Monday, November 26, 2012

Intro

The Crafton Hills (Underground) Student Gallery
At Crafton Hills, Yucaipa, CA

Curators:
Stefan Feather
LeRoy Reynolds
Berlin Abeyta
Kyle Tossetti
Rene Nicholas
This Gallery features many types of art. Many are photographs, while others are recreated photographs done by artists. There are also many paintings in many styles that are masterfully crafted by several artists!

Exhibition

Welcome!! This is our exhibition, Portraits of Many Design!
All Artists shown:
Steve McCurry
Sergey Bratkov
Joel Meyerowitz
Shepard Faire
Gween Seemel
Al Davison
David Barton
Collaboration of Salvador Dali and Philippe Halsman
WBK (workbyknight)
Stephen Colbert

Each artist has created a portrait using either their great talent with a brush or by using tools to create the image they created. The theme is based portraits that capture a person or thing and over power the viewer with an idea presented by the portrait. Some portraits may be disturbing, while others may be heartwarming! All we ask is that you enjoy what our group has put together and hope you gain interest in our artists.

Portrait 5, Stephen

                                                                   Portrait 5, Stephen
                                           Stephen Colbert, Shepard Fairey, Andres Serrano
                                            Oil on Canvas with spray paint and Sharpie marker                                                                  
                                                                     March 8, 2011

               Piece that was done for charity by Stephen Colbert, comedian and writer on Comedy Central. The painting is of Stephen Colbert standing with 4 other portraits represented behind him. The words OBEY are spray painted to the right side of the piece, and Stephen Colbert's face is written on with horns and a mustache.
               Stephen Colbert was very comical about the piece from the start when he had Steve Martin look at it on his show, The Colbert Report. His focus was to donate it for charity by promoting it himself and was right next to it when it was auctioned off for $26,000. The added work to the piece was a joke by Stephen and the other artists, and it ended up benefiting in the end.
               In the piece, there are multiple illustrations of Stephen in the background. This resembles his other 4 paintings that he has already sold for charities in the past. The charity he donated to this time was Donorschoose.org, which is an online charity for student in need.
               This piece is a great portrait with a strange twist. It is shocking to some due to the fact that the changes done by Sharpie show Stephen as evil, and due to the fact that Stephen is saluting. It is a change that shows how little changes can change the message of an art piece.
(LeRoy Reynolds)

                                 
                                                 


Amy Winehouse and Kurt Cobain



Amy Winehouse and Kurt Cobain
WBK (workbyknight)
Digital Art, Photomanipulation
Digital Photo
2012

The artist who remains anonymous as WBK (workbyknight) is an Australian underground artist who has been posting his work online for some time now. He uses photos of famous celebrities or important political figures and changes it by creating the same image out of keyboard keys and other types of old typing sets. He makes very realistic images using these tools and that are now out dated. 
The artist grew up using technology his whole life and began to witness how everything is changing by using different types of technology. Using keyboards and phones when he was younger, he began to think of how the world has changed and how he can illustrate how. He began to show this by creating the pictures out of items from the "analogue past" and began to use these items as to show how they are not obsolete at this day and age. 
The piece is a photo of two celebrity music stars who both committed suicide at a young age. Kurt Cobain ( the front man and song writer of Nirvana) is shown with a gun, which resembles the way he committed suicide. Amy Winehouse is shown with a bottle of alcohol, resembling how the singer passed away from a drug overdose. Both celebrities are shown through the keys and buttons from various types of keyboards and typewriters.
This piece shows how this underground artist has crafted a picture using tools that one would think odd. The creativity and time are what show his dedication to capturing the power in the image. The portrait is a great example of how a person can create a picture of two people and have alot of factors that make it artistic. 
(LeRoy Reynolds)

Juvenile Detention



Artist: Sergey Bratkov
Title: Juvenile Detention
Media: Photograph
Dimension: 120 x 90 cm
Date: 2001

Russian-Ukrainian photographer Sergey Bratkov (born in 1960, Kharkov) considers himself firstly as an artist, even a sculptor. The artist seems to have turned to images from his Soviet childhood for inspiration, specifically photos of camping and other outdoorsy activities popular in the ’70s in magazines such as Ogonek, the Russian equivalent of Life magazine.

