2012年3月30日星期五

research paper


Fei Gao: MA Graphic Design(Visual Art)2012



How does Andy Goldsworthy elaborate his opinions on the relationship between nature and art in his works?



MA Graphic Design Research Paper


Fei Gao
28th March 2011









Fei Gao: MA Graphic Design(Visual Art)2012

List of Contents


Abstract…………………………… p03
Paper……………………………….p04
Bibliography………………………..p
Annex(images)…………………….p













Fei Gao: MA Graphic Design(Visual Art)2012

Abstract


Nature is the foundation of artistic creation. The essential nature of art should be true. The relationship between nature and art is resources and applying. The artists who hope their works to be real ones should be close to nature. They borrow material from nature, then based on this objective to subjective mapping generated mood and feeling .

This essay intends to demonstrate the relationship between nature and art by Andy Goldsworthy’s works. It begins with analyzing how Andy Goldsworthy applied nature’s material to his works and how the works worked with nature. It finished by discussing nature and art, there is much closed relationship between them.

Key words: Andy Goldsworthy, art, nature, relationship.






















Fei Gao: MA Graphic Design(Visual Art)2012
How does Andy Goldsworthy elaborate his opinions on the relationship between nature and art in his works?

In ancient and modern history, the relationship between nature and art has been described by many artists and scholars. In most of their views, nature and art is inseparable. Art is based on nature and is dependent on it. Art can create more beautiful world, once detached from nature, art will not be long-standing. The relationship between nature and art is a momentous part of art view of Paul Cezanne. He thinks that "art is harmony which runs parallel with nature".  (Richard Kendall1988, p.160)This view gives another explanation of relationship among art, artists and nature. Paul Cezanne thinks that artists and nature are equal. Artists observe, record and interpret nature and display their inner feelings in the form of painting. Although the beauty and ugliness of nature can not be changed by art creation, nature, transformed and sublimed, is not what it is really like. Artists bring nature in the art world new colors by their subjective creation. The aesthetic objective is characterized by interaction, by the oneness of art and nature ,by the new art in nature and the culture approach to the understanding of nature. (Vittorio Fagone, 1996, p.26) 

 In order to further understand the relationship between nature and art, we should first have some ideas of what nature is and what art is.

Nature generally means essential qualities and innate disposition. In ancient times, nature literally meant "birth". which was originally associated with the organic characteristics of the features in the world and developed with its self-driven power.  Nowadays, the word "nature" often refers to geology and wildlife. It is often understood as the "natural environment"–wild animals, rocks, forest, beaches, which have not been actually transformed by human intervention. These are the interpretation from dictionary.

As for the definition of art, different artists and scholars have different explanations. The Oxford English Dictionary defines  “art is a term narrating a variety of human activities and the products of those activities". Art is regarded as a cultural phenomenon, and its changes have great influence on the level of material production and science and technology of the time. It also has a close relation to the social economy and culture. In Milton Glaser’s thought,
“ art is work”. He thought “work is essential to our lives. Doing work that is meaningful and excellent seems a fundamental desire of the best human beings, and it becomes more related to our daily life”. (Milton, 2000, p.8)

Art and Nature are closed linked. The relationship between art and nature can be explained as a paralleling one. The artists go into nature and endeavor to explore what nature effortlessly creates. The artists express it in their ways and learn from it. The work of art itself becomes part of nature. Not as a new aesthetic entity, art exists there, but simply goes back be a piece of the natural world. For artists, nature is an original source of artistic creation not a model to copy.

Art does not imitate nature, but it founds itself on the study of nature - takes from nature the selections which best accord with its own intention, and then bestows on them that which nature does not possess, viz. the mind and the soul of man. (Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton)
The forms,colors, and beautiful vistas of nature have always been an inspiration for art. In the fact, the procession of the artistic creation is a mix of spiritual, intellectual and aesthetic conversation based on nature. The imagination and creativity of the artists is allowed to interact. Artists make many landscapes painted and poems written, which are all inspired by rivers or towering mountains, foggy mornings and so on. Nature can give musicians inspiration. Even architecture can learn from nature. Nature is simple full of colors and geometric forms, while it is complex for organisms and the environment are interlaced together in spectacular ways.

