We used the words collected through our Text Glimpses activity in the gallery on Oct. 20 to write found poetry. After creating a group bank of words from our own lists, we each wrote a stanza to add to a group poem. We began by thinking about the theme "life in the museum," but some of us ended up going in slightly different directions... post-apocalyptic museum, anyone? Here's the result (sorry, guys, if the order is slightly different -- the sheets got a little mixed up).
Anyone have any title suggestions?
Industrial City
Museum Admission is mine!
Cafes and levels
I find it beautiful.
Beautiful art is a garden around the world.
Warmed photography is special towards mom.
Pressure between beautiful, not nothing.
Paradise is the key to no pressure.
Hidden cities' elevators is love.
Virgin child's modern wing is Paris.
Hidden cafes everywhere between polished laptops.
MINE!
Don't do that. The people stay nervous.
Look carefully, hidden dead bodies.
Find them.
The path finder in my mind is the Devil inside me.
The Devil.
Creepy bloody stuff in my Perfectly imperfect world.
The beauty.
Virgin Child leaves outside, crying.
Window city hidden in beautiful Beast.
Dead bodies everywhere, fantastic!
Mom, Devil is in side me, hidden inside mind.
Emotional war open, running is key..
God is mine!
Around the world no exit.
Dead bodies everywhere,
She's crying.
Reminds her of war,
Emotional beast in Paris.
Even beasts find it,
Between industrial archives:
A chance to win,
Running, unarmed, toward the polished city.
I break their neck
On membership desk.
Devil is inside me.
There is no exit.
Paris has a garden that's hidden.
The walls move and you find dead bodies.
The dead bodies are my grandchildren.
But it's okay because it's a perfectly imperfect world.
Every day life, love, Paris.
Crying and cursing.
Photography of every Sunday in the parks archive.
Polished key.
Chance to win marvelous path
Finder to Paradise around the world.
Paris.
I'm fantastic in my mind.
Can you find it?
It's hidden, get the key.
Open it wide look carefully.
Everything in my mind is everywhere scattering.
Look carefully, restroom that way.
Explore its beautiful hot marvelous reflection.
Work hours, exit, leave now, don't stay.
Terminated but stop, no pictures, photography.
I have the key to my mind that lets me think.
Can you see?
That's why I have to archive goals.
telling stories, making maps, collecting experiences, gathering inspirations, charting ideas, connecting with art
Friday, October 28, 2011
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Personal Museum Map Project
Today we will begin our Personal Museum Map Project. These will be individual projects that will reflect upon our museum experiences thus far. Since our experiences in the museum are unique to our own personal interests, navigating the museum is an important part of how we create lasting impressions.We will be creating personal map collages that describe who we are as individuals and how we record memories, collect images and sketch ideas that inspire our work. Many artists have used the idea of a theme of the map as collage or have used the concepts of collecting, space, time, and architecture as ways to create beautiful works of art that define themselves as individuals. Here is a list of artists that work in this manner that you can look at to draw from for inspiration:
Mark Bradford
Mark Bradford (Art 21 video)
Joyce Kozloff
Landon Mackenzie
Matthew Ritchie
Julie Mehretu
Mark Bradford
Whore in the Church House, 2006
Mixed media collage on canvas
103 x 142 in. (261.6 x 360.7 cm)
Whore in the Church House, 2006
Mixed media collage on canvas
103 x 142 in. (261.6 x 360.7 cm)
Copyright © 2009 Rubell Family Collection. All Rights Reserved.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Visual text
This week we're going to start off with some poetry-writing, which we will install on our Collaborative Mapping Project in a visual way. Here are some examples of artists/designers working with text in a visual way.
Holstee Manifesto
Stefan Bruggemann
Leon Ferrari and Mira Schendel (MoMA exhibition)
Axis Maps
Paula Scher
Courtesy of Axis Maps |
Holstee Manifesto
Stefan Bruggemann
Leon Ferrari and Mira Schendel (MoMA exhibition)
Axis Maps
Paula Scher
Catching up!
Since we started this class blog a little late, I'll do my best to play catch-up on what we've been doing so far. The first three weeks of the program were very busy! We've been keeping ongoing notes and sketches in our physical sketchbooks, which we kicked off with personal collages, as well as digital sketchbooks in the form of our blogs.
We've spent a lot of time in the galleries, starting with writing diamante poems. Then we did a Directed Wandering Project, where we searched out works that fulfilled certain criteria. Then we picked one of those criteria and developed a whole album of images from the collection, along with captions annotating our observations, thoughts, and reflections.
We've been on a fieldtrip to the MCA, where we saw Pandora's Box: Joseph Cornell Unlocks the MCA Collection. We looked at works by Joseph Cornell and other contemporary artists affected by his ideas and work. Back at the Art Institute, we looked at some Cornell boxes in our own collection and did an exquisite corpse writing exercise, inspired by Cornell's Surrealist contemporaries. Cornell not only collected ephemera from his daily life, he arranged it in thoughtful ways through his boxes.
We've spent a lot of time in the galleries, starting with writing diamante poems. Then we did a Directed Wandering Project, where we searched out works that fulfilled certain criteria. Then we picked one of those criteria and developed a whole album of images from the collection, along with captions annotating our observations, thoughts, and reflections.
We've been on a fieldtrip to the MCA, where we saw Pandora's Box: Joseph Cornell Unlocks the MCA Collection. We looked at works by Joseph Cornell and other contemporary artists affected by his ideas and work. Back at the Art Institute, we looked at some Cornell boxes in our own collection and did an exquisite corpse writing exercise, inspired by Cornell's Surrealist contemporaries. Cornell not only collected ephemera from his daily life, he arranged it in thoughtful ways through his boxes.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Documenting Teen Lab
Welcome to the Teen Lab Fall 2011 class blog! You are all keeping blogs to serve as your Digital Sketchbooks throughout the program. While your Digital Sketchbooks are personal to your own experiences and ideas during the term, this blog will serve to document the class as a whole and provide resources.
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