Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Pre-Holiday Project

1. I made a picture frame out of magazines and cardboard.
2. First of all, I printed out a picture I liked and then I measured the size of the picture to cardboard and cut the cardboard piece out. Then I cut strips of magazines out, rolled them, and glued them. After all this process, I glued it to the cardboard.
3. I used a glue gun with glue sticks, cardboard, magazines, and paper.
4. I was focused on trying to make precise magazine strips.
5. I enjoyed just looking at the pictures I wanted, and just starting to do the whole process. The difficult part was the glue gun was hot, and the whole thing took a while.
6. I think I did well in the fact that it turned out good, and its pretty useful.
I cut out the strips of magazines which was mostly even.

contrast- theres a lot of different colors, like blue, green, orange, and all the colors just contrast with each other.
pattern- there is no pattern, it's all kind of random colors from magazines.
emphasis- all the colors and just using old magazines and cardboard.





Friday, October 22, 2010

Q/2 Places

Portland Art Museum



GENERAL ADMISSION

Adults
$12.00
Seniors
55 – up
$9.00
College Students
18 – up, with Student ID
$9.00
Annual College Student Pass§
18 – up, with Student ID
$10.00
Adult Group Tours±
12 or more
$8.00
Museum Members
FREE
Children
17 – younger
FREE
School Group Tours
By reservation
FREE 
Reserve Now

VISITOR HOURS

MonCLOSED
Tue10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Wed10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Thu10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Fri10:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Sat10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Sun12:00 PM – 5:00 PM


Portland Art Museum, 1219 SW Park Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97205.
503.226.2811, info@pam.org



Seattle Art Museum
Seattle Art Museum Downtown 
1300 First Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101-2003 
206.654.3100
TTY 206.654.3137

Hours

During Picasso (October 8, 2010–January 17, 2011)

For a limited time we’re open on Tuesdays!
Tuesday–Sunday: 10 am–5 pm
Thursday & Friday: 10 am–9 pm
Monday: closed

Post-January 17, 2011

Wednesday–Sunday: 10 am–5 pm
Thursday & Friday: 10 am–9 pm
Monday & Tuesday: closed

Tickets

Special Exhibition Ticket Prices 
Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris
October 8, 2010–January 17, 2011
  • $23 Adult
  • $20 Senior (62+), Military (with ID)
  • $18 Student (with ID), Teen (13–17)
  • FREE for children (12 and under)
  • FREE for SAM Members

SAM Collections and Installations
Suggested General Admission Prices

(does not include entry to Picasso)
  • $15 Adult
  • $12 Senior (62+), Military (with ID)
  • $9 Student (with ID), Teen (13–17)
  • FREE for children (12 and under)
  • FREE for SAM Members




Tacoma Art Museum
Museum Hours

Wednesday - Sunday         10 am - 5 pm
Third Thursday
 10 am - 8 pm
    with free admission 5 pm - 8 pm
Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and Independence Day.
Tacoma Art Museum's administrative hours are Tuesday through Friday, 8 am to 5 pm. Please note that the administrative offices are closed on Mondays. 

Street Address 
Tacoma Art Museum
1701 Pacific Avenue
Tacoma, WA 98402
253.272.4258
info@TacomaArtMuseum.org

Admission
Members          FREE
Adults $9
Students, Military, Seniors (65 +) $8
Family (2 adults and up to 4 children under 18) $25
Children age 5 and under FREE

Coming with ten or more people? Group discounts are available. Visit our group tours section or e-mailtours@TacomaArtMuseum.org 

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Art21

Bruce Nauman- He does different types of art, like video, text, selfportraits. He said something about that he wanted to try to make something functional, but he couldn't always find out what the function is.

Kerry James Marshall- Kerry James is a teacher, an artist, and he uses African American traditions. He gave some cards for his family with black people on it for the history of African Americans.

Maya Lin- She made the vietnam veterans memorial. She works both with art, and architecture. She also made a ice skating rink and park.

Louise Bourgeois- She has been doing sculptures of hands and she wants us to understand what it means, and if we don't understand, she has failed to give her thoughts.

When I reveal my personality and identity, I think I just be myself, and when I get comfortable, I just let myself go sometimes, do the things I love to do, and by doing those things, my personal identity will come out. I think doing the things you love, and hanging out with your friends form your personality, how you act, and what you do.
If I were to do a self portrait of myself to explain my own identity, I would probably draw multiple things of what I love to do in one drawing. I would put some sports in there, and musical notes, and my friends and family, and that would be what forms my personal identity and personality.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

What Makes Something Art?

