Hosted by the St. Louis chapter of AIGA, Communication Arts owner and editor, Patrick Coyne spoke Wednesday April 8th before an audience comprised of both budding and experienced designers. The Washington University and St. Louis design communities came out to Steinberg Auditorium on Washington University’s campus to hear Coyne speak about the foundation and development of the visual arts magazine.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Apr 13th, 2009
- Category: Events
- Comments: 1
Communication Arts: 50 Years of Change
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Apr 9th, 2009
- Category: Uncategorized
- Comments: None
Student Reviews: Brett Cook
Recap and Reflection of Brett Cook’s “Dialogue for Community and Soul Collaborative Aesthetics: A Dialogue about Community and Soul”
Katie Lee Salis, Washington University
On Wednesday, March 19th, at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University, a wide-eyed, scruffy-bearded young man stood in the front of a large lecture hall and asked his audience to breathe with him. “In and out, in and out, in and out,” artist Brett Cook directed his eclectic audience of Washington University art students, professors and fans. Cook, an unabashed teacher, activist, thinker, motivational speaker, photographer, artist, and self-proclaimed icon, discussed the importance of his “unique” and “groundbreaking” artistic endeavors. Cook is the type of artist who believes that the process is more important than the product; the art is in the collaboration, the community and soul of the project, not in the painting or photograph itself. His ideas are interesting and borderline inspiring, but his recent art seems forced and tired.
Cook began as a graffiti artist in San Francisco and produced evocative and meaningful pieces with his spray can in the dark of night. He grew into an art student at the University of California at Berkeley who took his large scale, socially conscious paintings inside and experimented with technique and subject. Cook showed slides of innovative, irreverent and important pieces he was rightfully proud of although made a point to never sign. His evolving art was exciting, different, and filled with potential, but not for long. If you would like to take a look at some of Cook’s art, you can find it on his website.
It must have been the years of experience teaching in various public schools, but Cook articulately explained that he began to look at his art as a vehicle for education, for bringing people together, and for building communities. As I would explain it, he began to take his already meaningful art and sacrificed the visual quality for the trite and hackneyed “sentimental” process behind it. Creating projects such as “block-parties” on the streets of Harlem in which residents were able to color in connect-the-dot images of their neighbors and listen to the latest hip-hop music was interesting and fun but not life-changing, as he often claimed it was. Cook’s stories about making friends with those he has worked with and bringing communities together for a day were touching and heart-warming to say the least, but his purpose morphed from artist to ethnographer; Cook spent time writing essays and giving speeches about his experiences, explaining how certain communities worked and how individuals could relate to each other through these projects.
Today, it seems as if Cook has executed all of the collaborative projects he could possibly think of and is recycling some old ones. The artwork produced through these projects appears commercial, forced and unoriginal. He even noted, in a brief question-answer period at the end of his preachy speech, that he does not simply paint when he feels like it anymore, or go to a community where he feels he is needed, he waits for someone to ask him to grace them with his presence; he waits for someone to come up with an idea bud so that he can bring his special magic formula and help it to grow. I believe that Cook’s name-recognition and growing fame ended up acting as a detriment to the quality of his work. He became so contented with the attention he was receiving that he stopped creating unique works. If Cook didn’t settle on this artistic equation, he might be still creating inspiring pieces and contributing, in a very meaningful way, to the world of contemporary art.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Apr 1st, 2009
- Category: Artist, Events, Review
- Comments: None
Lecture: “Collaborative Aesthetics”
When attending an artist’s lecture, it is perfectly reasonable to expect the artist not to give free hugs. Fortunately, nobody told Brett Cook about traditional lecture dynamics. Wednesday, March 18th, in his lecture entitled
“Collaborative Aesthetics: a Dialogue about Community and Soul” at Washington University, Cook hugged every participant who offered their definitions of “community” and “soul.”
The rest of the lecture was much of the same. After beginning with a breathing exercise in order to better assess the artwork, Brett Cook exhibited photos of traditional portraiture in the faculty club at Harvard University and a cow sculpture painted with Mondrian geometry in a West Indian neighborhood. He displayed artwork that he views as inaccessible to the public and irrelevant to the community. In contrast, Cook presented his own portfolio, which was increasing representative of the spaces in which each piece was displayed.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 26th, 2009
- Category: Uncategorized
- Comments: None
Student Reviews: private (dis)play
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“private (dis)play” at COCA
Lisa Ito, Washington University
private(dis)play, an unusual exhibit focused not on finished art, but sketchbooks of contemporary American artists, opened February 6th, 2009 at COCA, the Center of Creative Arts in St. Louis. Founded in 1896, COCA is an institution dedicated to the education and inspiration of the arts, offering a wide range of programs in a variety of disciplines for students aged six months to adulthood. Believing in teaching through example, COCA not only provides classes and educational camp programs, but it also hosts performances in its 400 seat theater and exhibitions in its galleries.
