Monday, December 7, 2015
MOMI Visit
In terms of a doing a really good job of explaining a really good history of video and movies, the Museum of the the Moving Image did a great job especially in the many aspects of technological advancements that have happened since the beginning of the 20th century. I was really surprised that they even had Magic Lanterns and a few of the early slides as well. I grew up with an actual Magic Lantern projector in my living room my whole life and my mother has been buying old slides off eBay since I was little as well. It was neat to see where this, useless(well how I always thought of it as a little kid) piece of technology actually fit into history and you could see how it advanced and allowed for later video projectors.
The really neat demonstration that my group took part in was the ADR booth. It was really neat to see (in a rather simplified and dumbed-down way) how ADR works and the challenges that come with trying to match your voice and movement of your mouth to exactly how someone else is acting out a line in a movie, commercial or television show. Most of my classmates had a lot of trouble trying to keep up with the speed of Eddie Murphy speaking which was really funny to watch and listen to their fumbling attempts. Despite being dumbed down a good bit it was still a fun demo especially to hear my classmates' voices coming out of a famous actors mouth.
MOMI is an awesome museum but kind of unsatisfying. Not that I didn't really, really enjoy, I just didn't feel like there was enough of it but at the same time, there are currently so many moving images in the world, there's no way a single museum could possibly hold all of it. It just felt like there's so much being left out but in order to fit everything you might need ten more museums. It also really needs a history of animation or at least a larger better section on what little animation they actually had there. There's so so much that needs to be there but just isn't.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Blog 2: What I Hear (Soundwalk)
As I walk through my neighborhood of Bushwick, there are always a few sounds that make up the noises that I constantly hear in the distance that I sometimes just forget are even there unless I really pay close attention. Sounds like car alarms and the sirens of ambulances(I live near a hospital), are constant throughout the day. I grew up right next to a fire station as a kid, so I tend to forget how noise polluting sirens really even are because they're so normal to me and in a funny way they're almost comforting. As I exit my building and walk south, I hear my neighbor's television turned up quite loudly so that even down on street level across the street, I can make out every word of the soap opera they're watching. Off in the distance I hear the sounds of busy construction. I'm not actually sure where it's coming from because there's currently so much construction happening. The doors to my local laundry mat are always open and the muffled sounds of swooshing, churning clothes and the hum of dryers in the back of the place can be heard as I walk past. There's the light clinking sounds of a dog leash as a woman walks by me while walking her dog. It's not a loud or annoying sound but almost pleasant in it's constantly clinking way. I hear the sounds a broom brushing up against the sidewalk of an older gentleman trying to sweep the fallen leaves away from in front of his building.As I continue walking I pass Maria Hernandez Park, and hear the voices of dozens of kids. The elementary school across the street doesn't have a playground attached to it so all the classes walk across the street to play here instead. Running around the park, playing baskets ball; all different voices coming together to make a mass of sound that you can't really pick apart to hear one distinct voice unless you're really focusing hard. I hear the soft thumping of paws on sand as a group of dogs run around in the dog park portion of the park and the quiet chatter of the owners all standing around watching their dogs enjoy their little bit of freedom off a leash.
Some noises like the sounds of dogs paws in the dog park and the sirens of ambulances are tied to specific places while other noises like are constantly moving and getting louder and quieter as they move like the sounds of ridiculously loud latin music being blared from cars as they cruise through the neighborhood. None of these sounds are in any way unique to here and only here but they all come together to make the sounds of an active and lively neighborhood. Bushwick is a neighborhood through and through and the sounds reflect that in every way.
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Artist Statement
I am a child of the Internet age. I had my first email by kindergarten. I was always sort of just given technology and allowed to figure it out for myself especially since my dad is a mostly self taught software programmer and former website engineer. I never had cable tv or video games but I always had a computer and the programs to make stuff with. Nowadays I occasionally make stuff with computers mainly in programs like Illustrator, Indesign, and sometimes Photoshop. I’ve spent far more time drawing monsters in Illustrator than any person really should. Most of my work tends to be light-hearted and fun. There are times when I find that people take art and media pieces way too seriously and try and find deeper meaning and bullshit like symbolism in them. Perhaps the artist just wanted to have fun and make art without trying to give it labels and pointless symbolism. I’d much rather do art for fun and for myself than take it to extreme in all seriousness.
I don’t even try and take myself seriously when it comes to art. I don’t even really consider myself an artist to be quite honest or even have any self confidence in my artistic skills. I’m a double major in both Media Studies and Studio Art but I’m only that because I wanted to take a bunch of art classes and since I couldn’t minor in it, I figured I might as well major in it. I enjoy the many ways that art and the media so often intertwine and converge. I’m not even sure what sort of job I want after college but somewhere where media and art converge and intertwine sounds like a good place to start for me.
I’ve come to realize that right now with the current ever changing state of technology and media that I’d rather be a jack of all trades than spend my life with only one skill doing the same task over and over again. It’s getting harder and harder to know just one thing and not be expected to know a lot about a lot of things and that’s especially true right now in both the media production world as well as the art world. I'm not sure where I'll end up in a few years but that's okay with me.
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