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March 29, 2007

Web Traffic: Mapping the Footprints They Leave Behind!

mapbluestar.jpg

A couple of months ago I set up a web tracking script on my personal website. The program makes it possible for me to view all kinds of statistics and information on the visitors to my site..Information as basic as number of hits, and as personal as IP address, time spent, and previously viewed webpages. The statistics gathered by the program are viewable in a number of formats; various types of graphs, lists, and most interestingly, a world map. The above image shows the recent (past week) activity for my website according to origin of visitor on the world map. Because the stats are calculated in real time, it is sometimes possible to hypothesize as to the actual identity behind the IP address...other times the question remains cloudy...for example, I think I can trace a visit through a friend in Sudan, but Israel? That one's a mystery!
It's a fascinating kind of map...identities and information become extremely revelatory, but at the same time maintain the veil of anonymity.

Six Impossible Things

Alice laughed: 'There's no use trying,' she said. 'One can't believe impossible things.'

'I daresay you haven't had much practice,' said the Queen. 'When I was
younger, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed
as many as six impossible things before breakfast.'

— Lewis Carroll
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland


May all your 'impossible' dreams be coaxed into possibility by your vision and belief.

I would like to rent the movie Alice in Wonderland to see how many instances of representation I can come up with. I think it would actually be more fun as a group. A movie during class perhaps? Although, I think it would be rather difficult to screen print AND give an honest attempt at counting metaphors at the same time. But it would be fun to try.

March 28, 2007

information representation

After reading some of the book, I find myself really paying attention to information graphics. I have noticed these representations quite a bit in the newspaper. Today there was an article on how the number of men and women working compares with the 1950's. The graph gave a pretty good idea of how this info corresponds in each category. I find myself looking at these and sort of de-engineering them, trying to figure out how the info is represented and if there are other ways of doing this. It's sort of like a puzzle. I guess what I'm getting at is how much of this there is out there. I guess I haven't thought about it as much as I have recently....

stevens square art exhibit on the urban underbelly

Check it out! An exhibit that talks about another realm of urban reality. The off the beaten track realm. thought it relates nicely to our mapping project. Wish I had time to go this weekend. Let me know if you go and what you think!

> ***********************
It's at the:
> Stevens Square Center for the Arts
> 1905-3rd Ave S (above the Third Ave Market)
> Minneapolis, MN 55404
> http://www.stevensarts.org
>
> Gallery open Fri-Sun (1-5PM)

About it:

Art that delves into the back alleys, the wrong sides of the tracks,
> and
> the “bad neighborhoods,� inhabiting the metaphorical and literal grit,
> grime, and tags of contemporary American cities.
>
> Underbelly: Gritty Cities will feature pieces by Sylvette, Gerald
> Prokop,
> Ryan Sweere, Dan Qualy, Eva Christopherson, Matt Wells, Michael
> Sweere,
> John Terwilliger, Alice Dodge, Gail Kern, Michelle Layland, Terrence
> Davis, Faye Buffington, Kira Simonian, Sean McKenna, and Zach Korb.
>
> For more information, visit www.stevensarts.org
>
> **********************
>
> The opening reception is free and will feature music by Gordon Byrd.
>
> Underbelly: Gritty Cities is on exhibition at SSCA from March 2-April
> 1,
> 2007.
>

March 26, 2007

Mandala: Buddhist Map

My uncle, Paul Jasmer, is a monk at St. John's college in MN. A few months ago, some Buddhist monks visited the school, and made a Mandala, that are made with colored sand, and are a 2-dimensional representations of 3-dimensional palaces. Each of the four sides is a palace gate, and the monks visualize the 3-D form as they lay down the sand. A few years ago, a young Tibetan monk worked with a team of computer graphics students at Cornell, and they created a great, short video "walk-through" translating between the two forms. Here's a link to an excerpt on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rx4mdjMIqN

In making the Mandala, the Buddhist monks start from the centre of the circle and work their way out. Sand of different colours is put into narrow tubes and then sprinkled into place according to a set design. After the entire Mandala is completed, there is a ceremony, and then the sand is scooped up and poured into a flowing stream as a way to purify the planet.

The whole process seems very interesting. Sometimes, when talking about mapping, I feel bogged down by the typical defenitions of maps... creating a "true" map with a key, a scale, accurate lines, a compass, a title, etc. This Mandala helped me think more artistically and emotionally about maps. I feel I have been conditioned to see the idea of maps as "true" maps, and I love that we are able to expand the ideas of mapping into the artistic region. Now I feel that we could map anything, not just space or time, and map it beautifully, instead of traditionally.
-JennyParker

Artcrank poster show

I was in Uptown Saturday night and saw a friend whom some of you may know- Adam Turman. He went to the U for design, and he's now working as a designer here, but in his "spare" time he has set up a studio in his basement where he silkscreens some amazing posters. He was selling them in Calhoun Square, but he's also going to be in an upcoming show called: Artcrank: A Poster Party for Bike People. His style is retro, pin-up girl, underground band, sort of cartoonish. If you look up the website for the show: artcrankpostershow.com, you'll find all of the other 20 or so artists listed as well with links to their websites. From what I could tell, it looks like most of them also silkscreen their posters. The opening is April 7 at 7pm., at One on One Bikes+Coffee+Stuff (there's a map). There will be food, beer and a band. It sounds like fun!

March 8, 2007

cursive

Oops! I was sent an entry and it got deleted! I wanted to link this pdf to the entry. But then it deleted the text from my entry! boo.

