This was a week where I had to remind myself the subjectivity of art and how there is now apparently little to no basis of objectivity with it in a world of increasingly loose contemporary art. Please bear with me if I come off as a bit condescending, because I am not, but rather using witticism to make light of my thoughts about our visitor as well as my tired mind. Also, this is just my honest opinion, and I am not going to pretend to like something just to be "polite." And honestly, I felt a bit discouraged the day Lawton Hall came to visit, and I honestly did not expect that to happen. I am not blaming Hall for my discouragement, but instead the whole experience in general that he happened to be apart of. When Lawton entered the room, I remember one of the first things John said was that Mr. Hall is one of the few graduates to quickly enter the art world and "survive," or something along those lines. Of course, John may have simply said that out of humor, based on the world's current attitude toward art students in a time where STEM education has taken ahold of mainstream academia, and I may sound like I am about to overanalyze a simple joke, but that statement had me both intrigued and worried nonetheless and continued to linger in my mind to this day, along with the long list of fears I continue to have about the present and future. Apparently one of the themes that Lawton is pursuing is "nostalgia" or trying to return to form of something lost or in the past, and I definitely think he captures something old and tired.
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Monday, April 27, 2015
My Response to Lawton Hall - Michael Hubbard
(Please note before reading this that I continue to struggle with what I want to do with my life with a degree in fines arts, especially in the world we now live in, and that part of that struggle constitutes a good portion of my feelings in post.)
This was a week where I had to remind myself the subjectivity of art and how there is now apparently little to no basis of objectivity with it in a world of increasingly loose contemporary art. Please bear with me if I come off as a bit condescending, because I am not, but rather using witticism to make light of my thoughts about our visitor as well as my tired mind. Also, this is just my honest opinion, and I am not going to pretend to like something just to be "polite." And honestly, I felt a bit discouraged the day Lawton Hall came to visit, and I honestly did not expect that to happen. I am not blaming Hall for my discouragement, but instead the whole experience in general that he happened to be apart of. When Lawton entered the room, I remember one of the first things John said was that Mr. Hall is one of the few graduates to quickly enter the art world and "survive," or something along those lines. Of course, John may have simply said that out of humor, based on the world's current attitude toward art students in a time where STEM education has taken ahold of mainstream academia, and I may sound like I am about to overanalyze a simple joke, but that statement had me both intrigued and worried nonetheless and continued to linger in my mind to this day, along with the long list of fears I continue to have about the present and future. Apparently one of the themes that Lawton is pursuing is "nostalgia" or trying to return to form of something lost or in the past, and I definitely think he captures something old and tired.
This was a week where I had to remind myself the subjectivity of art and how there is now apparently little to no basis of objectivity with it in a world of increasingly loose contemporary art. Please bear with me if I come off as a bit condescending, because I am not, but rather using witticism to make light of my thoughts about our visitor as well as my tired mind. Also, this is just my honest opinion, and I am not going to pretend to like something just to be "polite." And honestly, I felt a bit discouraged the day Lawton Hall came to visit, and I honestly did not expect that to happen. I am not blaming Hall for my discouragement, but instead the whole experience in general that he happened to be apart of. When Lawton entered the room, I remember one of the first things John said was that Mr. Hall is one of the few graduates to quickly enter the art world and "survive," or something along those lines. Of course, John may have simply said that out of humor, based on the world's current attitude toward art students in a time where STEM education has taken ahold of mainstream academia, and I may sound like I am about to overanalyze a simple joke, but that statement had me both intrigued and worried nonetheless and continued to linger in my mind to this day, along with the long list of fears I continue to have about the present and future. Apparently one of the themes that Lawton is pursuing is "nostalgia" or trying to return to form of something lost or in the past, and I definitely think he captures something old and tired.
