also as you enter there is a piece of art to your immediate left but those didn't interest me except for the one piece of art that you see as you walk into the building with four shapes. The name of the piece is called "Forged Drawing" by Richard Serra in which the artist depicts a stop sign (a octagon), square, rectangel and a circle. The building is huge and long with large rooms all dedicated to specific types of art from modern to greek and african art. The african art got me thinking of my heritage since my father is from Sierra Leon SW Africa I seen a 700 bc piece of art of a Mali Inland Niger Delta woman holding a child and an african Gazel head mask just like what we see in class and wooden figurins. The Menil builidng captured alot of photos in their photo gallery of inspirational essenses in time such as martin luther king and civil rights activisim with teens in the late 1960s in Atlanta Georgia. There was a great piece of Assemble by Robert Rauschenberg called "Niagra Summer Glut" 1987, materials used were metal parts but the materials look like roof gutters from a house or building they were huge. "Seasons" with four oil and wax canvases one being beige, green, gray and navy blue not that intriging but its art. David novros's piece called "6:30" used acrylic on canvas on six wood panels based on where ou are standing the sun relects and changes the art works color from left to right by shifting the colors from left to right. And last but not least is an artist by the name of Jasper Johns, he is mentioned several times in our "Aworld of ART" text book, he has a piece that is similar to his 1958-1959 Encaustic and collage on canvas piece called "Numbers in Color" called (drumroll please) "Alphabets in color" but another piece of art that he did got me to see his symbolism and medium or meaning behind the piece. Jasper Johns uses an oil canvas, wood string, wire with a fork and spoon. The piece is called "Voice" with the word voice almost being wiped away with the wire attached to the sponge almost wiping away the word voice and also being attached to the fork and spoon. To me it is like the artist is saying closed mouths don't get fed take a look at the piece and see if it comes to you like that.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Trenton Doyle Hancock-"You Are A Liar And The Truth Is NOT In You"

Mr. Trenton painting "You Are A Liar And The Truth Is NOT In You" is a large mixed-media work hanging on the wall. A pair of tombstones function at once as fore- and background for a raining-down of collagiste forms. One is in pink and the other in black, and together they bear the words of the ominous title. Small and large swatches of fabric, some with impasto others without, vie with drawings in graphite and pink teardrops fashioned from the negative cut-outs of a layer of black canvas on top. His works gives and creates his own mythology to inform his massive, obsessive, and intricately, detailed and painting. He uses color, language and pattern to give me a way to understand why he creating a new character to convey a symbolic meaning.  Lastly he uses biblical elements, with references to religious stories that the artist learned as a child from his family and his community.  I am so amaze by the balancing of the moral dilemmas with humor and through a musical sense of language and colour.  Trenton Doyle Hancock was born in 1974 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Raised in Paris, Texas, Hancock earned his BFA from Texas A&M University, Commerce, and his MFA from the Tyler School of Art at Temple University, Philadelphia. Hancock’s prints, drawings, and collaged-felt paintings work together to tell the story of the Mounds—a group of mythical creatures that are the tragic protagonists of the artist’s unfolding narrative....

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Final Art projects and presentations

Part of your final grade will be to create a work of art that has been inspired by any of the works of art or artists that you have seen or learned about in this class. You can choose any media (painting, drawing, photo, performance, etc) that you would like. You will be presenting the artwork to the class as along with a short (400-600 word) paper about your inspiration (the artist or artwork), elements/principles  of design present, your choice of materials, and the process by which you made it. The artwork and the papers will be due on Mon 4/30.

Menil Collection Visit Due Mon 4/23


Instructions: Visit the Menil Collection, take as much time as you can to look at the building itself (designed by Renzo Piano) and around the museum until you find a work of art that you are drawn to or are most interested in to write about. It is extremely important that you complete this writing at the museum, DO NOT rely on your memory! First write about the building then a work of art. Then post the info on the blog by Monday4/23.

Menil Collection building Basic info:
Artist’s Name (if available): Renzo Piano
Date: 1982

Formal (Visual) Analysis –Describe the building visually and be as descriptive and detailed as possible. What are the size, colors, materials, etc?






Finding Meaning- Why do you think Renzo Piano designed the Menil building in the way that he did? What  effect does it have on you looking at it from the outdoors and experiencing it from the inside?



Work of Art
Artist’s Name (if available):
Title:
Date:
Materials:
Size:


Formal (Visual) Analysis –Describe the piece visually and be as descriptive and detailed as possible. What are the size, colors, materials, or sounds?   


Finding Meaning- Use titles, text, symbols, how the subject matter represented (abstract, representational, nonrepresentational), role of the art, the cultural origin, or any other info you can to try to find the meaning of the work.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Robert Crum: A Man With Great Taste in Women





           I went on Robert Crum’s website to do some research on him and I come to find out that he is a very interesting man.  I feel like he is a man that we can all relate to.  Most of us out there were always curious about the girl with the big feet or the girl with braces and humongous breasts.  And Robert like most of us never really took farther than playing footsie with the girls.  What I do like about him is that he is comfortably enough in his own skin that he can talk about it and not give a damn what you or anyone else, including his wife may say or think about it.  The sketching that caught my eye on the website is the one about Monica delivering the pizza.  The drawing shows an Amazonian woman delivering a pizza to a gentleman that is on the phone and has to stop his conversation at the sight of the woman bringing him his pizza.  And in a Robert Crum classic moment he writes in his drawing, “that bills a lucky guy”.  I have to say that I was instantly drawn, no pun intended, to the woman in Robert’s drawing.  The way he outlines her curves and uses contour lines to accent her voluptuous woman curves.  The he accents her facial construction.  He wants to make it clear that she is the figure that one should focus on in his drawing.  Not like anyone could miss her if you know what I mean.  I have to say that I would very much like to meet Robert in person and have a conversation with him on his taste and experience with women.