Showing posts with label digital artifact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital artifact. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Soundtrack for my Digital Artefact video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nuQuFExadM

For my soundtrack I used Eric B & Rakim- Juice (Know The Ledge), I already knew since my topic was based on Graffiti that I was going to use a 90's hip hop rap song. This song talks about knowing about one's history and learning. So it fits well, I used the instrumental version instead of the whole version because my video has text and I felt it would distract from the facts I added to the video.

http://eastcoastlegends.tumblr.com/post/27712651450/eric-b-rakim

Final Video- Digital Artefact




 Link to my video:
https://vimeo.com/62210744 

 

This is my final video, the link above. I would say with the time constraint I had with this video I am fine with it, though I would not mind making it longer but at the same time, the facts are short so people watching it can remember what they've seen.

Monday, 18 March 2013

More Graffiti Research

In response to reading the book ''Spraycan Art'' by Henry Chalfant.
I found a documentary directed by Tony Silver who collaborated with Henry Chalfant.

Style Wars | Watch Free Documentary Online. 2013. Style Wars | Watch Free Documentary Online. [ONLINE] Available at:http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/style-wars/. [Accessed 16 March 2013]




The documentary discusses the influence of graffiti and it's history. It also mentions the Hip Hop culture and its other elements.
The main styles of graffiti I have looked at is Throw-up, Tagging, wildstyle and pieces.

A throw-up is a form where it can be done very quickly, will consist of one or two letters or phrase but they are simpler versions of pieces.

Tagging is a basic form that gets the writer's name out there and noticed. It could also be the writer's logo.

Wildstyle is a complicated form where the letters interlock or are tightly closed together.

Pieces, short for a masterpiece, is more of a painting style, normally seen on murals.



Saturday, 16 March 2013

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean Michel Basquiat, an artist that became famous by the age of twenty-three. Born in Brooklyn, New York with parents from Caribbean and Spanish backgrounds. You could say that his accident that caused some internal injuries helped influence his art as his mom gave him the book, 'Gray's Anatomy' to help pass his healing time.
Around the year 1979, he starts exploring more into the arts and selling his work.
He had a successful career as an artist having had his work displayed in museum exhibitions.
He died in the year 1988, buried in Brooklyn.

And some of this information is from: Street to Studio: The Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat, presented by JPMorganChase. 2013. Street to Studio: The Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat, presented by JPMorganChase. [ONLINE] Available at:http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/basquiat/street-to-studio/english/whobasquiat.php. [Accessed 16 March 2013]

Jean-Michel Basquiat. 2013. Jean-Michel Basquiat. [ONLINE] Available at:http://www.basquiat.com/index-new.htm. [Accessed 16 March 2013]

Arroz Con Pollo, acrylic and oil paintstick on canvasJean-Michel Basquiat. 2013. Jean-Michel Basquiat. [ONLINE] Available at:http://www.basquiat.com/index-new.htm. [Accessed 16 March 2013]
I would say his work is very influenced by the experienced his faced in life and the society around him. His work is different from traditional graffiti street art done by examples such as Lee Quinones or Blade.

Lee Quinones, Graffiti Artist

Image of one of Lee's work

Lee Quinones, a graffiti writer became very well known through his works done on trains and handball courts. He later on began being commissioned to paint murals and pieces. He is well known in the contemporary art industry and the most known artist to come from New York subway art. At a young age, he joined the Fabulous Five, a crew of highly talented graffiti writers.
I would say his work definitely had the Wildstyle graffiti type and his work consisted of pieces and throw-ups.

''Basically my life story is painted here. The lion is the protector. I've seen a lot deteriorate around me through the years-the bottom of the painting shows that-yet I've been able to move up. Most people don't get a chance to express themselves-it's like an adventure for me.''  Lee, pg 14, Henry Chalfant, 1987. Spraycan Art (Street Graphics / Street Art). First Edition Edition. Thames & Hudson

''A true art movement never goes by the script, instead it flips the script, faithfully reinventing itself.'' Lee, 2013. Lee Quinones. [ONLINE] Available at:http://www.leequinones.com/index.php?page=about. [Accessed 16 March 2013].


History of Graffiti


''The history of graffiti or drawings on objects is to have begun since cave and rock paintings/engravings emerged. This can be dated back to 40,000 to 10,000 BC times, which is known as the Upper Palaeolithic period. The paintings/engravings, discovered to be done by the ‘Magdalenian’, the name of the location site.
The Chauvet Cave situated in the Ardeche region of southern France, is a well-known famous prehistoric rock art site that was discovered in 1994. The most common method used to produce engravings was using flint and etching a drawing onto the rock. These engravings/paintings were a form of visual documentation that could have been done as part of rituals or a way of passing on information to other people that might have crossed through their area and drawings of animals was what was mainly seen. The main fact is that these engravings/paintings were placed in a position where it was available for everyone to see. These paintings/carvings is the way the people of that time would portray their events of the days or months.
As time progressed, the Egyptians used similar methods of telling their stories and lives, this was present around 5000 BCE to 300 AD.
The earliest Egyptian art is found to be located in the Nile Valley around the Upper Egypt region. This art was engraved on the cliffs depicting the actions they engaged in with, this was done in the Palaeolithic period. The Pre-dynastic period, which is what it is called, saw these engravings being placed on pottery vessels or small stones.
These paintings and engravings from the Palaeolithic and Egyptian time were possible because these people used the public spaces or surfaces that were available to them to express on and document stories that they wanted to tell.
This act of communicating through use of a public space continued into the time when Hip Hop started to emerge. I shall be focusing more on the type of graffiti produced in the Hip Hop era to modern graffiti seen today.
From the year 1966 onwards, graffiti was done by political activists that wanted to make statements to the government and other gangs around their area did graffiti. It was present in cities like New York, Los Angeles and Philadelphia. A name that was commonly seen around areas in Philadelphia was the writer, Cornbread. They would leave their names next to their work to get people to publicize up about them. As being a writer became more popular, people began to see more tags and graffiti around their areas. Mainly focused in the area of Brooklyn, writers would use the subway system as a way of getting their messages across because the train would travel the city so this way it would reach a number of places and people. A well known writer around that time in Brooklyn was ‘Friendly Freddie’, his work would be seen on the subway system and this helped increase his popularity. There was competition between writers to try to outdo each other and have more tags. This became a popular activity in Brooklyn area. The form of graffiti done with the use of spray cans could be called traditional art, because it came from different communities from different cities practising similar methods of graffiti on walls and trains. Graffiti to the communities that were of a higher class than these writers did not see it as art; they saw it as vandalism and illegal work. Bando, a graffiti artist stated ‘’I have a saying from very long ago. Graffiti is not vandalism, but a very beautiful crime.’’ 

This is small context from my essay that briefly tells the story of graffiti. I shall now be looking at graffiti artists such as Lee Quinones.

Digital Artefact Research


I am basing the topic of my digital artefact project on ''Graffiti''. This is the same topic as my 3000 word essay for context of practice. I have already researched the history of graffiti from the cave paintings to the graffiti created in the hip hop culture. I would say my interests definitely lie with the graffiti in the hip hop culture, I find the political and artistic qualities are influencing me more.
I shall post a few paragraphs from my essay about history of graffiti and about some artists that have seen fame from the hip hop culture through this culture.