In artistic history, there is a form of art closely related to nature, which is Land Art. It is a kind of modern art, beginning with a kind of artistic activity of the 60s last century and artists are mainly from the US and the UK. Land Art is the first genre of art regarding nature itself as a form of artistic expression. Different from Romanticism advocating returning to nature, Land Art assails social and cultural reality in the form of nature. The artists of Land Art think that there is no rigid limit between art and life, art and nature. Art exists everywhere in the space and time for being. (Amanda, 2010,pp.26-7)

The main feature of Land Art is to employ earth materials, and to create art on the earth and concerned with earth.It has two essential features, one of which is to draw materials from the earth and to be finished on the earth. Artists usually use materials from the earth like rocks, sands and organic media and so on. Their creation often interacts with nature, earth and large structure, which, at the same time, are easily damaged or disappear. The other essential feature is gigantic volume. The works of Land Art are dinosaurs of artistic family, some of which even alter the landform. It means that Land Art can not be displayed in the galleries and can not be brought into traditional artistic system.Ben Tufnell, 2006, pp.46-8)


Land Art can be regarded as a result of indoor ornamental works developing to outdoor. The earliest examples can be tracked back to Egyptian Pyramid and Stonehenge.

The works of Land Art have concerned for the sense of place. The artists integrate the works and environment, strengthen or lessen the topography, geology or the alteration of season, in order to guide people to deeply experience nature.

In the early ten years, Land Art has become the order of the day and there has existed a series of classical works.  The most famous one is named Spiral Jetty created by Robert Smithson in 1970. The artist built a huge spiral break water in northeastern of Great Salt Lake of Utah. The length is 1500 feet and width is 15 feet. It was made of black basalt, limestone and earth weighing 6500 tons. The shape of the work is like a snake crawling into the pink lake and because of the elevation of lake in 1971, the work sank in the 15 feet beneath the waterBen Tufnell,2006,p41)

Robert Smithson, who coined Land Art was the first to challenge the connection between urbanism and development, and the first to advocate non-urban locations for sculpture. The early works frequently exist in the open, located well away from civilization, left to change and erode under natural conditions. Aiming at another artist standing for Land Art named Andy Goldsworthy 's gateshead project, Robert Smithson pointed out that rust was one of the fundamental properties of steel.(Goldsworthy,1991, p.140)

While Andy Goldsworthy is different from Smithson, who enjoys extremes and ideas in terms of polar opposites likeorder –disorder. Compared with Smithson, Goldsworthy is a cool and moderate artist, but he does identify the view that the downsides and upsides of things can both be embodied in the art.(Goldsworthy,1991, p.140)

Andy Goldsworthy is another representative of Land Art. He is a brilliant British artist who collaborates with nature to make his creations.The artistic creation of Andy Goldsworthy is associate with his working experience in the farm when young. When Andy Goldsworthy was studying art in his college, he found that he was set a limit to the studio. He always travelled to the beach, and he enjoyed making temporary sculpture outside. At the same time, because he worked part-time in a farm. Goldsworthy got more creative inspiration from the experience of his labor in that period. He thought that the experience of working in the farm brought him up. Confronting with the brutality of nature and the closeness of death made him learn what school would never teach him.

That experience made him be more sensitive and alert to nature and changes in material, season and weather. He made his art concern more for his own life, his nature and the earth’s nature and environment. When one of art activities came to a disillusionment, he immediately discovered his own nature, because a work process just used one’s own nature like a tool. He made his work literary and symbolic which became a simpler, more effective and honest process.

Andy Goldsworthy always uses the materials of nature straight away to hand to make his sculpture in the landscape. We are now familiar with his art forms – domes, holes, spires, arches, spheres, columns, circles, - lines ,spirals, which strong show the patterns and rhythms of growth. These forms are the attempts to understand the purpose of sculpture as well as the purpose of nature itself.

In my opinion, art is really about the nature. Everything we do in art, is related to our environment and also the things we do. For example we often draw plants and animals, which are nature. Even if we draw objects, they are parts of the environment/ nature. I don't know much but I think in the art world, nature is really important because it is where we get most of our drawing ideas from and from it we might get our own inspiration and build our own imagination.(Andy Goldsworthy)


In Andy Goldsworthy's art, he often used the following materials including leaves, stone, pinecones, brightly-coloured flowers, icicles, thorns, mud, snows, and twigs.He said "There is a whole world in a single leaf".( Goldsworthy, 1991, p.108)  Andy Goldsworthy thinks that it's unbelievably brave to be dealing his creation with flowers and leaves and petals. But he persisted doing like that. He believes that he should not choose the materials he works with and his duty is to regard and use the whole nature as his materials. Andy Goldsworthy understands from the literal sense of the word that ‘raw materials’ are found in nature in primeval times, which is the starting point of human production. But nature itself became to be developed then gradually to be further manipulated. 

