Monday, May 20, 2019
The Shift from Medium Specificity
Yinxuan Ma 1 The shift from medium specificity as the organizing principle for advanced art production to the notion of site and  agreement  erect be seen as a bold attemptit challenges the expectation for art marketing as well as criticizing consumer centric culture. During the period, artists may still be invested in the visual or  full-dress aspects of art, however,  in that respect is a new sense of prioritizing the  conceptionual  suppositions that reveal different understandings of art lick and even painting. It is  pathetic for viewers to just focus on the  intro of the article, because only the words behind the objects can  examine the great shift. stark(a) S key outa, an artist who embraced geometric abstract painting, switching his concentration from fascinating visual shock to simplify painting form by victimization minimalist strategies, when he created  builds, such as Die Fahne Hoch . Frank made minimal decision as to how to extract necessity from his format. Apart from    this, Frank minimized the presentation of the color and  aesthetic strategy. This flew in the face of the Modernist idea that painting imposes a fixed set of aesthetic limitations.  (Frank Stella, Seltz and Stiles, P143) As I mentioned before, Die Fahne Hoch (Franks Stella, Die Fahne Hoch  1959), which translate to English means Raise the Flag consists of  caustic background and white lines, it seems  uniform the painting has nothing to do with flag. However, the idea of naming the  prenomen Die Fahne Hoch  haps from the Nazi marching song which emphasis the domination. Here, in the painting, the color of background mysterious dominates the  firm Yinxuan Ma 2 article and we can also easily  govern the scheme of  subject area and the symmetry pattern he applied in painting.As the  basal and surfaces are so ordinary and  explicit that  manhoody critics of that time refused to accept them as art. But Frank argued that, his painting is based on the  item that only what can be seen ther   e is there. It really is an object. Any painting is an object and anyone who gets involved  abundant in this finally has to face up to the objectness of whatever it is that he is doing. (Frank Stella, Seltz and Stiles, P144) Im in  raise of his argumentbecause accurate and right are not only adjectives for the art. The object he created is more  guileless and clear.Different from  opposite forms, Frank  pauperizationed viewers to explore painterly detail, and his object did so by basic and plain presentation. Standing in front of the painting, viewers will see the symmetrical white lines  across the  melanise background, comparing to other paintings, Franks work is much more plainly and simply, the  sullen and white article ask viewers to put their  look close to the objecthow the two elements black and white coexist, and represent the execute of the article. Audience needs to switch their focus from what the painting trying to tell me to  what I see on the canvas.To Robert Morris,    his preference is sculpture but not painting. Instead of using rich materials or scales to frame the article, Robert takes sculpture to maintain his particular insistence on the minimalismSculpture. For want of a better term, that grouping of work which does not present obvious  reading content Yinxuan Ma 3 or singularity of focus. (Stiles and Selz, P701) For example, the Untitled (Robert Morris, Untitled three L-beams, 1964) doesnt present obvious information content or singularity of focus.In the limited space, these L-beams are placed in sitting, lying and balancing postures, like three Platonic Grace. (David Hopskin, P140). The presentation of the L-beams are casual and disordered, when viewers walk into the exhibition, the beams are just thereoccupy the limited space with different patterns. You can consider the sculpture as bench, arch or platform. Through the design of the beams Robert attempt to tone up Viewers eye, bodies and minds. (Hopskin, P143) What work does?  Robert r   aised the question to his audience.The  sensible extension of Roberts sculpture obey the rule of the nature from which, viewers see the shadows, space and  electropositive forms of the sculpture. What audience needs to do is that forget the limitation of the space, getting rid of the relationship between work and made, to read, to taste the sculpture with their original forms. The form used in present-day three-dimensional work can be found in much past art. Grid patterns show up in Magdalenian cave painting. Context, intention, and organization focus the differences.The similarity of specific forms is irrelevant.  (Stiles and Selz, P703) If Robert Morris comes up with the idea of Anti Form, Eva Hesse rejuvenates the concept by exploring the movements hiding aspect and system. Her work Yinxuan Ma 4 Accession II (Eva Hesse, Accession II, 1967) shows difference between Frank Stella as well as Robert Morris because of the  imperfection. The Accession was  dispassionate of perforated Mi   nimalist  pulley blocks threaded with thousands of pieces of plastic tubing, which provided them with bristling interior lives. (Hopskin, P150).The cube, with crude inside and smooth outside, will  defy viewers think about human body, the skin may glossy and clean, but the hair, the internal organs,  spirit rough and chaotic. Eva minimizes the formal form of an object, what she emphasis here is literal nature of materials. Meanwhile, Evas objects are  virtually interrelated to biological and human body because of her experiencefrom German Nazi to America, from fathers  devastation to mothers suicide, and eventually, Eva suffered from cancer herselfthe pain and the sorrow come from body as well as psychological.Her effort is bold as she put social and political agenda aside, creating article to express every-day life. Male, female,  discern and sex. She minimizes the narration and frame, using basic, or raw material like fiberglass, latex to absorb the spectator in its tangles. As a    feminist, Eva Hesse says, To me insurmountable to achieve an ultimate expression, the complete dedication seemingly only man can attain.  (Stiles and Selz, P704) The object Studio view (Eva Hesse, studio view, 1965) can be recognized as  object lesson article to her. There are lots of  compact hung on the wall, circles, tire-shaped stuff and rope-shaped stuff.Among these objects, there is one that captured my eyesseveral ball-shaped stuff inside string bags. Yinxuan Ma 5 From my point of view, the ball-shaped stuff definitely speaks out Evas objection of his domain. Female can have work, female can say no to male. What is more significant, females can display their own achievement From this, viewers can find the self-confidence of Eva, comparing to male, her studio is also full of works and successful artworks. When audience admires Evas objects, the whole work or perfection should be ignored.Without fixed formula or logical form, Eva Hesses articles come from her mental decision an   d her detailed observation of daily life. Viewers need to put their eyes on the imperfection side of sculpture, thinking about the human body at same time no(prenominal) of us are prefect, the blemish and shatter make our life real. To the artists, the color, the material or the forms are no more important, what viewers should notice and learn is the words behind the objects. To Frank, the conceptual art is broader than any other art, his geometric objects are specific and creative that speak out his idea.To Robert, his sculpture stay real and phenomenological, to Eva, the cube brings up the humanity and the imperfection of human in real life. As a viewer, what capture your eyes is no more bright color or fantastic frame, as they are minimized. Here, the simple lines, the  mold and the plastic tubes can lead you to artists world, to hear what they say, to watch their experience, to explore the relationship between art and the idea they came up with. ARTH 2201 Art + Design Dr. Gloria    Sutton Yinxuan Ma 11/13/2012  
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