Monday, April 20, 2015
Project No. 2 - "The Slow Cascade"
"The Slow Cascade"
Monday, April 13, 2015
Project No. 1 - "Nighttime Reader"
Working the topic of mundane rituals, I wanted to explore
reading before going to bed and how the process of that can affect our internal
hardwiring for both the good and the bad. I chose the medium of film because
that is where I work best and make the most out of my more elaborate ideas. The
film is titled “Nighttime Reader” is simply about a young man reading before
retiring to bed. However, there is a twist toward the end that I included to
give the film a more interesting narrative edge aside the ambient music, crisp color
contrast, and various camera angles. With this film, I also wanted to visually emphasize how there is a simple beauty to what we consider "mundane" through the slow and steady pace of the film as the calming, reflective music plays in the background. Michel de Certeau says in his book The Practice of Everyday Life that, "The 'insignificant detail' inserted into the framework supports [the story] makes the commonplace produce other effects" (de Certeau 89). By inserting the surprise of a supernatural presence, I believe I gave the film further reason as to why carries its grainy, subdued pastiche. That particular aesthetic hopefully adds to the feeling of discomfort despite its comfortable setting with audience having already learned the eery ending of this film.
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
ART 340 Proj. No. 1 Proposal - Michael Hubbard
On the subject of mundanity & capturing an instance of it in a day-to-day routine with whatever chosen media, I would like to create a short, two to three-minute video about something as ordinary as reading before going to bed. However, with the intention of giving the film a contextual plot and my keen interest in the cinematic feel, I would also like to add an ounce of suspense and horror to add an energetic spin to the topic of the mundane. The premise would be that the protagonist has been extensively reading a book in his, not paying attention to what is going on behind him as something horrific warps into existence, and soon meets his presumable demise after putting his book away & turning off his light. There will be no sound, only a moody soundtrack piece, and the film may be in color, although that may also be unlikely.
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Fuck YouTube
I want to formally make a statement to YouTube: Fuck You
You take such a long ass time to process a 3-minute video and you're useless
Love,
Michael Hubbard
You take such a long ass time to process a 3-minute video and you're useless
Love,
Michael Hubbard
Final Project Presentation - Experimental Horror Film: "Never Lighter"
*Note: It's taking really long time to upload the video of my film because of the video processing on YouTube
Yesterday we all had our final projects presented for a final critique as well as a sort of public showing. I was overall excited by the whole experience and actually made a new discovery while I was there that could potentially shift the development of films I plan to make in the future.
I as am sure you are all aware, I did another short film similar to the one I did earlier this term, only this time it is a couple minutes longer and carries a slightly more cohesive narrative, despite its experimental form. During our times reading and discussing McLuhan's book I felt like there several elements in his theory of modern technology that could be made into a horror film, particularly his prediction that this technology would makes us basically more detached from one another despite our intention to become more connected a "global village"because we would then require a further overload of unadulterated information we never really need. In my film "Never Lighter," which stars Ridley Tankersley and sees the return of Ben Meunier, there are no really apparent horror elements other than the music and some scenes hinting at it. The film is about two young college students who are not directly linked but are facing a similar situation, which is how modern technology has mired their social lives and made them either paranoid or frustrated.
Yesterday we all had our final projects presented for a final critique as well as a sort of public showing. I was overall excited by the whole experience and actually made a new discovery while I was there that could potentially shift the development of films I plan to make in the future.
I as am sure you are all aware, I did another short film similar to the one I did earlier this term, only this time it is a couple minutes longer and carries a slightly more cohesive narrative, despite its experimental form. During our times reading and discussing McLuhan's book I felt like there several elements in his theory of modern technology that could be made into a horror film, particularly his prediction that this technology would makes us basically more detached from one another despite our intention to become more connected a "global village"because we would then require a further overload of unadulterated information we never really need. In my film "Never Lighter," which stars Ridley Tankersley and sees the return of Ben Meunier, there are no really apparent horror elements other than the music and some scenes hinting at it. The film is about two young college students who are not directly linked but are facing a similar situation, which is how modern technology has mired their social lives and made them either paranoid or frustrated.
Monday, March 2, 2015
John Cage, Avant-Garde Music Theorist & Composer
For our brief artist research report, I was tasked with the
music theorist and avant-garde artist John Cage. I noticed that in The Medium Is the Message, author Marshall McLuhan does not have
much about John Cage other than several quotes just as obscure as McLuhan’s
book. McLuhan voices many problems with the advent of modern technology and how
it affect our individuality and hamper our ability to proper socialize, and it
seems to me that Cage offers a solution to some of those problems with the
little page space he has in McLuhan’s book. The argument that I make is that
Cage’s solution consists of us taking time to remove ourselves from modern
technology.
~ Cage and his prepared piano experiment ~
~ Cage playing on a ridiculously small piano for 4'33' ~
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