Andy Goldsworthy has become aware of an increasing concern for environmental issues. At the same time he has adisenchantment with the kind of art he was then producing. He wants to find his own nature, and then make use of his nature like a tool. Andy Goldsworthy is also intented to keep himself alert and sensitive about alteration of material and weather.

"Movement, change, light, growth and decay are the lifeblood of nature, the energies that I I try to tap through my work. I need the shock of touch, the resistance of place, materials and weather, the earth as my source. Nature is in a state of change and that change is the key to understanding. I want my art to be sensitive and alert to changes in material, season and weather. Each work grows, stays, decays. Process and decay are implicit. Transience in my work reflects what I find in nature."(Goldsworthy,1991, p.160

Andy Goldsworthy showed his first work to public was a circular hole dug which was outside the Serpentine Gallery,London in 1981.   In 1984, he scooped another hole through the floor of the gallery as part of the Serpentine's 'Salon d' Automne. This time is different from before, and it is inside. Deep and dark holes induce people’s curiosity and even fear. Their intense blackness shows a mysterious, limitless space or energy. Goldsworthy encompassed holes because of his strong fascination for caves and tree hollows, which becomes a persistent theme existing through his work.

In 1997, here came Goldsworthy’s first significant project in the United States with “The Storm King Wall” at a celebrated sculpture park at the Storm King Arts Center in Mountainville, New York.  Since Europeans settlers entered the region of Hudson Valley, distinct stone walls had been usually built everywhere. But in modern times, these structures had been in the state of disrepair in modern times and were often replaced by forests. Here Goldsworthy used natural rocks from the region which people in that time admired and respect to construct a 2,000-plus-foot wall. The inspiration of “The wall” “comes from an ancient, ruined rock boundary, winding its way through stands of maple and oak trees, leaping under the surface of a small area of water, appearing at an angle on the bank far away then sharply bending before climbing straight up a hill to the edge of a road. Its pace seems to be quick from east to west, and we can feel and get a feeling of similarity of Old World to New and past to present.”

Andy Goldsworthy has regarded colors as a kind of energy. The lively colors existing in nature are unsound. They are destructed and removed by time and erosion like all organic matters. Nature's seasonal or meteorological changes which are based upon his geographical location have been used by Goldsworthy. And because climate has influence on his color palette, it does affect his work's form and pattern.

For the past two decades, Andy Goldsworthy has created works not making use of a given landscape as base but inscribing it with spirals circles and lines. All are based upon elemental forms from nature and all organic matter that is made up of at a molecular level. Goldsworthy has measured long cracks in the earth which were bordered by the imbricated stones. He has also built up and created gigantic arches and cones put in water or on land with rocks which are changed in form or rectangles of ice which are cut down. His sculptures are based on elemental forms, therefore, seriality or patterning often appears in his construction. The temporal and temporary dimension of his work is embodied in his work just because of the effect of seriality or of something that extends over time.

Lots of Andy Goldsworthy’s creations are transient. In order to capture the essence of his work, he always photographs every piece work right now after he makes it. Andy Goldsworthy uses the photograph to record as a form of documentation. He set a goal of understanding nature by directly taking part in nature as closely as he can. He thinks that every piece of work has a process of growing, staying and decaying, and that is a complete circle. The photographs show the highlight of the works and make the moment alive. The artists express the peak of the work in the image, but the process and decay are implicit.
 Looking at his works, we can always find there are familiar things, but they give us fresh eyes.

My approach to photograph is kept simple, almost routine. All work, good and bad, is documented. I use standard film, a standard lens and no filters. Each work grows, strays, decays—integral parts of a cycle which the photograph shows at its height, marking the moment when the work is most alive. There is an intensity about a work at its peak that I hope is expresses in the image. Process and decay are implicit.
  
Andy Goldsworthy thinks the photographs keep the reason and spirit of the work in form, which is not the purpose but the result of his art. Andy Goldworthy’s creations usually happen against a natural background to portrait artificial figures. 
This place will always be important to me. It is difficult to define the light, the colours. I cannot describe the effect that  red has on me. It is as deeply moving spiritually as red maples in Japan or the spring green grass in Britain... I have tried to touch that color not just with my hand, but also with light. To understand that colour is to understand something of the spirit of this place.( Andy Goldsworthy, 1996, p.40)

In the given context, there exists a new order and the order is not unnatural. Spirals, meanders, lines, cracks, concentric forms or chessboard patterns, star-shapes, spheres and eggs are all compositions that can be found in nature and they are applied to other materials in other condition. When his composition infinitely refers to other natural phenomena, Andy Goldsworthy himself gives us suggestion on that.