private(dis)play is an example of one such educational exhibit that teaches specifically about the process of creating art. As a collection of sketchbooks and journals, the exhibit acts as a portal into the private minds of artists, displaying their ideas, thought processes, and methods for creating the finished pieces that they are now renowned for. The artists of the show vary in aspects such as their interests, subject matter, and media, so it is unsurprising that their sketchbooks also exemplify great differences. Some artists are very gestural in their sketches, whereas others resolve their drafts to the point of a finished pencil rendering. Of the more unique works were one set of collages and a digital animatic, which served as a time-based “sketchbook” for developing a finished animated piece. Many sketchbook pages consisted of visual imagery, while others included artist’s writing.
Artists displayed in the show included Bo Bartlett, Roland Becerra, Vincent Desiderio, Ella Gant, Julie Heffernan, Catherine Howe, John Jacobsmeyer, Kurt Kauper, Tom Knechtle, Katharine Kuharic, and Jamie Adams, a current professor at Washington University’s Sam Fox School of Design. Adams and Kuharic co-curated private(dis)play, and Adams spoke briefly at the gallery opening, introducing the show and expressing his hopes of revealing the unseen world of what artists go through before producing finished works.
Contemporary American painter, John Jacobsmeyer was also present at the exhibit opening and was invited to speak about his submission which featured several highly rendered sketches for a concept based on a poem titled “Sheep Boy.” Jacobsmeyer combined his interest in the poem with his interest in American Sign Language by drawing stills of a model performing “Sheep Boy” in ASL.
Attending private(dis)play was a new experience, as it was the first exhibition opening I had ever been to. The atmosphere was somewhat sophisticated, the attendees dressed in formal clothing, but it was also very friendly and energized. A large variety of people attended, young and old, practicing artists, art professors and art students, but no matter what the age or status, everyone was clearly focused on the exhibition at hand, participating in lively conversation.
The exhibit itself was very inspiring, showing another side to artists, one that normally is not presented. To see the raw workings of these nationally acclaimed painters and animators showed that everyone must start somewhere, and maybe even the greatest artist has crude and undecipherable sketches. It was extremely interesting to see how each artist thought differently, and how emotions drove all of them.
private(dis)play is open until March 22, 2009, at the very accessible St. Louis COCA, and as a student of the arts, I highly recommend the show not only as a sight to see, but as a motivation to create art, even if it is just a handful of sketches.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 26th, 2009
- Category: Uncategorized
- Comments: None
Student Reviews: Yuko Shimizu
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Yuko Shimizu Lecture
Anna Hegarty, Washington University
Yuko Shimizu, a New York based illustrator originally hailing from Japan, gave a lecture in Steinberg Auditorium on the campus of Washington University in St. Louis on Wednesday February 18th at 6:30p.m. The lecture was part of the Sam Fox Public Lecture Series.
The turnout for the event was the largest so far this year for a Steinberg Auditorium lecture, exceeding seating capacity and causing audience members to take seats on the floor. The audience did not seem to mind and appeared to consist mostly of students from the university.
When she took the podium her way of speaking in short, incredibly blunt and very funny sentences made it immediately evident the lecture would be entertaining as well as informative. The lecture began with a short introduction to what the illustration industry is, followed by the history of Shimizu’s career.
She spent part of her childhood in New York and upon returning to Japan she never felt like she belonged there. Under pressure from her parents she studied Marketing and Advertising at Waseda University instead of pursuing a career in art like she thought she wanted to. She worked as a PR executive until her early thirties when she experienced a self-labeled mid life crisis and moved back to New York to pursue art. Once back in New York, she enrolled at the School for Visual Arts and graduated in 2003 with a MFA from the Illustration as Visual Essay Program. Since then she has been working as an illustrator.
Illustration is a very broad field that includes artwork for advertisements, magazine illustrations, book covers, posters, calendars, and many other types of two dimensional work. Shimizu has produced work in many of these venues. The progression of her work shows leaps and bounds in understanding of spacial relationships and ability to create atmosphere. Her style is influenced by her childhood in Japan, but she did not always let her Japanese past influence her. After arriving in New York she tried to forget her past and continue her life as an American Illustrator, but eventually her artistic growth hit a wall and she realized she had to embrace her artistic instincts. Through her personal work she developed a style that incorporates her childhood desire to draw cartoons and the influence of Japanese culture.
