500 Years of Women in Art (Give This Video Points for Creativity)

This video takes you on a fair­ly amaz­ing tour of the great por­traits of women in West­ern art. It moves from da Vin­ci to Picas­so, and, along the way, the por­traits seam­less­ly morph one into anoth­er. This mor­ph­ing allows you to see how artis­tic styles changed over time, and also how the human face has been artis­ti­cal­ly treat­ed dur­ing dif­fer­ent peri­ods. Watch the video below, which is accom­pa­nied by Bach’s Suite No. 1 per­formed by Yo-Yo Ma. For infor­ma­tion on the paint­ings cov­ered in the clip, click here. And also see the relat­ed video, Women in Film.


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Australia’s Electronic Canvas

We want­ed to post a quick pho­to from the light­ing show at the Ade­laide Fes­ti­val of Arts. Dur­ing the fes­ti­val, artists project lights on the city’s archi­tec­tur­al mon­u­ments, turn­ing the build­ings into elec­tron­ic can­vas­es. We’ve post­ed one pho­to below. For more good ones, see here. Thanks Car­ol for shar­ing these!

tapestry2.jpg

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How Camera Lenses are Made

On a relat­ed note, also see Learn the Art of Pho­tog­ra­phy: The Nikon Way

The Best Photoblogs of 2007

The best pho­to­blogs of last year, as declared by Photoblogsawards.com. Some beau­ti­ful images here:

Via: Andrew Sul­li­van’s Dai­ly Dish

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Learn the Art of Pho­tog­ra­phy: The Nikon Way

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Museums Crossing the Line?: An Interview with Jori Finkel

The New York Times fea­tured yes­ter­day a piece that rais­es seri­ous ques­tions about the art world. Accord­ing to the arti­cle, some major muse­ums are now allow­ing art gal­leries to finan­cial­ly under­write their exhi­bi­tions. And, of course, the gal­leries often have a direct finan­cial stake in the work on dis­play. This trend, which seems to be grow­ing, nat­u­ral­ly prompts ques­tions of influ­ence: are some of the most well-regard­ed muse­ums let­ting financ­ing — some­thing that’s always in short sup­ply — deter­mine what exhi­bi­tions they will put on dis­play? Are the lines between church and state get­ting crossed? (The muse­ums insist that the answer is no.) Then, there are ques­tions of com­merce: are non-prof­it muse­ums help­ing for-prof­it gal­leries, whether inten­tion­al­ly or not, bump up the pres­tige and finan­cial val­ue of their artists — some­thing which almost always redounds to the finan­cial ben­e­fit of the gal­leries?

I had a chance to catch up with Jori Finkel, the author of the arti­cle. She’s an arts jour­nal­ist based in LA where she cov­ers con­tem­po­rary art for The Times, among oth­er places. I asked her a few ques­tions and here’s what she had to say:

DC: What’s essen­tial­ly dri­ving the muse­ums to work so close­ly, per­haps too close­ly, with gal­leries? In short, how did we get here?

JF: One thing I dis­cov­ered in report­ing this sto­ry is just how com­mon it is for gal­leries to help out muse­ums behind the scenes—with research, with loans, and with things gal­leries do in the nor­mal course of busi­ness like fram­ing works of art. But it’s much more unusu­al to find gal­leries writ­ing checks for muse­um shows. Peo­ple I inter­viewed see this as a sign of the art world spin­ning out of con­trol or out of bal­ance because of all the mon­ey chas­ing con­tem­po­rary art late­ly. The imbal­ance being that gal­leries are rich­er than ever before, while muse­ums, which are not sup­posed to be part of the mar­ket, can find them­selves strug­gling or even beg­ging for fund­ing. A muse­um direc­tor once told me he felt his job was a lot like being a beggar—a glam­orous, well-con­nect­ed beg­gar, but a beg­gar.

DC: As I recall, some muse­ums have got­ten into trou­ble when seek­ing out spon­sors for exhi­bi­tions in the past — for exam­ple, from some cor­po­ra­tions. Is what’s hap­pen­ing now any dif­fer­ent, and does it raise par­tic­u­lar­ly new eth­i­cal con­cerns?

