Thursday, 4 June 2020

Thursday June 4th

Graffiti Alley. Bhumsoo Kim, June 3, 2020. Ann Arbor, MI

Your last image for this class will be one in which you express something that you believe to be an injustice that you would like to see changed. You will need to take a picture or pictures or creat a drawing or drawings in which you feel it expresses this change. The images will need to include TEXT either in the picture or text you add with Photoshop or Photopea.com.

The intent of Project 17 is to give everyone one a voice through the lens of Social Justice. The guidelines to this Project is as follows:

No intentional exclusion (focus on the group you are promoting)
No harm
No violence
Show respectful for all 

Common themes for Social Justice are: 
unfair labor practices, racial discrimination, discrimination due to gender, orientation, ethnicity and age but are not limited to this.

Please contact me with any concerns or your process if you get stuck.

The artist's work for this project is vBarbara Kruger  http://www.barbarakruger.com/

Her work uses PostModern Principles- Recontextualization, Text & Image and Appropriation (the photos are not hers).



Recontextualization
Positioning familiar imagery in relation to pictures, symbols, or texts that it is not usually associate with. 
 A process that extracts text, signs or meaning from its original context in order to introduce it into another context.  Since the meaning of texts and signs depend on their context,  recontexturaliation implies a change in the communicative purpose to. 

Text and Image
Creating meaning through the combined interplay of text and imagery.  Artists working in this style often combine images and text that don't obviously go together.   This results in a piece of work that build meaning that is beyond the text and image alone.  Combined they create a stronger meaning. 

Appropriation
To appropriate is to borrow. Borrowing imagery from historical and mass media sources, such as found photos and advertising.  Through the act of borrowing, the artist manipulates, adds to.  Appropriation is the practice of creating a new work by taking a pre-existing image from another context—art history, advertising, the media—and combining that appropriated image with new ones. Or, a well-known artwork by someone else may be represented as the appropriator’s own. Such borrowings can be regarded as the two-dimensional equivalent of the found object. But instead of, say, incorporating that “found” image into a new collage, the postmodern appropriator redraws, repaints, or rephotographs it. This provocative act of taking possession flouts the modernist reverence for originality.