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Wednesday, April 28, 2010
My Teaching Philosophy
My first video ever. One possible topic for this assignment was to describe my teaching philosophy. This is definitely a loose interpretation. I learned the quality of your video editing doesn't improve when you are simultaneously trying to improve the quality of your thesis paper. Sheesh! What a week!
I literally put the footage (all taken from my iPhone!) together in less than an hour. This is definitely a work in progress. I plan on releasing the full video about the polka dot car at the end of this summer. So yes, there is still time to share your polka dot memories with me. Enjoy what we have so far:
If the embedded video doesn't work, go to this link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KeTOWpAM8AA
I literally put the footage (all taken from my iPhone!) together in less than an hour. This is definitely a work in progress. I plan on releasing the full video about the polka dot car at the end of this summer. So yes, there is still time to share your polka dot memories with me. Enjoy what we have so far:
If the embedded video doesn't work, go to this link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KeTOWpAM8AA
Labels:
Art,
Art Education,
Chicago,
iPhone,
Polka-Dot Car,
Teaching,
Thesis,
Video
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Exploiting the Nude Female
I'm going to exploit one of my thesis readings here- a reading chosen for an entirely different topic- to blog about something else. (Notice my complete disregard for proper citation here. Screw it.) But what I will tell you is that this is a picture of a life drawing class at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1905. A hundred years later, the nude female wouldn't be the model; she'd be the performance artist. Art school now and then. Wow.
You've come a long way, baby.
You've come a long way, baby.
Labels:
Art,
Art Education,
Art School,
books,
Chicago,
drawing,
feminism,
Obsolescence,
Teaching,
Thesis
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Monday, April 12, 2010
Nerd Alert
Okay, here's a quick blurb of images to sum up the week. "Must. Make. Things. Connect." -said the little thesis voice in my head. Here's a book work from an undergrad at SAIC's BFA show. Book artists. We just keep doing the same thing over and over! And I fully admit I love it. This genre just keeps repeating itself!
Now watch how I connect this book image above to the view from my Thesis class below. (My thesis is related to books.) This is also what a thesis binder looks like, boys and girls.
Now I will connect my thesis class to this image of a lecture I attended. I was late for my thesis class that day actually because I was sitting in on an art history lecture about the human body through history...or something. The professor claims it is the first lecture ever given in history via an iPad. I have no proof of this but I felt cutting edge.
Now I will connect this nerdiness above to a whole different nerdiness below. Soul Asylum. Yes. Soul Asylum. I saw them Saturday. There, I said it.
This image is just for emphasis. (You know, this blog post is sounding remarkably like my annotated image list from my Curriculum and Instructions class- inside joke: FMT.)
And this image is connected because I thought this, too, was a riot. As it turns out "Latino fiesta" tastes remarkably like my favorite cookie that I dearly miss from my days in Australia. The amazing Tim Tam. I actually left some clothes out of my suitcase in Sydney so I could pack more Tim Tams.
And now I will connect that image to this image of the aforementioned excellent Australian cookie...or bisquit as they say.
I miss you, Tim Tam. But, alas, I found a new lover: the Latino fiesta.
If you've made it this far down the blog post (congrats), please leave a comment for me answering this:
What is your definition of a nerd?
Now watch how I connect this book image above to the view from my Thesis class below. (My thesis is related to books.) This is also what a thesis binder looks like, boys and girls.
Now I will connect my thesis class to this image of a lecture I attended. I was late for my thesis class that day actually because I was sitting in on an art history lecture about the human body through history...or something. The professor claims it is the first lecture ever given in history via an iPad. I have no proof of this but I felt cutting edge.
Now I will connect this nerdiness above to a whole different nerdiness below. Soul Asylum. Yes. Soul Asylum. I saw them Saturday. There, I said it.
This image is just for emphasis. (You know, this blog post is sounding remarkably like my annotated image list from my Curriculum and Instructions class- inside joke: FMT.)
And this image is connected because I thought this, too, was a riot. As it turns out "Latino fiesta" tastes remarkably like my favorite cookie that I dearly miss from my days in Australia. The amazing Tim Tam. I actually left some clothes out of my suitcase in Sydney so I could pack more Tim Tams.
And now I will connect that image to this image of the aforementioned excellent Australian cookie...or bisquit as they say.
I miss you, Tim Tam. But, alas, I found a new lover: the Latino fiesta.
If you've made it this far down the blog post (congrats), please leave a comment for me answering this:
What is your definition of a nerd?
Labels:
Art,
Art Education,
Bookmaking,
books,
Chicago,
Good Food,
Music,
Obsolescence,
Teaching,
The 90s,
Thesis,
Trains
Monday, April 5, 2010
Do You Still Hold Books?
Look, it's a kindle! Look it's a newspaper!
Which is more exciting to see on the CTA brown line? You know you're working on a thesis when everything starts connecting...to your thesis. My thesis will be related to books. That's all I'm saying right now. But here's a new revelation I had at art group critique this weekend. (Their blog will be linked here shortly as soon as I know it...) I learned that my "books" come to life only when they are held. Deep.
This is a book works in progress. I'll report back soon. In the meantime, I'll probably be holding more academic texts in my hands. My dear blog readers, answer me this: In the loosest of terms,
what have you been reading...and do you hold it in your hands?
Labels:
Art,
Art Education,
Bookmaking,
books,
Critique,
Obsolescence,
Teaching,
Thesis
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