Over the past decade, the Ukrainian-born, Moscow-based artist has exhibited his documentary-style photographs throughout Europe. They are often portraits of young children exploring “forbidden” behaviors such as smoking cigarettes or sniffing glue. Photographer Boris Mikhailov, with whom Bratkov studied, introduced him to this kind of antihero with his own photographs of the destitute of the post-Soviet economy.
Bratkov's Statement: "One could say that I want to make painting from the photography. But really I want to do rather a sculpture which has a shape, volume, mass. The scupture is closer to the photo I think. I shoot really different. Traditionally the photography is emotional, especially amateur shots. But I do not shoot emotionally and my composition is also different. For example I almost don’t use the central focus. In addition the light and shadow are very important for the traditional perception of the photography but for me it doesn’t matter."
The image, Juvenile Detention, shows a young child, who is obviously rather rebellious. He has a broken arm, with a cast that reads,"X 2.03 OF UTES". All of this, with a lit cigarette being held between his lips.
I found this photograph to be quite intriguing, in a sense that I have never seen anything like this before. It is so unique because of how raw and how real it is. Although, no matter how real this photograph may be, I feel intense coldness, blandness, and uneasiness in it. The immense lack of emotion involved in this picture is what makes this picture absolutely brilliant; how Bratkov is capable of capturing such an emotionless, and cold image into something the viewer can look at, and feel uneasy about it. Art is something that is usually filled with emotion, and the fact that Bratkov can turn art into something like this, is just absolute sheer genius. This piece is fitting to the overall portrait theme of this exhibition because it is a portrait.
(Stefan Feather)

NewYork City, Time Square, 1963



Artist: Joel Meyerowitz
Title: New York City, Time Square, 1963
Media: Photograph
Dimension: -
Date: 1963

Joel Meyerowitz (born in 1938,the Bronx New York City) is a street photographer who began photographing in color in 1962 and was an early advocate of the use of color during a time when there was significant resistance to the idea of color photography as serious art. In the early 70′s he taught the first color course at Cooper Union[citation needed] where many of today’s renowned color photographers studied with him. He made a significant change to large format color photography in 1976, and along with Stephen Shore and William Eggleston became the first group of young artists to use color exclusively.[citation needed] Their work, seen and published in America and Europe, influenced the next generation’s, particularly the young German artists’, turn toward using color in photography. He is the author of 16 books including the seminal[citation needed] book, Cape Light. Meyerowitz often uses an 8×10 large format camera to produce luminous photographs of place and people.

Meyerowitz's Statement: "It's just sky and water, but on any given day at any given moment, it changes and becomes a different color and atmosphere  I am caught up in it as an artist. Photographing is about the process of being in the present. We tend to sleepwalk through our lives. What inspires me is a response to that sharpened sense of being here and now and that is the underpinning of my work."

The image New York City, Times Square, 1963, shows a theater cashier,  her face obscured by a round ticket window speaker.

I chose this photograph because of how the "nowness" of that moment in time is so perfectly portrayed and captured. The title of this photograph, New York City, Time Square, 1963, describes it incredibly aptly. With me having prior knowledge of Meyerowitz being universally known for his color photography, this one caught my eye, being a black and white. Even though this picture is considered to be a portrait, it really is not a portrait at all. I look at it as more of an abstract portrait, if anything, because of the way Meyerowitz captured this picture. He focused in on the speaker in the glass, rather than the ticket teller's face, which portraits are regularly images, focusing on a person's face. It suits this exhibition's theme.


(Stefan Feather)


Sunday, November 25, 2012

Hope                 Rene Nicholas

Artist - Shepard Fairey
Title - Hope
Media - Poster
Dimension - 18 x 12
Date - October 2008

Frank Shepard Fairey was(born February 15, 1970 is an American contemporary graphic designer and illustrator. He first became known for his "Andre the Giant Has a Posse" sticker campaign, in which he appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. His work became more widely known in the 2008 U.S. presidential election, specifically his Barack Obama "Hope" poster.

Shepard Fairey statement -  “The first aim of Phenomenology is to reawaken a sense of wonder about one's environment."

Fairey created a series of posters supporting Barack Obama's 2008 candidacy for President of the United States, including the iconic "HOPE" portrait. The New Yorker art critic Peter Schjeldahl called the poster "the most efficacious American political illustration since 'Uncle Sam Wants You'". 

I think this poster was to inform of there generations of the election and show who is running. It wasn't made to be an add it was just a form of art, where the artist showed his opinion in the election of 2008. This portrait fits with the overall theme