Truthfully, at first, it seems like her paintings were just a little kid, playing around with paint. But when I think about it, it is art, because its her own thing. I think art is just something that you do on your own, it's your own thing, and it's how you express yourself. If you put your heart into it, and have fun with it, I think thats art. 
I think this whole thing about Marla was ridiculous. This whole controversy about if her paintings were her own or her dads. One of the quotes that her dad said stuck in my head. He said something like 'everyone makes the story how they want it to be, and not what it is.' I think that is so true. Once people have suspicions, like 60 Minutes, and they air it on tv, and media, then people would easily be fooled, and they make it what they think, and not what the truth is. Everyone was being so ridiculous, and they were trying sue them for it.
Marla doesn't like painting on camera, and I wouldn't either. I think it would just be nerve racking. You would always worry about painting it perfect, and not relaxed, and doing your own thing. 
I'm glad that the questions about Marla were cleared up, and I think that people shouldn't be so harsh.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Artists

1. Vincent Van Gogh- 
The Starry Night.
 I love his style of painting. Its dark, and mysterious looking, yet it has a different touch to it.

van-gogh-vincent-starry-night-7900566.jpg









2. Pablo Picasso-
The Three Musicians.
In this painting, he used the style of cubism. I liked how he didn't use that many colors, and yet made an amazing picture of three people playing instruments. Its a different and unique style.

picasso_three_musicians_moma.jpg


3. Claude Monet-
The Lily Pond.
When I was in elementary school, my art teacher gave us an assignment to try to draw this painting that Claude Monet painted. I love all the different shades of green that he used. He painted this a lot, and did different styles, colors, etc, for the seasons.

Claude Monet Water Lily Pond2.jpg

4. Leonardo Da Vinci-
Mona Lisa
Leonardo was known for a lot of things.
One thing he was known for was his painting of Mona Lisa. I like how a lot of his paintings with people, the people look realistic. I think its one of the hardest things to do, and I respect it.
Getty-MonaLisaWeb2.jpg

5.George Seurat-
A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte
I think George Seurat is so amazing. He painted everything in dots. Its so amazing, and it would just take so much time to do every dot, and paint things like this.

Georges_Seurat_-_Un_dimanche_après-midi_à_l'île_de_la_Grande_Jatte.jpg

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Videos

In the first video, they used a lot of words that I didn't really understand, or comprehend.
It kind of went in one ear, and out the other. I just couldn't understand it.
All I know is that in the video, they were talking about the left and right side of the brain, where the left was used for like science, and math, etc,. and the one for the left was for arts.

In the second video, I thought this was more of a simpler concept where almost anyone could understand. They had a programmer side of view, and the artists side of view of what they would do at the cross walk. I thought this was not really as informational as the first one, but this video just gave us the basic idea.

In the last video, it was talking about how people needed both sides, the left and the right brain. 
I don't think we need just one side of the brain. People need to be artistic, creative, and people need to do well in math and science. If you want to do well in life, and be one of those people with power, you will need both sides of the brain to help you.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

What did I learn?

Portrait:
The portrait was one of the ones I didn't like, because I don't like to draw people, since I'm not good at it. Looking at the mirror, examining all my features, seemed a little weird to me. Trying to make it look REAL was hard for me, and trying to make it look like me, but in the end, it didn't look like me.
The only thing that I thought I did good was the hair. The hair looked like MY hair, and not someone else's hair. Not everyone has the same ears, and not everyone has the same noses etc., I know that, but its hard to not draw everything the same, because we have learned in our heads to draw like that. I learned that even though not everyones the same, we all have our own ways of expressing ourselves.

For Memory:
I thought this one was the hardest, because I couldn't really remember anything about my brother. I remember what he looks like, but I couldn't remember all the details of his face, and his face shape and things like that. That was one of the most difficult things for me, plus the fact that I had to draw a person. I liked the face shape of my brother's face. I think it was an exercise to get my brain moving, and help me remember things better.

Hand:
This exercise was my favorite one because it looked like my hand. One of the difficult parts of this was that I was trying to make the exact hand size of mine, and that took a while. Making it look realistic was pretty difficult too, but I think I did a good job of making it look like my hand. The drawing had all the little wrinkly parts a hand would have and things like that. I was satisfied with how it looked like mine.. I learned to do things by just looking, and trying to estimate the sizes, and not just trace my hand around, but do my best in what I can do.

Igor upside down:
I thought Igor was easier than the portrait and for memory because I was looking at a picture, and then trying to copy the exact picture. One of the difficult things about this was trying to make the picture proportionate. For mine, the head was a little too big for his body, and so I had to change things. If one thing is off, you have to adjust the other parts to that part. That was one of the difficult parts of it.
I learned to just go with the flow, and let things just go, and let my hand move the way it wants to. It wasn't exact, but I did it and finished and I was pretty satisfied with the way it turned out. ! :D