Currently, she is very comfortable creating work that is generalized as “Asian” due to its references to Japanese prints and Chinese and Japanese culture. One example of this is in her piece, “Panda Bear girl-The first Asian American Superheroine,” created for a calendar of her work that incorporated many incorrect Asian generalizations and references to both Japanese and Chinese culture. This piece shows a cartoonish, female character who is wearing traditional Japanese shoes with Mount Fiji in the background and incorrect Chinese characters on her shirt and in the upper left hand corner. This piece replicates the style of traditional Japanese prints, and the graphic style resembles an etching in certain places. The color pallet used is very limited, including only red, yellow and a pale greenish blue. Sexualization of Asian women is shown through the high cut white leotard and thigh high black socks this woman is wearing. As a relatively recent piece, from 2004, this is an example of Shimizu’s matured style.
Her personal work is much more explicit and sexual than her illustration work, and she showed the tamest pieces during the lecture. Some of the themes in her work are polka dots and stripes, the significance of which she cannot explain but both seem to have penetrated not only her work but also her personal style. She wore a black and white striped shirt to the lecture which seemed identical to multiple articles of clothing depicted in her work.
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Yuko Shimizu Lecture
Brittany Mikottis, Washington University
On Wednesday February 18, the Japanese illustrator Yuko Shimizu visited Washington University to speak to students and staff about her work as part of a Sam Fox speaker series. She opened her presentation by describing how she started her career in the corporate world majoring in marketing and advertising because her parents would not let her study art. She grew up in a very traditional family in Japan for most of her childhood, except when her father got transferred to New York for three years during her adolescence. Shimizu never really felt she belonged in Japan, describing herself as a “black sheep” among the rest of her peers. When she was young she would stay inside at recess and draw in her sketchbook while all the other kids went out and played dodge ball. As an adult she moved back to New York and began fulfilling her dreams of becoming an illustrator.
An illustrator is an artist that creates images impossible to capture with a camera. They often, but are not limited to, do work for newspapers, magazines, album covers, and book covers that do not want or have a photograph to go along with them. Illustrations are everywhere, but people still do not really understand what an illustrator does. A big part of their focus is to create an image that will engage the audience and hint as to what the piece of writing or music is about. Illustrators generally draw in a more animated style. Shimizu’s style has a strong resemblance of Japanese cartoons. A large amount of the work she is hired to do has Asian related subject matter because of her Japanese culture. However, she really likes working outside of Asian subject matter; especially because it gives her the opportunity to read pieces that she probably never would have read otherwise. She gives an example of a piece she did on an article about oil under the ground in Israel.
She draws out all of her images by hand and then puts them onto the computer to fill them in with color. Many of her pieces involve a human figure along with many patterns and colors. Stripes and dots are present in numerous pieces of her work. She also tends to use a wide range of colors. Some of her works are very bright and vibrant and others incorporate more neutral and desaturated colors. Many of her works consist of portraits. Portraiture is a very important skill for illustrators because over fifty percent of jobs require portraits.
Shimizu used to get frustrated because she had a very hard time drawing people accurately. She originally thought it was just a hard skill to develop. However, she later found out that she has a brain dysfunction called face blind disorder, which makes her unable to recognize people’s faces. She did not let this stop her from continuing to pursue her dreams of being an illustrator. After much hard work put into learning how to draw portraits she is now able to draw them tremendously which is obvious in the piece she showed of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie from the film Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
It was eye opening when she spoke about the process of designing a magazine cover about the sluggish economy. She showed each step in altering the illustration as the editor of the magazine changed his mind as to what he wanted. Many drafts of different images finally led to the final product of a person flying on a snail over the New York Skyline. Shimizu did not express strong frustration when describing this process; she was able to laugh at some of the client’s ideas for their ridiculous qualities. Having a positive, cooperative attitude is very important when working in an industry such as illustrating because they work closely with clients.
Concluding the lecture, she made a special point to emphasize the importance of individuality. Embracing and expressing oneself should be a top priority in everyone’s life in order to be happy. She talks about how she feels she did not belong in Japan but it is still a big part of who she is. As a result Japanese culture is evident in much of her work. It was humbling to hear such an established artist talk about something that is often lost when people become very successful. Her presentation gives hope to many art students in the audience that they can make it doing something they love. The audience erupts in applause at the finish of her presentation. Shimizu’s shining personality and unique works captivated the audience’s attention and provided an exceptional experience.
Shimizu spoke mostly about the technical aspects of her work and very little about the symbolism within her personal work. The intent was to inform the audience about the career of an illustrator and not to focus on the actual work. This caused a lack of context for the personal piece Shimizu showed. The lecture was a jovial affair due to Shimizu’s sense of humor, and was also enlightening about the illustration field.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 25th, 2009
- Category: Events, Review
- Comments: None
Fred Tomaselli Speaks
In honor of the re-dedication celebration of Steinberg Hall on Washington University’s campus, Fred Tomaselli gave a lecture about his life and work. Tomaselli had been asked to speak by his gallery owner James Cohan, an alumnus of Washington University.