He enjoys the freedom of using his hands to find tools on himself like thorns, the quill of a feather and a sharp stone. He makes full use of every day, every kind of weather and every leave in nature. He learns from nature and treasures nature.

Andy Goldsworthy makes attempt to discover nature in his works which are created indoors or with urban and industrial materials removing far away from their source. He thinks nature goes beyond rural land and everything comes from it. He is fascinated in working with the earth directly. As along as he can make creations on land, he can sensitively get the first fresh perception of the land. That is what he pursues.  ( Goldsworthy, 1990)

Most of the artists combine their artistic creation with visits to the countries, which are influenced by the climate or culture of the various countries. Different from them, Andy Goldsworthy's works are based on the British tradition of landscape. That is to say, Goldsworthy seems to place the view upon nature advocated by the founders of British landscape painting who are devoted to make persistent conversation with nature, such as Turner and Constable (Goldsworthy, 1993, p. 113)

   
Throughout the history of art, there is much closed relationship between nature and art. At the beginning people drew the animals on the wall till now. It is difficult to say art can survival without nature. Nature provides art nutrition, so art is dependent on nature. Artists are deeply attracted by beautiful scenery of nature, then take nature into their art world by the way of their subjective creation, endowing nature with fresher life.  All in all, nature and art is closely linked. Nature provides art nutriment and material. Art is derived from nature, and all works of art have nature as their sourceLosing contact with nature, no art can survive. Being confined to nature and purely imitating nature will never bring us fine artistic works.

BOOKS
Amanda, B. (2010) The Ethics of Earth Art . Published by the University of Minnesota Press

Andy, G. (1996) Wood. Published in Great Britain by Viking
Andy, G.(1993) Two Autumns. Published by Tochigi Shuppan Design Center
Andy, G. (1989) Touching North. Fabian Carlsson Craeme Murray London Edinburgh
Andy, G. (1992) Ice and Snow drawings. Published by The FruitMarket Gallery,Edinburgh
Miwon, kwon. (2001) One place after another. The hit press. Cambridge,Massachusetts .London England
Nancy, G.(1989) Earthworks and Beyond Contemporary Art In The Landscape. Cross River Press,Ltd 
Richard, K.(1988) Cezanne by himself. Macdonald& Co Ltd London & Sydney

Skira. (2009) 1969-1999 Neo-avant-gardes, Postmodern and Global art. Italy: Skira Editore s.p.a 
Tacita, D. & Jeremy, M. (2005) Place. Published in the United Kingdom
Terry, F & Andy, G.(1991) Hand to Earth  Sculpture 1976-1990. Published by w.s. Maney & Son Ltd in association with The Henry Moore Centre for the Study of Sculpturec
Viking. (1990) Andy Goldsworthy. Published by the Penguin Group
Vittorio, F. (1996) Art in nature. Edizioni Gabriele Mazzotta
Tacita, D. & Jeremy, M. (2005) Place. Published in the United Kingdom

Film /Video

Rivers and Tides (2002) Directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer, 90 min [video]

 

Websites

<http://www.morning-earth.org/artistnaturalists/an_goldsworthy.html>[Access on 15, 1, 2012]
<http://www.notablebiographies.com/newsmakers2/2007-Co-Lh/Goldsworthy-Andy.html>[Access on 1, 2, 2012]






2012年3月27日星期二

Alice Channer

A few days ago . I occasionally walked in South London Gallery and saw Alice Channer's works.
Alice Channer explores the relationship between the human body ,material ,sculpture and personal adornment. In this exhibition ,she shows some new works which extend her idea. I quite like the different of materials which she use in the exhibition.cloth, iron, wood , marble ,especially the big cloth in the middle of the gallery .It suspend from the ceiling and fusing together with the gallery.It looks very spectacular. On the other hand ,I like her idea which is to use the space reasonably. so her works and gallery fuses into one.







2012年3月21日星期三

Thomas Ruff

The difference between my predecessors and me is that they believed to have captured reality and I believe to have created a picture. We all lost, bit by bit, the belief in this so-called objective capturing of real reality.

