Tuesday, May 4

#8 Carry it Forward: The Perfect Human


The idea behind Von Trier & Leth's project to recreate The Perfect Human in the movie The Five Obstructions was to challenge Leth's film making ability, and expand his creativity by challenging him to think outside of the box to create a film. In a take-off of obstruction #2 which was created in Cuba, I think a The Wizard of Oz, or a short film based on it, should be recreated in a variety of countries, subcultures and cultures.

The Wizard of Oz is largely based of things we value in the U.S.: courage, intelligence (a brain) and love or passion (a heart). I would be interested in seeing a short film based on the plot line of the Wizard of Oz, but carried out in other countries. Instead of a traditional American clothing and a dog carried in a picnic basket, Dorothy would be representative of other countries' "typical" people. It could end up being very strange, but I think it would be an intriguing insight into foreign cultures through an adaptation on a classic American film. The film would not have to follow the plot exactly but instead the general message.

Directors would be at liberty to recreate with their own perceptions of what the most important main themes are. Not only does a project like this force the director to analyze and explain his or her interpretation of the original film, it also forces the director to understand and analyze a different culture in order to portray its values in a film.

Interesting cultures or countries to recreate with: India, Cuba, indigenous tribes of Africa, Mexico, etc.

#7 Carry it Forward: Letters to a Young Poet



Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet has a strong focus on the importance of solitude. Most of the deep, contemplative periods of thinking I have are a result of conversations with friends or family, or in classes like Humanities or Issues and Answers. Rilke talks a great deal about what solitude can do for a person, and that being alone is necessary if you eventually want to have a unified relationship with another person, because solitude is an essential part of attain a full understanding of yourself.

At this point in my life, attaining an understand of yourself and "finding yourself" is a common goal. Next year, our class will go off to college and people will start to develop personal identities away from their families and friends, but these identities are not very different from what we've grown up with. Next year, I am taking a gap year and traveling to Chile, and Rilke's idea of learning from solitude is something I can utilize. I realized that though I would still grow in college, I have the ability to truly understand myself, my life and my future because of my plans for next year. I know that in Chile I will be forced into situations way outside of my comfort zone and away from the culture and social atmosphere I have been raised in. Because I'll be away from all things familiar to me, I have a chance to figure out what I am like when I am not being influenced by my friends, my country, my family, my school or the media and culture where I live.

When in solitude, we are stripped of everything that we try to hide behind. We have noone to rely on, to copy, or to lie to. When in solitude, the only person you are lying to is yourself, so there is a certain forced truthfulness that comes out of solitary contemplation. I will keep in mind the powers of solitude, and not fear the loneliness or desperation it seems to evoke. I want to focus on learning about who I am outside of the environment I am in, and make sure to stay true to myself.

Photo: tiquetonne2067

Monday, March 1

Challenging the Status Quo


It is necessary in any functioning society that people challenge the status quo. Accepting the way things are is what leads countries into total control by the government. In many ways, messages sent out by the government, much like the advertisements of "liberty bonds" and idealization of war during WWI, can affect the population and if people don't resist, freedom is swiftly taken away.

Of course, much of what people think about when they think about challenging the status quo isn't to the government, it's to popular culture. But this is still just as vital to a society's well being.

If artists never challenged the church and broke away from realistic paintings of everyday life, or broke away from paintings of biblical scenes, we would have missed out on almost all of the "greats" of art. If the Voskuijls and Gies' never broke away from the status quo mindset of German's during World War II, Anne Frank's family would never have been able to survive in hiding as long as they did. Essentially, if the status quo is not challenge as much as possible, no progress in a society will ever take place.

However, it is impossible to 100% challenge the status quo of society because so much of our thoughts and morals are biased and based off of our condition in society. As much as we try to break free from any societal influence, it is impossible to neglect it entirely because it is so ingrained in us.

[Photo credit: Creap-- Flickr] Photo of rebellion on rebellion about rebellion...graffiti opposing the graffiti made about Che, a leader of rebellion.

Best Of The Week

Studying "mash-ups," bootleg culture and different ways people challenge the status quo has forced me to examine what I think about the way the music industry is starting to accept more and more "mash-up" art as cool new music. But my idea has mainly stayed the same-- while the music produced by artists like Girl Talk may not take as much technical skill as was required of the original artists, it's just a different type of creation and takes an imaginative and creative mindset.

Still, I think it's easier to defend the work of artists who "bootleg" content from other people to send out a clear public message, like Evolution Control Committee's "Rocked By Rape". This video sent out a clear message of defiance to the way the world is, and wanted to point out all of the destruction going on in our world. It sends an interesting message to those who have been desensitized to the constant explanation of horrific world events by the calm and collected newscasters of America. It is easy to defend works like this, that attempt to make a positive change or send out a message of awareness. However, it is nearly impossible to define bootleg work as "good" or "bad," which is why I would defend the rights of any artist who wants to use other material in his own work.