Tomaselli began in school by studying painting, but felt that the pressure of its art historical lineage was more than he could live up to. As a result, he spent several years exploring sculptural forms. Several of his works became interactive pieces requiring the viewer to be an active participant in the work. For example, in his piece, “Box for Your Head”, the viewer is required to insert their head into a hole, covered by the neck of a T-shirt, in a wooden box that is hung on the wall. The viewer is rewarded for this action by a view of an alternate reality, outer space.
His talk framed his work within the context of his life-long experience and interests.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 22nd, 2009
- Category: Exhibition, Review
- Comments: None
Designs for the Riverfront
As a resident of St. Louis, it goes without saying that if you drive downtown, you will see various angles of the Arch along the way. It stands as a tribute to the Louisiana Purchase among other historical events, and is an easily recognizable icon of Missouri at the very least. As a student tour guide at Washington University, I often point out the nearby Arch, which you can see on campus if you’re lucky (and it’s winter). It was all I knew about St. Louis for a long while – that the city was home to the “Gateway to the West.”
In late January, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum opened a new exhibit on Eero Saarinen, the architect who designed the Arch, and invited the public to join in a free symposium held at Washington University’s Steinberg Auditorium. The Symposium was hosted by Washington University’s Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts and sponsored by ASSA ABLOY. I dropped by for one of the last portions of the day-long discussions, arriving in time to hear Patricia Heyda, a visiting assistant professor of architecture at Washington University, speak about the “Riverfront Charrette.” The “Charrette” took place last November, with students gathering from Midwestern schools to re-design the Riverfront property (theoretically) here in St. Louis.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 22nd, 2009
- Category: Exhibition, Review, Uncategorized
- Comments: None
A Reaction to “private (dis)play”
Walking with a group of friends to see the opening of the new exhibition at the Center of Creative Arts (COCA), private (dis)play, I had no idea what to expect. The concept sounded novel: exhibit pages from artists’ notebooks to gain an
understanding of their inner lives, but I wondered how such an idea might be implemented effectively. After all, I thought as I jumped over the puddles of slush covering the unlit streets of University City, notebook pages alone are not very interesting.
As we entered the building and made our way to the exhibition room, I thought my worst fears were confirmed. The show was housed in a white exhibition space, and the nature of the art being shown made for a fairly drab appearance. Reluctantly I began to circle my way around the space, glancing at the notebooks and sheets of paper pinned and encased in plastic along the walls. Though the exhibit emphasized the sketchbook component of private work, the pieces took many forms. In addition to white sketchbook pages, the show housed larger sheets of paper with drawings done in pen, video monitors displaying digital animatics, lined sheets with watercolor, and even a few collages.
After I had perused through the gallery for a few minutes one of the curators, Jamie Adams, began to speak.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 21st, 2009
- Category: Review
- Comments: None
Eero Saarinen – Opening Lecture
Run a Google search on “top skylines of the world” and you’ll be hard-pressed to find St. Louis anywhere on the list. Although St. Louis’ skyline isn’t much to brag about, one aspect we have that sets us apart from most other concrete jungles of America is the Saint Louis Gateway Arch, a 630 ft. tall steel structure built in the 1960s, and designed by Finnish-American architect, Eero Saarinen.
I had the opportunity to attend the opening lecture for a two-month long exhibition at Washington University in St. Louis in honor of Eero Saarinen and the Arch.
- Author: student@WashingtonUniversity
- Published: Mar 20th, 2009
- Category: Review
- Comments: None
Get to Know Yuko
Yuko Shimizu is a Japanese born, New York illustrator who gave an entertaining and educational lecture in the Steinberg Auditorium at Washington University late Wednesday, February 18th. An illustrator with a love for saturated tones, texture, and dramatic figures, Yuko’s art has a complexity that is very intriguing. She once painted a ceramic rabbit with an intricate black and white pattern comprised of just dots. The bunny sold on Ebay for over a thousands dollars and the proceeds went to Save the Children Foundation. Other artworks she has done include: an evocative illustration for a sex story in New York Magazine where hundreds of couples were making love in the middle of a colorful Times Square, a chic aristocratic female lounging in ornate outfits for a Neiman Marcus advertisement, and an offbeat summer illustration of a wave rendered in a cable knit sweater pattern engulfing a swimmer as balls of yarn are tossed around for a Superphat magazine cover. Although her finished work looks so polished, Yuko’s career path is almost as complicated as the patterns she creates.