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Showing posts from March, 2021
  Curators oversee a collection of exhibits in a museum or art gallery. Their job is to build up collections, often in specialist areas. Curators develop ways in which objects, archives and artworks can be interpreted, through exhibitions, publications, events and audio-visual presentations. What do you need to be a curator? Curators typically need a master's degree in art history, history, archaeology, or museum studies. Students with internship experience may have an advantage in the competitive job market. In small museums, curator positions may be available to applicants with a bachelor's degree. Because curators have administrative and managerial responsibilities, courses in business administration, public relations, marketing, and fundraising are recommended. What skill are needed? Analytical skills: Curators need excellent analytical skills to determine the origin, history, and importance of many of the objects they work with. Customer-service skills: Curators...
  Art Book stores in London   Artwords bookstores Broadway market Rivington street Camden arts bookshop centre Donlon books Broadway Market Cambridge heath road Hayward gallery bookshop ICA Koenig bookstore-80 charring Cross road. Serpentine gallery Tate Britain Tate Modern White Chapel Gallery Pointers for a artist statement Have a good opening sentence. Be clear, precise and engaging. Try to capture the visual nature of work. Have a friend proofread it for you and have someone there with you. Keep it fresh and up to date. Try to keep it at page length if it’s too long people will lose interest. what is the point of an artist statement? To give the viewer a better understanding of your work. It describes sources and inspirations. Provides a general philosophy of how and why you make the art you do. It can be all inclusive of your work or it can focus on a specific body of work. It should be 2 paragraphs minimum or one-page long maxi...
  Research, Prints and Photography In my research I looked at artists such as Paul Strand and Edward Western (photography). Print artists such as Edgar Degas, Joan Miro and Salvador Dali. In my research I created my own interpretations of monoprints and photography, working with what I could in my photography I had to get creative with pencils and fruits. I used light and shadow in my photography, also incorporating abstractism in my pencil photos. Here are some examples of my experiments. Also with the black/white and colour photographs I experimented with texture and done some photo manipulation by weaving colour and black/white photographs into each other. 
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  The exploration of colour As an experimental artist and an abstract expressionist, looking upon the subject of exploration of colour I decided to do some artist research. researching artists such as, Pollock, Picasso and Hoffman I looked at how Pollock used the automatism technique dripping and splashing paint from heights, researching his most well known piece, "Blue Poles" also known as (NUMBER 11 ,1952 ) I can see how the technique enhances the effects that the splatters give depending on the height he let the paint fall from. However Hoffman focused more on the idea of Rhythm ,rhyme and the future of colour. his use of red, blue, green and yellow really accentuate the darker backgrounds of his work, he also explored shape and space in his work which I found interesting. Taking inspiration from Hoffman I created a black and white background using an ink roller to create a blocky effect, on top of that I decided to overlap bigger and smaller square shapes and paint them...
  Alan Turing's Turing Test - Alan Turing's “ The Turing Test” (Alleys of your mind - Benjamin .H. Bratton) - Alan Turing’s famous “ imitation game” was an ingenious thought experiment, but was also ripe for fixing the thresholds of machine cognition according to its apparent similarity to a false norm of exemplary human intelligence. -with cognoscenti from Stephen Hawkings to Elon Musk recently weighing in, position’s are split as to whether AI will save us or destroy us. - AI can never exist while others claim it is a fake idea. -Living and thinking with synthetic intelligence is very different from our own meaning of AI. -For our own safety and sanity we should not ask AI to be or pretend to be human , as it could cause a danger to us and is self defeating and unethical. -Stephen Spielberg's AI ( 2001) wants to be a real boy with his metal heart. -Skynet the terminator movies ( 1984-2015) represents the opposite ends of the spectrum and is set on human extinction. -Se...