Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Virtual Museum Experience
Stefany Townsend
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Monday, November 3, 2008
~Justin
Monday, October 27, 2008
SOUND/IMAGE EXCERCISE
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
VISIT A VIRTUAL MUSEUM
Comment to THIS POST in paragraph form describing your virtual experience at the Museum of the Moving Image.
LOVE YOUR PROFESSOR
TRANSFORMATION EXCERCISE
This animation should be 5-20 seconds long, rendered as a Quicktime movie and posted to the BLOG entitled TRANSFORMATION.
Examples:
Use shape to make something skinny fat
Use scale to make something big small
Use value and form to make a building melt
Use texture to make something dry wet
Use color to make something hot cold
LOVE YOUR PROFESSOR
Monday, October 20, 2008
Samantha's Responses
http://digitalfrances.blogspot.com
M. McLuhan
In his writing The Medium is the Massage McLuhan places emphasis on the media or medium themselves and not the content for which they become a vehicle. In this age of internet and information overload, I find McLuhan to be very prophetic in his theories. He's suggested that a medium affects the society in which it plays a role, not only by the content delivered over the medium, but by the characteristics of the medium itself.
Excercise #2: Photo Response
Image Credit: Behherit
I find the following image to be quite intriguing. However, the question is not whether I find the image visually appealing but "why" I find it visually appealing.
To begin, I find the colors in the image to be a perfect mixture of pure color and muted tones. I think the mix of intense and muted tones really help to draw the eye forward and focus as it would naturally, on the red berry like forms, making them the center of interest in the piece. To drive the nail further, the rest of the image in comparison to the berries which are quite focused compared to the background brings the eye continually to the berries but not without some wandering first. The berries in the foreground of the image act as a resting and focal point for the eye.
The drops of dew on the piece create several diagonal lines that act as guides, inviting the eye and the viewer to move through the image. However, the viewer does not move aimlessly and without end through the image, as the size of the berries and the fact that the berries are front and center in the picture, leads the eye to rest on them.
There is also a wonderful contrast in the image that is dealt with through not only the colors but also through the blend of blur and focus in the picture. It is as if we, the viewer are standing in front of the branch and looking only at the red berries, leaving the rest of the branch and it's surrounding to fade and blend into a whirl of mush. Even the subject matter, draws out some interesting natural contrasts, such as, the hardness of the branch and the softness and fluidity of the dew dropping down like strands of iridescent pearls.
The image is also a wonderful example of the kind of value that is desired in a photograph or a drawing. At the bottom of the photo the darkest shades of color are represented. However, the photo is not bottom heavy because some bits of dark also draw the eye to the top of the piece, where the lightest shades are represented.
There is a certain balance to the piece that is not achieved through symmetry but through asymmetrical means. However, despite the image being skewed to one side the viewer gets a sense of unity and balance because of the the other complimentary components listed above.
In short, we get a feeling of real atmosphere, not only due to the subject, but because of the use of space, line, color, value, etc. throughout the image. The use of these elements and principles of design help to create a convincing and intriguing piece that allows the viewer to experience a piece that is aesthetically appealing, but in a way far more than that. We get a real sense of depth, visually, and emotionally.
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan
Marshall McLuhan is a man of great depth. His words though irrational to many have given others an alarming sense of truth regarding the path down which society has traveled. He is much like a piece of fine art. He gives us just enough information to see the image; which in his case is a society consumed by technology, all the while allowing his viewers the space to make their own criticisms.
He speaks of extensions and amputations- those tools that both add and take away from the endeavors of mankind. He speaks about these as two separate things while in fact they are the same. He’s giving us the option to choose. It’s like asking someone if the glass is half full or half empty. Is technology- helping society, or are we just hurting the potential we have to make progress within our endeavors? For instance someone who views the glass as half full might say that a computer has aided society in many ways by giving us a faster more condensed way to access and store information, whereas a viewer of a glass half empty would say that we are losing more than we are gaining due to the lack of human connection lost in the hours spent in front of the glowing screen.
His arguments have left a lasting impression as he has challenged us to face the lives that we live and decide whether or not we are “extending” our abilities or “amputating” our progress. Getting people to more thoroughly examine their lives and the choices they have made could quite possibly be the greatest of all his accomplishments.
D. Whitcomb
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Marshall McLuhan
-Stefany Townsend
Monday, October 13, 2008
Media Interpretations
McLuhan personally speaks to me as an advertising major, to take notice of the subliminal messages that are being fed to viewers through all forms of media (television, radio, etc.) His research and the technique he used to apply to media shows how in our society, stereotypes are able to be able to continually be perpetuated by the role media plays in our day-to-day existence.
-Alexis Cummings
McLuhan the prophet
-Judith Fitzgerald for The Globe and Mail
What a genius. More to Come.
-Brooke
Marshall McLuhan and the Pre-digital Age
Marshall McLuhan: "The Medium is the Message": http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/mcluhhan.html
McLuhan Reconsidered: http://vispo.com/writing/essays/mcluhana.htm#A_techno
Karen Borden
ANOTHER EXCERCISE!!
On Marshall McLuhan.
Somehow McLuhan was able to forsee the direction technology was headed and how it would also impact us on cultural level. Having a computer went from something only the nerdiest of us would have to a necessity for every home. Its become a primary source of information and communication amongst ourselves, our family, and friends.
~Justin Marking
McLuhan's Global Village
Living from 1911 to 1980, Marshall McLuhan was able to analyze the advancing of technology and predict the coming roll of mass electronic media. He published the book Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. Within this book he spoke philosophically of media. One of the most important thoughts that McLuhan expressed was “electric media.” He brought forward the idea of the world as a society intertwined globally by mass media. This was his idea of “the global village.” He was probably the first person crazy enough to see the potential of media in advancing technology and electronic media.
We now have his “global village.” Computers, the Internet, and television are viable mediums for art and media. McLuhan foresaw the coming age that we now live in, and how mass media would affect the world. Electronic media has connected the world, and it is the digital canvas that is our medium.
~Travis Erickson
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Marshall McLuhan - A Response
cites:
- http://www.marshallmcluhan.com/
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_McLuhan
- http://www.regent.edu/acad/schcom/rojc/mdic/mcluhan.html
Marshall McLuhan
-Kim Spann
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Marshall Mcluhan
-William Waitman (October 9,2008)