Recently in Sights Category

Viral Doilies

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Spark a show about the bay area arts scene is one of my favorite shows on T.V. I don't always catch it but when I do I always learn so much and often discover new things. This time, it was these doilies that caught my eye. I didn't really know what doilies are and in case you are wondering too, a doily is a a small ornamental mat, usually of lace or linen.

Laura Splan's doily designs though take this very domestic item to a whole another level. Her designs are all based on the structure of various viruses. The first image is of the Herpes Virus, next to it, the dreaded HIV and then the common cold or influenza virus and the last one the once infamous SARS virus.

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I am not quite sure I can explain in words why I like them. I think that the beauty of the result coupled with the subversiveness of the inspiration just appeals to me. The art has an innocent side but on closer inspection and education about it reveals a darker side.

Her other work also has similar qualities. She make pillows cases with blown up images of human skin, paints traditional looking wall paper designs with her blood (you need very little blood to do this) and creates interactive digital artshowcasing scars. Some of it might make one queasy but for me it is about acceptance of the human body, flaws and all and its abs
traction and elevation into art.

Comic characters

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MacMerc had a cool step by step way of turning photos into comic art. I am reading Scott McCloud's "Understanding Comics" and so I thought I would try it out.

I chose this photograph as it is one of our favorite wedding photographs (Thanks Chandrayee!).

I spent only about 10 minutes creating it and then 5 more mins editing it. I like the colors and the wood cut character of it. I like the way it looks in black and white. But I don't think any of them effectively retains Anirvan's classic expression.

Maybe Photoshop will add a filter that does the same thing in one step! When I have more time maybe I will try a whole strip!

Do we look comic?


Comic characters, originally uploaded by barnali.


Overlapping planes

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Overlapping planes, originally uploaded by barnali.

Triangular view

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Triangular view, originally uploaded by barnali.

Holga in Hand

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sanfrancisco, originally uploaded by barnali.

Back in the day-- I took a class at the ASUC art studio in Berkeley. We used a Holga--a plastic camera that we covered with black electrical tape to prevent light leakage. The film was medium format and appealed to my "square form" leanings.

The class description said that the photos would have a dreamlike quality. And they did. It was a joy to see the pictures (my first time developing them) have this ever so slight shakiness--so unlike the preciseness of today's digital photos.

This is one of my favorite ones taken with the Holga. The picture is of a scaffolding along a old San Francisco building caught behind the looming street light.

I retained the black borders that were part of the original print when I scanned it. Like scratches being put back into cds, this dissolving of the edges will probably soon return to the realm of photography.

Urban Planners, Architects and Designers are very rarely the subject of drama. This, even though our lives are crying out to be made into reality shows. Buildings appear,parks disappear, communities disappear, developers rejoice, communities complain, budgets get cut, arguments over color destroy, paranoia kills. I am sure we all have out share of big and small designer dramas and dilemmas!

So the new play "Boozy: The Life, Death and Subsequent Vilification of Le Corbusier and, More Importantly, Robert Moses",that just opened in New York piqued my interest. The play is a blend of fact and fiction, mixing charcters and stories to talk about the making of public space in a democracy, created in a style described as an "absurdist brand of revisionist history."

[Guest-posted by Anirvan]

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Scotch Tape and Cake

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A trip to the MOMA to see the Lichtenstein exhibit was completely worth it. The paintings were grand.

We also stumbled onto a really amazing piece by Rosana Castrillo Diaz, called simply "Scotch Tape".

"Rosana Castrillo Diaz’s 30-foot “drawing” made entirely of loops of cellophane tape spans the gallery wall like a delicate veil."

What caught our eye was the shadow of the piece on the wall, which we thought was THE piece. Only when we were closer to it did we discover the tape. Wow.

The "Cakes" in the window of the ACCI are delicious looking--on closer look revealing that they are actually made of fabric--by artist Zhenne Wood. If I had one of those at home I would be craving chocolate cake all the time!

Amazon's View of the Block

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May be this acknowledges that visual cues to the environment are as important as other tools in finding one's way around cities. What it doesn't acknowledge is that the physical environment constantly changes and real time efforts to freeze it in time is highly time and resource consuming. Imagine doing this for University Avenue where turnover is so high. How does one keep up?! Already the Darling Flower Shop location has moved a block and Comic Relief has moved to Shattuck.

Will this enable us to memorize landmarks as we navigate the city? Will all those landmarks be only commercial establishments?

Personally I love good old maps--I shiver with excitement when I discover in front of me that curve or that unique zig zag that has been captured on the piece of paper I hold in my hand. However it was fun to see the street our house is on.

Art happenings

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The copyrighting of public space. A photographer setting up to photograph Anish Kapoors recent sculpture in Millenium Park was stopped and asked for a permit. Pay to take a picture of public art? The sculpture itself is gorgeous and photography would be a great way for people relate and interact with it. There does seem to be quite a few pictures on the we though so not sure why this photographer was stopped. In any case it brings to light issues about the privatization of Public domain and its disappearance from public life.

Cool Pictures of the "Cloud Gate" under construction.

While in India we were asked to pay for a photography permit when we visited the Hill Palace in Kerala. It seemed odd and maybe I should have clarfied that the photos were for personal use. Photography was allowed outside only.

Inspirational
Born into Brothels: A documentary by Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman about Zana's work with children in the Sonagachi redlight district in Kolkata. The documentary chronicles the experiences of Zana and the kids as she, a photographer begins to teach these children of prostitutes to photograph their own lives.

And don't miss the opening of Christo and Jean-Claudes' "Gates" at Central Park February 12th. Is it art? If you are in NY see it and decide for yourself. I wish I was there.

Another interesting happening in New York is an exhibition titled Groundswell: Constructing the Contemporary Landscape.

Khushru recommends Bright River. It sounds great, I am looking forward to seeing it.