JF: We saw a num­ber of con­tro­ver­sies in the late 1990s over cor­po­rate sponsorship—like Armani report­ed­ly gift­ing the Guggen­heim $15 mil­lion and get­ting a show in return, and BMW under­writ­ing a motor­cyle show, also at the Guggen­heim. Then there was the scan­dal over the “Sen­sa­tion” show at the Brook­lyn Muse­um of Art, which fea­tured works from Charles Saatchi’s per­son­al col­lec­tion and was fund­ed in part by Saatchi. Sev­er­al of my sources men­tioned these cas­es because they think gallery spon­sor­ship rais­es rough­ly the same set of eth­i­cal ques­tions. The only dif­fer­ence they point­ed out is that gallery con­flicts might have the poten­tial to be more per­va­sive. (more…)

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500 Years of Art in Morphing Action (Excellent Video)

This video takes you on a fair­ly amaz­ing tour of the great por­traits of women in West­ern art. It moves from da Vin­ci to Picas­so, and, along the way, the por­traits seam­less­ly morph one into anoth­er. This mor­ph­ing allows you to see how artis­tic styles changed over time, and also how the human face has been artis­ti­cal­ly treat­ed dur­ing dif­fer­ent peri­ods. Watch the video below, which is accom­pa­nied by Bach’s Suite No. 1 per­formed by Yo-Yo Ma. For infor­ma­tion on the paint­ings cov­ered in the clip, click here. And also see the relat­ed video, Women in Film.

PS Thanks to Boing­Bo­ing for high­light­ing our inter­view today with Satoshi Kanaza­wa.

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One Formula Thinking

Speak­ing of Einstein–have you ever want­ed to explain the world on a nap­kin? The Edge, self-described as “an online col­lec­tive of deep thinkers,” has teamed up with the Ser­pen­tine Gallery in Lon­don to par­tic­i­pate in a month-long Exper­i­ment Marathon. The Ser­pen­tine has been ask­ing lead­ing sci­en­tists and thinkers “What Is Your For­mu­la?” and the Edge is now host­ing the fas­ci­nat­ing answers on their site. Rickard Dawkins, Bri­an Eno and Benoit Man­del­brot are just a few of the con­trib­u­tors.

Learn the Art of Photography: The Nikon Way

The advent of dig­i­tal cam­eras has changed pho­tog­ra­phy as we know it. It has dra­mat­i­cal­ly low­ered the cost of pho­tog­ra­phy, and we’re now snap­ping more pho­tos than ever before. But we’re not nec­es­sar­i­ly tak­ing bet­ter pic­tures.

This is where Nikon steps in. Their cam­eras make casu­al pho­tog­ra­phers immense­ly bet­ter than they actu­al­ly are. (Trust me, I know.) And Nikon has now set up a free Dig­i­tal Learn­ing Cen­ter that offers tuto­ri­als and tips for tak­ing a range of dif­fer­ent pic­tures — por­traits, trav­el pho­tos, nature pho­tog­ra­phy, etc. Ques­tions that get tack­led here include, but are not lim­it­ed, to: “How can I take bet­ter por­traits?” “How can I take pho­tos at dusk with­out hav­ing them look com­plete­ly dark?” “How do I get true-to-life skin tones?” “How can I get the mov­ing fig­ures in my pho­tos to look like they’re in motion and not frozen?” “My por­traits have red eyes. How can I pre­vent this?” Give a tour of the Learn­ing Cen­ter here. And thanks to Life­hack­er for putting this on our radar screen.

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Relat­ed Con­tent:

  • If you’d like to learn about dig­i­tal pho­tog­ra­phy using pod­casts, check out Dig­i­tal Pho­tog­ra­phy Tips from the Top Floor (iTunes — Feed — Web Site). And, for that mat­ter, if you need to learn how to use a pod­cast, spend some time with our Pod­cast Primer here.
  • Final­ly, NPR’s Fresh Air just aired an inter­view with pho­to­jour­nal­ist Paul Wat­son on Wit­ness­ing War (iTunes Feed Web Site). It’s an intrigu­ing but also quite haunt­ing con­ver­sa­tion.

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