Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Australias to TEN Logos
1. The ABC I beleive is the most recodnisable logo, the reason for this is largly due to the fact it is a TV station. Also its symetry, its completely symetrical (infinite), and another reason is the sound thats coupled with the logo itself - so as to create the effect that as soon as you see the logo you repeat the sound in your head.
.2 This logo has also been arround for ages, this logo has an effective tagline attached to it "which bank?" witch again for see your mind to repeat the phrase one first glance when you see the logo. Unfortunatley for them if the choose to change this it will take a considerable amount of time for there customers and the general populas to adjust to the new phrase.
3. ANZ - Acronym, Definition. ANZ, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited. There logo hasn't changed over the years and they too have a sound component to there logo, they also have cleaver TV ads witch always help.
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Having posted my top ten, I would however like to add that the top ten would be relative to what or who you accossate yourself with and your various cirumstances to pick a top ten from a group of different people of different ages and for them all to pick the same logo would be a testiment to the brand not so much the logo. However having an exceptional logo will always go down well.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
More highlights
Art & Design Graduand Show 2009
The creative works of over 250 final year Design and Fine Arts undergraduate and honours students from Monash University's Faculty of Art and Design will feature in the annual Graduand Student Exhibition, which will be officially launched on Friday 20th November, 2009.
The of work showcased in this years exhibition derives from the disciplines of interior architecture (interior design); industrial design (product design); visual communication (graphic design); multimedia and digital arts, sculpture, metals and jewellery, painting, photomedia, printmedia and glass.
As you walk about this amazing exhibition/show you suddenly realize that you are surrounded by art, the Faculty of art & design was done in such a way that every where you looked there was art, it was quite clever. However finding your way around was “interesting” to say the least! However the quality of the work was of a high standard.
The art piece that I found particularly interesting was a work done by “Amber Harris” called “E+mc2”. Impressed by the vibrant colour, how it was situated on the wall, and how it communicated the idea (how interpreted anyway) that although every action has
a reaction and most things can be explained there is almost always something in every subject/theory/question (almost like the ever ongoing debate about creation vs evolution) that can not be explained and understood – I see this through the design in which amber has laid out most of the colour paper squares in a geometric which starts as an arbitrary layout as it has come out of the bin, however whist this organization is going on you see to the right, a straight pink line of the same subject matter witch continues from the bin all the way round the wall continuing in a straight line from bin to finish .
Whist the art and shot movie stuff was very well done, the multimedia and visual communication (uni talk for graphic design) was a bit lack luster – the MM didn’t have the wow factor and the Graphic design was a bit average, I would have liked to see more typography as the advertising alluded too.
All in all I found it too be a good exhibition to good too, well done Monash
Pretty good for a uni lol
some of the highlights in our epic journey
deciphering the code a t the train station:
Some highlight of the exhibition:
needless to say i was very impressed
some other highlights...
wait for it....
The of work showcased in this years exhibition derives from the disciplines of interior architecture (interior design); industrial design (product design); visual communication (graphic design); multimedia and digital arts, sculpture, metals and jewellery, painting, photomedia, printmedia and glass.
As you walk about this amazing exhibition/show you suddenly realize that you are surrounded by art, the Faculty of art & design was done in such a way that every where you looked there was art, it was quite clever. However finding your way around was “interesting” to say the least! However the quality of the work was of a high standard.
The art piece that I found particularly interesting was a work done by “Amber Harris” called “E+mc2”. Impressed by the vibrant colour, how it was situated on the wall, and how it communicated the idea (how interpreted anyway) that although every action has
a reaction and most things can be explained there is almost always something in every subject/theory/question (almost like the ever ongoing debate about creation vs evolution) that can not be explained and understood – I see this through the design in which amber has laid out most of the colour paper squares in a geometric which starts as an arbitrary layout as it has come out of the bin, however whist this organization is going on you see to the right, a straight pink line of the same subject matter witch continues from the bin all the way round the wall continuing in a straight line from bin to finish .
Whist the art and shot movie stuff was very well done, the multimedia and visual communication (uni talk for graphic design) was a bit lack luster – the MM didn’t have the wow factor and the Graphic design was a bit average, I would have liked to see more typography as the advertising alluded too.
All in all I found it too be a good exhibition to good too, well done Monash
Pretty good for a uni lol
some of the highlights in our epic journey
deciphering the code a t the train station:
Some highlight of the exhibition:
needless to say i was very impressed
some other highlights...
wait for it....
Friday, November 20, 2009
Transformation - J Space
The Transformation exhibition is all to do with the subject of transformation. The fellow students work made up of sculpture/prints/and digital work. The use of all mediums helps to make the space come alive with the interesting pieces.