All artists are inspired by other art and other work, and it will come across in anything they create, but "mash up" style creation seems to me like it is just directly citing the other artist. Though they may not put the name in the credits, people know that what they're hearing is a compilation of other artists' work.

However, even though

Wednesday, November 25

Best of the Week: Parmenides and change

The part of Sophie's World that has interested me most so far is discussing the idea of change, specifically the one suggested by Parmenides. The line that started making me think wason page 36, that said that Parmenides "believed that our senses give us an incorrect picture of the world, a picture that does not tally with our reason." This idea has been stuck in my head ever since I read it. I often think about something I learned in Easter Religions class sophomore year, the Buddhist idea that we are CONSTANTLY changing, and even science agrees. The body that we are in is not the same one we were in a few years ago-- every cell renews itself, therefore, if all of our cells are different, we are different. Our way of thinking changes and advances, as well.
This idea was brought up again in Sophie's World in the chapter on Plato. On page 84, the idea horses not being all the same, and also in the section of the book that discussed how even though a river is called the same, it is really not the same river or water that was viewed previously. As humans, we classify everything using our senses, and conclude that if something shared a location with something else, it is the same thing.

The main thought that has lasted in my head is about reality-- what is real? Is nothing real? Is life an illusion? Things like the sunset, as mentioned in the Flaming Lips' song "Do You Realize?, are examples of illusions that we have come to understand. Without seeing the big picture, it seems to humans like the sunset is one set thing-- the sun is setting and creating beautiful colors. However, once you can look at the whole earth, one can see that we are actually just revolving. I think that there are so many things in our world that if we could see them from a perspective outside of our own, we would realize how wrong we are, and that we just cannot understand them the way we see them now.

Tuesday, November 17

The Definition of Beauty

I struggle with listing things that are beautiful. I think that figuring out what I find beautiful would help me define the word, but the only thing that pops into my head is a blurry green landscape. My initial definition to beauty is much like the one given in the dictionary-- beauty is a quality of something that evokes emotion and pleasure. This attempt at a definition is much to vague, broad, general, and unhelpful. Using this definition would deem cotton candy, family vacations or cheddar Goldfish snacks (all things that evoke pleasure or make me happy) as beautiful.

Beauty IS in the eye of the beholder. Of course, humans have very similar ideas to what beauty is, but picking out THE most beautiful is always subjective. That being said, the definition of beauty, or the way the we feel when we see something beautiful, could very well be genetic. Men find women with certain waist to hip ratios more beautiful that other women because that ratio reflect a woman's fertility. Therefore, this attraction seems like a genetic disposition present in humans in order to come out ahead in the survival of the fittest, and to carry on the human race. People find symmetry in face of someone of the opposite sex to be more beautiful and attractive because it reflect health.

As mentioned in "Call of Beauty," this is also true with landscapes-- we find open green pastures to be beautiful because it means that no predators could be hiding in the open area, and maybe because green signifies life.

Still, it seems that some men find women who are physically very artificial (make-up, surgery) beautiful. I included the video of a woman being altered by make-up and Photoshop because it made me think about skewed perceptions of beauty.

YouTube Video: Altered Beauty

Maybe beauty has nothing to do with survival of the fittest. What affects young childrens perception of beauty? Is it based on parent's opinions, the 'pretty girl' character in TV shows, or is it inborn?

Right now, writing this blog post, I can feel myself slipping deeper into confusion about the definition of beauty. Every step I think I take in the right direction, I contradict myself and find more holes in my theory.

Beauty is something that causes pleasure or evokes emotion that you want to be next to, with, or present in. People would want to be next to a beautiful flower, with a beautiful person or in a beautiful part of nature. Beauty defines something you want. The antonyms of 'beauty', including repulsive, unappealing, unattractive and offensive, offer insight into what beauty really means. Beauty must attract. Beauty must cause pleasure or intrigue. Beauty must be felt.

Tuesday, September 22

What if? Destruction of Art

Stories of historical creation, such as" The Televisionary" by Malcolm Gladwell, get me thinking. All of these technological feats are based of of past success like harnessing electricity, creating lightbulbs, radios, the internet-- I could go on and on with lists of technological advances that shape the way future inventors look at things.

It's commonly understood that engineers need the knowledge of previous generations to move forward, but what about artists? What would happen if all past art was destroyed, or just never known about. If people didn't know about Picasso's cubism or Donatello's incredible perspective illusionism with his sculptures, what would have happened to these fields of art?

Though I usually think about art as people expressing a burst of creativity, it is much more complex than that. It is an expression using accumulated knowledge from past generations.

If art were all destroyed and no current artists knew of things from the past, we would start going in reverse. Artists would still receive immense pressure from society to paint inside the lines and not to ever create anything risqué. Eventually we would reach the point we are at today, but it is important to realize that art is history-- we must see how much art is like many other fields. It takes times to move forward, and there are waves of certain creativity. In essence, to keep moving forward, we must hold on to our past.
 

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