Each of my series has a visual idea behind it, which I develop during my research. Sometimes the development follows a straight line from A to B; sometimes something completely new and interesting shows up, which makes me leave the straight path and follow a more indirect one with new rules.
—Thomas Ruff

2012年3月20日星期二

Lucian Freud


Since I studied my BA course in my college ,I had known Lucian Freud. He is so famous  that a lot of students who studied at that time research him.They wanted to get more from him. I quite like his works as well .I like him to depict people's characters.I also like the color which he used .the grey colors is the main color . They are the main one I want to absorb.uI like him to depict within charactersLucian Freud

Andy Goldsworthy







Text


A Yorkshire farm was where, from the age of 13, British artist Andy Goldsworthy first learned his trade: how to use a shovel, skin a hare, build a dry-stone wall. And it is to the grounds of the 500-acre Yorkshire Sculpture Park, near Wakefield, where he first worked in 1983, that Goldsworthy now makes a fitting return for the largest ever exhibition of his work. Running until Jan. 6, 2008, the show features major new works and a photographic review of many of the ephemeral works in nature for which Goldsworthy has become famous over the last 30 years. Among the new outdoor pieces are dry-stone wall enclosures that cradle giant fallen oaks, while inside there are rooms of stone, wood and clay. In another gallery all but a snaking ribbon of picture window has been covered in cow dung. In front of a curtain he made by pinning together 10,000 horse chestnut leaf stalks, Goldsworthy, 50, spoke to TIME's Michael Brunton about his inspiration and his homecoming.
TIME: Much of your work has been fragile, made in the wild outdoors and only preserved in photographs. Is your work here meant to be a more permanent statement about this place? 
Goldsworthy: The social nature of the landscape is something that has become increasingly important to me. But the ephemeral work is still very, very important. I can't not make it. That's how I get a lot of the ideas for the larger works. Here in the Yorkshire Sculpture Park is an opportunity, with a gallery and the outdoors, to make work that people can see, lay on, touch and engage in without photography as a medium. But a building no matter how beautiful is a dead space compared to the outside, and it takes whereas the ephemeral work gives. Well, I've given and now I want something back.
Is it frustrating to have to rely on photography often to display your works rather than showing the real thing?
It's a very appropriate way to describe some of the works. In the neutral space of a gallery, the light doesn't change, [the works] are just held in suspension when really they need to go from darkness into the light. The sun needs to penetrate and catch the bronze in just such a way at just such a moment. Photographs can show us that.
You've made sculptures that deal with people and their landscapes all over the world. What does this homecoming mean to you?
My art came out of the British landscape which is heavily worked by people, so that's important to my work. The East Coast of America is also quite interesting for similar but different reasons. Once there were stone walls that ran through fields there, and now there are secondary woods; you can feel the presence of the farmer in the past. When you come back to this country and you see the fields still intact, you think we're not that far off it becoming woodland again. I'm not into the idea of a nostalgic preservation of the British landscape. I think change has always been part of of it. But it's very interesting to have the sense of the future presented to you in a different country and come back and see the vulnerability of this thing you take so for granted.
You obviously need help with the larger exhibits, but do you still enjoy getting your hands dirty? 
Oh, I love it! The process of it is the attraction. I need to touch, I need to make. That's what provokes the next work. After working on this installation here, I've got a whole other exhibition now in my head.
What are the specific themes and inspirations for this exhibition? 
It's specifically to do with the worked landscape and the ways of looking at it. Here [in what was once a country estate] is a very privileged viewpoint, the landscape as seen from a distance. My viewpoint has always been from the other side. That was the driving force in the outside work. But there were also the connections between the inside and the outside. It's not a contradiction for an artist who's committed to working outside to work inside. I live inside, I should work inside occasionally. When I do, I hope that it's a way of finding the nature of the building. Nature is not just trees and fields.
And how does farming inform your work?
I lived near Leeds and worked from the age of 13 on a farm right where the suburbs began — and that was very important. I was always going to be an artist, since I was a kid, but the impact that farming had was tremendous. It's a very sculptural activity. Not just dry stone walls but stacking bales — big minimalist sculptures, beautiful and enormous. Plowing a field is drawing lines on the land, painting the fields — it's incredibly visual. And the dead animals. When you're a farm kid you see death all the time. When you see spring lambs hopping around the fields and then go round the back of the farm, there's a pile of dead lambs every year — that's the way it is. Dogs attacking sheep, raw brutal experiences and they've always remained in what I do. It's such an important part of the landscape; it's green and verdant because of it. So that's why I put cow sh-- on the window, to make you aware of it while you're looking [out]. Right in front of your face is the stuff you choose to ignore.



Read more: http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1610464,00.html#ixzz1xfCLHIMf