The jist of it was this: I was hanging out with some friends the other night and one friend starting talking about cursive writing. He feels like it is a lost art form. We spent a good hour practicing our cursive writing on the backs of cocktail napkins and laughing at eachothers penmanship. He thinks that because we spend so much time on computers, our writing has begun to simulate the text we see so often on the computers. I definitely agree with that. What other things do we simulate from our long hours spent with computers? I have noticed that when I work on photoshop for an extended period of time, when I enter out into the real world, my mind functions strangely. It inherits functions from photoshop in perceiving the world. I notice myself using a zoom tool in my mind to focus on minute details and I think I even use a cut and paste fuction to construct my visual reality. It is some kind of pattern of processing information that I get into on photoshop and then the rhythm keeps going even after I am off the computer.

And here is the link that I hope takes you to the essay that my friend with cursive mania wrote about cursive. it is hilarious. Download file

March 5, 2007

Paper Trail: A Decade of Acquisitions

I found this show is opening at the Walker on the 15th. It looks like there will be some inventive and creative use of different materials used in printmaking. I thought this would be a good show to help some of us who are not sure how to approach our next project- and a good show regardless.

There's an opening and talk on Thursday the 15th- which I think is spring break- but it will be up for several weeks as well. Below is a write up about the show by the curator.


Many artists working today have embraced the new millennium as an era when traditional boundaries between disciplines are more fluid than ever before. With works on paper, this is particularly apparent, as drawing, printmaking, collage, and other paper-based methods have become an arena for remarkable innovation. Paper Trail: A Decade of Acquisitions features a broad selection of prints and drawings collected by the Walker over the past 10 years that addresses in myriad ways the means by which contemporary artists have explored notions of time, place, and narrative through the intimacy of paper.

The practice of drawing continues to be more broadly defined, with artists employing everything from pen and ink to elaborately layered, multimedia compositions to large-scale environments. Increasingly, these media are being used not merely as an end in itself, but in tandem with other techniques to create conceptual works and installations. Over the past decade, printmaking also has seen an expansion of interest, with artists well versed in traditional methods such as etching, lithography, screenprint, and woodcut turning to less conventional approaches and opening a remarkable range of aesthetic possibilities.

In Paper Trail, this spirit of experimentation is seen in works such as Glenn Ligon’s Untitled (Crowd/The Fire Next Time) (2000), a screenprint made from coal crystals; Gabriel Orozco’s Polvo Imprezo (2002), a group of etchings made from dust laid on printing plates; and DeLuxe (2005), a portfolio of prints by Ellen Gallagher that incorporates Plasticine, glitter, magazine cutouts, and hair pomade to create a mural-scaled tableau that examines social and historical issues related to race and gender. Many artists in the exhibition have grouped their work in portfolios or series, which often creates a powerful sense of storytelling, as seen in a series by Rachel Whiteread, whose sequential screenprints of London buildings undergoing demolition form a potent narrative of a constantly evolving urban landscape. Other selections utilize found images or materials to comment on global culture, such as a series of drawings on newspaper by Japanese artist Kaoru Arima; or German artist Thomas Hirschhorn’s collaged constructions of news magazine images, plastic, adhesive tape, and ballpoint pen.

The Walker has a long history of collecting and exhibiting works on paper, which now comprise more than half of the collection. Many works included in Paper Trail are new to the institution’s holdings and have never before been exhibited. Pieces by a number of artists represented in this show are on view concurrently in other Walker galleries, affording visitors the opportunity to examine their diverse activities across media and through time.

—Siri Engberg, curator, Visual Arts

The World in Maps

A great series of visual maps that shoes how the world would size up if mapped according to military spending, wealth, housing costs, etc.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html?in_article_id=439315&in_page_id=1811

March 2, 2007

Traces in the Snow

Drifting around in the blizzard yesterday, reminded me of how much the snow actually reveals about our lives and about the structure of nature. Car, foot, and animal tracks are everywhere; they reveal the comings and goings of strangers, neighbors, pets, and wild animals. And other imprints in the snow reveals processes that we don't normally see at all, in the same way that light raking across the top surface of a pad of paper can reveal a note written on a piece of paper that has since been removed. An obvious example of a revealed process is gravity — depending on the surface they are on, dollops of snow sit in degrees of precariousness, revealing by their shapes how they are going to fall before they fall. Patterns of snow reveal where there’s heat— on a car hood, or where roof insulation is not very good. In other cases, snow simply reveals natural and human-made structures —one’s struck by how intentional the shapes of cars are, and how complex and rhythmical the shapes of tree limbs are.

Mounds of snow reveal the parts of our world where we don't want anything to stay still for too long on; and it's surprising to be reminded of how many such places there are — why does so much of the matter of our world need to be in an almost constant state of motion— what would happen if things slowed down, or stopped….?

On NPR yesterday there was a report about researchers in Melbourne, Australia who researched the disappearance of teaspoons from the tearooms in their institution. They found that 80% of all the teaspoons go missing within a few months. I was struck by how this apparently irrelevant fact — the "absence" of teaspoons — reveals aspects of human behavior that are not usually visible — how we behave and how we use things. From a design point of view, such research reveals that in the future designing a perfect teaspoon may not be enough! Designers will need to shift our attention from individual things to the connection between things.

Maps have been used for many purposes, bad and good, but a thread that ties many of the projects in Else/Where: Mapping is that innovative processes of looking at aspects of the world can reveal patterns that allude to hidden activities, behaviors, and structures. Seeing these "traces" can help reveal new knowledge and new ways of understanding, not merely new data.

Our urban environment is full of traces: things covered up, or missing; things that were there but are no longer. What do these traces tell us about who we are, what we value, and where we're going?