Friday, December 13, 2013


Event Blog #3

For the final excursion I visited the Hammer museum, here in Westwood. The architecture and colorful murals were intriguing from the outside; therefore I was excited to see what was within its walls. My favorite piece was the murals right inside the entrance (see below), for their intricacy, and almost shape-shifting form. The longer the viewer stares at the piece, the more patterns and shapes reveal themselves. The form and patterns are entirely symmetrical, reminding me of the mathematical symmetry in Leon Battista Alberti’s work. I enjoyed drawing similarities between the colorful, modern play with patterns to the Italian renaissance revelations on perspective we learned about in week 2.


In addition to the modern murals, I thoroughly enjoyed some of the older work in the Hammer museum. While drawing comparisons between our class material and these works, I noticed a significant difference between the more modern works and the older works—the framing. The more modern works have simply, or often no frames, compared to the extravagant, intricate framing of the medieval and older works (see below). My reasoning behind this would be that earlier works were most frequently commissioned by wealthy patrons for homes, honor, and portraiture, rather than more modern artist’s creations for the sake of art. Visiting the Hammer museum helped me bring to life the concepts we’ve learned in class, and I’m proud to have such a great institution here by campus.


Sunday, December 1, 2013


Blog 9 

When watching the lectures this week I was particularly interested in the portion of lecture 3 about the cold war. The Cold war was an exciting era in history full of nation wide progress in space exploration and intense tension and completion with the Soviet Union. The day the soviets launched the first satellite, sputnik, changed our nation forever. We were now behind in the spaced race leaving our nation in fear of other more dangerous soviet advancements we didn’t know about. The competitive atmosphere pushed American scientist to work quickly and scientific advancements were made faster than ever. Our nation was in an era of rapid change and intense politics and learning about this made me curious to see how this change was reflected in the art of the time. After further research I found the cold war had significant influence in both the art and fashion world. In this era you saw a new genera of clothing in high fashion that reflected the space age and looked very futuristic. Pictured below is a Piece called the “Space Hat” by Edward Mann. (1965)


Another piece of art that was influenced by the cold war was the “Environmental Transformers” pictured below. They were created in 1968 by Haus-Rucker-Co and reflected the nation wide fear of an atomic explosions. The piece shows three different fly like masks that resemble some sort of futuristic gas mask. This piece represents the old saying “the art of the possible”. It became so famous because people were genuinely afraid they might end up having to live life wearing a mask like that one day.



Lastly, I included a famous drawing at the time that is a great example of American propaganda towards the soviets during the cold war.







CITATION
"Photos." TIME.com. TIME Photos, n.d. Web. 01 Dec. 2013.


Ward, Ossian. "Art and Politics of the Cold War." Time Out. N.p., 30 Sept. 2008. Web. 01 Dec. 2013.


"Designer Daily." Designer Dailys RSS. N.p., 14 Aug. 2009. Web. 01 Dec. 2013.

 "Art and Politics in the 20th Century ." Digication E-Portfolio. Boston University, 2013. Web. 02 Dec. 2013.