“The transformation” can be seen though the digital mediums more (personally),. The through the use of digital mediums the artists are able to put them selfs in to “transformation” situations with the help of green screens and the editing software. From the transforation angle the exhibition has much merit, However to your average passer by some of the work I found, I failed to understand and appreciate.
The statement was made at this exhibition that “digital art is not art” to which the speaker gave her rebuttal. With the overtone being that digital art is a new window to express passion for the arts. While I agree with this I also have my reservations.
Digital art is more then just whacking some images off the net and using as many of the different Photoshop filters as you can to create an “artwork” - this in itself has already been done, and done and done. “Real” digital requires as much in not more effort then that of traditional artwork, :ie if you are to do a collage or build an artwork around (in layers) a central image it MUST be the right dpi and quality, or at least used in a way that masked its lack thereof. Photoshop or image manipulation filters must be used with a purpose or to create a certain atmosphere. With out going into detail digital artwork is very much acceptable ONLY when it is done properly!
If this is not the case the work can be cheapened or look uneducated in its execution. Fortunately this will on be apparent those who are involved in the digital arts industry or who appreciate image clarity. You can have the best conceptual idea however if it isn’t properly executed it can look cheap. Unfortunately that the impression I got when viewing some of the work at the transformation exhibition.
Not all the work I view had this effect, there where some well developed digital art there of a very high standard with no pixelaisation or negative distortion. The sculptor was very interesting also. All in all I enjoyed the exhibition, it was an opportunity to see the depth, understanding and the thought process of my fellow students, which is always a good experience. Below are some example of very well executed digital art work:
Mireille Beaufremez - cubist face
Annie Watkins - Blue Night
Yvone Picot - Foxes in the Chook House
“The transformation” can be seen though the digital mediums more (personally),. The through the use of digital mediums the artists are able to put them selfs in to “transformation” situations with the help of green screens and the editing software. From the transforation angle the exhibition has much merit, However to your average passer by some of the work I found, I failed to understand and appreciate.
The statement was made at this exhibition that “digital art is not art” to which the speaker gave her rebuttal. With the overtone being that digital art is a new window to express passion for the arts. While I agree with this I also have my reservations.
Digital art is more then just whacking some images off the net and using as many of the different Photoshop filters as you can to create an “artwork” - this in itself has already been done, and done and done. “Real” digital requires as much in not more effort then that of traditional artwork, :ie if you are to do a collage or build an artwork around (in layers) a central image it MUST be the right dpi and quality, or at least used in a way that masked its lack thereof. Photoshop or image manipulation filters must be used with a purpose or to create a certain atmosphere. With out going into detail digital artwork is very much acceptable ONLY when it is done properly!
If this is not the case the work can be cheapened or look uneducated in its execution. Fortunately this will on be apparent those who are involved in the digital arts industry or who appreciate image clarity. You can have the best conceptual idea however if it isn’t properly executed it can look cheap. Unfortunately that the impression I got when viewing some of the work at the transformation exhibition.
Not all the work I view had this effect, there where some well developed digital art there of a very high standard with no pixelaisation or negative distortion. The sculptor was very interesting also. All in all I enjoyed the exhibition, it was an opportunity to see the depth, understanding and the thought process of my fellow students, which is always a good experience. Below are some example of very well executed digital art work:
Mireille Beaufremez - cubist face
Annie Watkins - Blue Night
Yvone Picot - Foxes in the Chook House
Walker st gallery - Peter Biram & Peter Rowe
Peter Rowe
Recent works on paper
Peter combines collage, and various media to explore colour, space and energy. Torn fragments from a range of photographic images are re-constructed into a surreal landscape comprising a series of layers.
Peter Biram
Environmental reflections with undertones of possible disaster
Peter investigates the fine balance that exists in the natural environment, the Order & Chaos found within nature and the balance of power shifting between the two states.
I found peter Biram work to be vibrant and alive! I quite enjoyed this work because of the life about it, the loud colours the chaotic line work and brush strokes. This brush work coupled with sections of solid dot work not dissimilar to our indigenous artists, however not so similar that it would cause upset. The dot work considered there in was done freehand but straight enough that one could easily be misled into thing that it was done by a machine or computer
I enjoyed his work on two different level or design element & principals, in that I enjoyed both the colour and the subject matter. Witch is somewhat of a rarity for me. I found that his work would look just as good in both black & white and in colour! Not only this but it had amazing texture flowing through it, another aspect that is very high on my aesthetic list. I was most impressed Biram’s work!
