Saturday, February 21, 2015

Prints + Books + Gallery Opening

This project was more extensive than anything I've done before, and I think it turned out pretty alright. I have improved my photoshop knowledge from next to nothing to basically proficient, and I'm interested in playing around with it more. The book creation process was surprisingly simple; it's pretty amazing that that's all it takes now to create a book- a layout and some photos, pay 20 bucks, and get your own book in the mail.

I think the gallery opening went really well; I was glad to see so many people walking and talking about the art. I also appreciated that Noah's description was more about food than it was about art.


Ridley's off kilter frame also ended up reinforcing the "something is happening" theme. I think if we didn't have that one element of off-ness it would have seemed too perfect and "something is happening" wouldn't have as much of an impact on first sight. So thanks to whoever put only one nail in the wall for that frame I guess? 


Great show everyone!


Thursday, February 19, 2015

Anthony Appiah Lecture

I found Professor Appiah's convocation interesting, but ultimately very broad and generalizing. He made a good point about the role of honor in society, or respect more specifically, and the need for sustained dialogue about our values as a community. But this is such an immense topic that it raises more questions than it answers. How do we get such a dialogue started? In the case of international dialogue, who gets to start that dialogue? How can we avoid simply one culture/way of thinking imposing itself on another culture/way of thinking? Where do we draw the line between what needs to be changed and what is simply cultural difference? The case is obvious in situations like foot binding or FGC, but what about something like arranged marriage, which is in more of a moral/ethical gray area.

Appiah's ideas obviously coincide with McLuhan's emphasis on global connectedness via technology. In some ways I think Appiah's honor discourse is already in effect via the internet. Through the web we are more able to talk to each other than ever before, and we have been able to spark important social and political conversations through this technology. And yet, if Appiah advises caution in this type of discourse in person, even more care must be taken through technology, since it seems to be several times easier to inflame someone with even the best of intentions. Not to mention some people are more willing to be intentionally hateful on the internet because of the anonymity it provides. All of these complications essentially go back to what I first said about Appiah's argument: it makes sense, but it's incredibly complex and not as simple to implement as he makes it sound.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Testing the Ice

This soundscape was inspired by John Cage's statement that "everything we do is music." All music is sound and all sound is music. This idea got me thinking about how we perceive sound and that everyone perceives sound differently. What is "music to my ears" may not be music to yours. With that in mind, I recorded many different sounds in my daily life, trying to figure out what sound resonates with me musically that isn't what we would normally call music. I ended up recording myself walking on ice, lacing up my skates, and figure skating on Ormsby lake.

I took figure skating lessons for five years in middle and high school, and I've always thought there was a musical quality in the sound of the blade on the ice gliding, turning, and jumping. I hope I have communicated both a sense of fluidity and rhythm in this soundscape, mirroring the way a skater should move across the ice.

I edited this project very little, although I played around with it a lot. The only changes I made were to cut a few clips together and reduce the background noise slightly in an attempt to muffle the wind. I hope it turned out alright. 

Monday, February 2, 2015

Project #3: Sleepytown

Sleepytown is a series of photographs taken between 7 and 10am on a Tuesday morning on the Lawrence campus and the surrounding area. The project attempts to counteract Marshall McLuhan’s idea of “allatonceness” (63) and “a world of total involvement in which everybody is so profoundly involved with everybody else” (61), as well as address “the humanity of the moment” and the possibility of “a genuine connection between individuals” (Greenough 187-188). As a society, social media and the process of being constantly connected to each other consumes us just as much as we consume it. The idea of this series was to ask whether we could remove ourselves from the busyness of “allatonceness” and reconnect to ourselves, to our physical surroundings, and to our in-person relationships.

I tried to order the photos to reflect the idea of waking up, creating a gradient from solitary to social, cold to warm, impersonal to personal. These photos attempt to make the everyday more visible in an attempt to capture “the humanity of the moment” and a heightened awareness of our surroundings.


 And while I think the series achieves this progression in some ways, in others it seems to remain disconnected and distant. Several photos in a row show students absorbed in their phones, making them seem far away no matter where the camera is or what tone the photo has. The final photo of two students at a table in the cafĂ© is the closest we get to a look at an in-person relationship, but they aren’t looking at each other, and they’re not speaking. So in this age of extreme technological connectedness, how connected are we really? We should be aware of how our technological connectedness affects our human connectedness, and that “allatonceness” doesn’t necessarily translate to awareness of the things around us and of the world at large. So we have to consciously make the commitment to be present in our lives; we have to continue to find “the humanity in the moment.”

Click here to view the photo set in Flickr. (Note: Start from the bottom up.)