10 March 2011

Blurb Book- artist statement

Twilight is the mysterious time of day when day turns to night. I have always found watching the sun rise and fade below the horizon as the most peaceful and cathartic thing in the world. There may be a slight melancholy and even spooky tone to my portfolio, yet I believe that beauty is ambiguous and abstract and even that which is perceived as dark, sad, or even lonely can be surprisingly beautiful.


The extended exposure time in my dusk photographs creates contrasting chromatic relationships between the natural dim light of the sun that blues the sky and the bright artificial tungsten light, which creates an orange glow that lights up its surroundings.

I have also always been fascinated by trees, which are another common theme in my portfolio. I think that they are majestic, and especially feel an appreciation for them because they are essential to life on earth. Most of my photos were taken around the campus of my university, the University of Denver, and I try to show the beauty of every day and seemingly ordinary sights. I feel as though people are even less appreciative of the natural beauty that surrounds us when it is dark out, yet I believe it is still omnipresent if you simply look hard enough.

02 March 2011

Margaret Bourke-White

Margaret Bourke-White made history as the first female industrial photographer and the first female to be hired as a photojournalist. Her work is very inspiring to me because I also hope to be a photojournalist and travel around the world documenting social, political, and environmental issues in the hopes of bringing awareness to them and precipitate positive change. One of my favorite quotes by White is “We see a great deal of the world. Our obligation is to pass it on to others.” White is also very inspirational because she made it big in a world where the roles of women were very limited. This is due to her incredible persistence and determination.





She also made history as the first female war correspondent permitted to work in combat zones in World War II and actually flew in American bombers. White was a documentary photographer for Fortune magazine and later became a photojournalist for Life magazine, and her photograph appeared on one of its first covers. She also shot the great depression, and was the first Western photographer allowed into the Soviet Union, where she captured the industrial revolution. 



She made history for being the only photographer to capture the bombs that fell on Moscow. She was also one of the first to document the Nazi death camps. She explains that the barrier that her camera created between herself and the horror and tragedy that she witnessed helped her to maintain her inner tranquility throughout her career





Later on, she traveled to Pakistan and India to shoot the violence that erupted during the independence and partition of both countries. She is also famous for photographing Mahatma Gandhi just hours before his assassination. She died of Parkinson’s disease at the age of 67. Her friend and colleague, Alfred Eisenstaded, said that her work was so great because there was no assignment or photograph that was unimportant to her. She wrote six books about her travels, and three books have been written about her. Her work is displayed in the Brooklyn Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Library of Congress. 

Andy Warhol Exhibit- Schwayder Art Building (University of Denver)

Photograph of Andy Warhol
by Mark Sink

The Andy Warhol Exhibit in Colorado is composed of 158 of his Polaroids and silver prints that the Andy Warhol Foundation donated to the University of Denver in 2008. It also includes photographs of Warhol taken by Colorado artists like John Bonath, Valere Harris Shane, and Mark Sink, who were all in his inner circle of friends. Warhol was fascinated by the goings of everyday, ordinary life, and his artwork shows how ordinary snapshots can become meaningful, beautiful, and sometimes darkly fascinating with vibrant colors. Like Richard Avedon, Warhol was so involved with portraiture because he thought that people were the most fascinating subjects. He said, “people are so fantastic that you can’t take a bad picture of them.”






Sticky Fingers

Warhol’s photographs are mostly taken of his friends and often reflect very defined and traditional gender roles, as men appear serious and working, and women appear beautiful, carefree, and with sex appeal. Warhol, however, was very interested in human sexuality, and willing to deviate from the social constructions of masculinity and femininity, which is attested by his Ladies and Gentlemen (1974) series of photographs of transvestites in Grenich Village. Many of his photographs were erotic and even pornographic, and many of the subjects of these images were homosexuals. This is also evidenced by his series of 5 silkscreens of Jagger, which is androgynous themed. Warhol went through a phase where he was fascinated by the motif of biting and licking. One of my favorite pieces was the cover of the 1971 Rolling Stones album cover, Sticky Fingers, which shows the members of the band biting themselves or each other.

            Warhol is mot famous for his pop art and celebrity imagery. Though he critiqued commercialism, he often reimaged mercantile brand name products, like his most famous piece of a Campbell’s soup can, and used them as an art form. He was interested in brand name products, because they served the same purpose for everyone, and every American uses them, whether rich or poor. He said that he was so fascinated by Hollywood because everyone there is plastic, and he loves plastic. Some of his quotes, which were playing on a movie screen projecting his images, seemed very strange to me. Warhol was absolutely fascinated by the artificial, and even said that if he could he would be a machine, because life would be easier that way.



He also said that he wants everybody to like everybody and for everyone to be alike. He also said that he likes to remain a mystery, but that there is nothing deeper to know about him then what the eye sees on the surface of him and his art work. Some of the large and colorful silkscreens displayed in the exhibit are of icons like Superman, Dracula, Santa Clause, Uncle Sam, and Mickey Mouse. Many of his silkscreens are in series’, which use different colors, like those of Mohammad Ali and Mao Zedong. I really liked his serigraph of a turtle, which incorporates beautiful blues, greens, and oranges, and his silkscreen cow wallpaper of different sized pink cow heads against a yellow background.

            I really like Warhol’s style of art and respect his willingness to deviate from what was considered tolerable in the art world. His work has captured the imaginations of millions of people around the world, and he will continue to be remembered as one of the most influential artists of all times.