Peter Rowe on the other hand, I failed to grasp the aesthetics of his work I found them to be the very opposite of Peter Biram’s work - that being dull and life less, and very two dimensional.
Which was in shier contrast having the art work in such close proximity that made even more obvious the difference between the two! I know that, that was the very intention of the curator, the contrast of the two peters having completely opposites styles. The only thing that I found that this achieved is that it made one artist work better (Biram) and one artist look worse (Rowe).
Having said all of the above I very much enjoyed the view of both works despite my disagreement with the curators layout, Had I arranged the space I would have had Biram’s work set up with another artist with a style similar to that or Piet Mondrian, there couldn’t be a greater contrast!
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Figures in an Exhibition - Mc Clelland Gallery
The Figures in an Exhibition… exhibition draws together sculptures, paintings and photography from Australian art, ranging from the Colonial era, through early Modernism to the inspiring examples of the present. These various representations of the human figure reflect a variety of concepts of beauty and style as well as portraying various ideas of personal and national identity.
Within the exhibition, amongst others, the poetic feminine figures of the sculptors such as Bertram Mackennal and C.D. Richardson stand in elegant contrast to the masculine hyper-real detail of Ron Mueck and Sam Jinks figures. Figures in an Exhibition encapsulates the changing ethos of Australian art.
If found the hyper realism of Ron Mueck quite striking, not only in tis size but in its amazing detail! If someone asked me to define this style or genrĂ© of art I would show them the wild man of Ron Mueck. In The Wild Man a giant clutches at his seat. In his nakedness, unarmed he shies away from our gaze. This is a real circus strongman, caught naked and unable to defend himself from our presence and our gaze. His eyes wide open fend us off and there is an expression of "whoa – what are you doing here?
The other art piece that engaged my attention simply because of its rarity and weightiness in terms of how profound Edgar Degas’s work was and is in the stream of time. I like the idea of is cheekiness and how Edgar Degas’s art works/poses always seem hold a very private or intimate pose, as if the viewer was not suppose to be look at the portrayed model – like a “peeping tom”, or as I like to call him a “dirty old man” (which in this case I use as a term of endearment).
Edgar Degas’s Dancer Looking at the Sole of Her Right Foot (fourth state), The figure is one of four in a series of surviving figures—each in a slightly different position but all doing the same thing—that exemplify Degas' fascination with subtle changes in the dynamics of movement. This one was long thought to be the final one in the series owing to its relatively finished surface, but one of Degas' models asserted that in 1910 she was asked by the artist to assume the difficult pose of the plaster cast while he modeled another small figure. So it seems that, in fact, the less finished versions are likely to be the later ones.
As for the rest of the sculptures I thoroughly enjoyed the experience and this time there was no question as to what was and what is art, there was in almost all case’s a cense of awe with the sculptures. I’ll let the pictures speak for themselves.
Within the exhibition, amongst others, the poetic feminine figures of the sculptors such as Bertram Mackennal and C.D. Richardson stand in elegant contrast to the masculine hyper-real detail of Ron Mueck and Sam Jinks figures. Figures in an Exhibition encapsulates the changing ethos of Australian art.
If found the hyper realism of Ron Mueck quite striking, not only in tis size but in its amazing detail! If someone asked me to define this style or genrĂ© of art I would show them the wild man of Ron Mueck. In The Wild Man a giant clutches at his seat. In his nakedness, unarmed he shies away from our gaze. This is a real circus strongman, caught naked and unable to defend himself from our presence and our gaze. His eyes wide open fend us off and there is an expression of "whoa – what are you doing here?
The other art piece that engaged my attention simply because of its rarity and weightiness in terms of how profound Edgar Degas’s work was and is in the stream of time. I like the idea of is cheekiness and how Edgar Degas’s art works/poses always seem hold a very private or intimate pose, as if the viewer was not suppose to be look at the portrayed model – like a “peeping tom”, or as I like to call him a “dirty old man” (which in this case I use as a term of endearment).
Edgar Degas’s Dancer Looking at the Sole of Her Right Foot (fourth state), The figure is one of four in a series of surviving figures—each in a slightly different position but all doing the same thing—that exemplify Degas' fascination with subtle changes in the dynamics of movement. This one was long thought to be the final one in the series owing to its relatively finished surface, but one of Degas' models asserted that in 1910 she was asked by the artist to assume the difficult pose of the plaster cast while he modeled another small figure. So it seems that, in fact, the less finished versions are likely to be the later ones.
As for the rest of the sculptures I thoroughly enjoyed the experience and this time there was no question as to what was and what is art, there was in almost all case’s a cense of awe with the sculptures. I’ll let the pictures speak for themselves.
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