User:Chen Junyu/Graduation Project Seminar/project proposal/Proposal2: Difference between revisions

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==Plan==
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==Annotation==
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====1==== Quoted from the English scripts of ''Earth, Sea, and Sky: Nature in Western Art: Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art'':  From early times, people struggling to understand powerful natural forces imagined them as human in order to mitigate their fear of the unknown. The tradition of personifying nature continues to this day, for example in the practice of giving personal names to hurricanes.
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Quoted from the English scripts of ''Earth, Sea, and Sky: Nature in Western Art: Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art'':  From early times, people struggling to understand powerful natural forces imagined them as human in order to mitigate their fear of the unknown. The tradition of personifying nature continues to this day, for example in the practice of giving personal names to hurricanes.

Revision as of 19:04, 11 November 2014

1.specific examples and sketches of possible outcomes and past experiments

2.concrete proposals and prototypes of your own work as well as the contest in which that work sits.What will you create that expresses your vision and your subjective position on the topics you are exploring.

Project

The project would be an audiovisual installation, represent the relation between nature and human being. I would like to use 2d hand drawing animation as the tool of visualizing the

Q: 1. go inside ,user's experience 2. change the first sentances 3.technique and the possibilities of the animation.

Introduction

After the research for EMO(Giants and Little People)[[1]] I have slightly moved further with the word "Scale". Since we born in this world, the scale of the world for us is always changing, it changes with the grow and shrink of our physical body, also relies on the understanding or our emotion/feeling to the world. At a macro level, out general understanding of this world is also changing by the time, such as the conversion of public perception from Geocentrism to Heliocentrism or the changing of peoples' feeling to nature presented in the western painting history.

File:Lascaux 04.jpg
Lascaux Caves
File:Claude Gellée - Paysage avec la fuite en Égypte.jpg
Claude Gellée - Paysage avec la fuite en Égypte


And generally we stand only at the human being's perspective, the world which is heard and seen by nonhuman objects, is mostly unaware for us. How is the view if we look at the world from a different point of view and what kind of thoughts and feelings we could get from the role transition is my direction of research.

Depends on the topic I am interested, I would wok with image basically, probably also with sound. Thus the specific topic didn't been chosen yet, what I want to reach for this project is to push ourselves to a different view of seeing the world.

Relation to previous practice

When I started thinking the topic of the graduation project, I traced back to my old works before I came to PZI, most of them are illustrations. Then I realised in these drawings, little people or giants, the comparison of the scale between human and other species took a large part. Surely "scale" is an effective factor in different kinds of artwork, especially in drwaings and sculptures, I still wanted to dig out what is the point attracting me so much.

Relation to a larger context

[Nature/art/scale]:Western

The oldest known paintings are the Grotte Chauvet in France, the paintings show horses, rhinoceros, lions, buffalo, mammoth, abstract designs and what are possibly partial human figures. These paintings are thought as the respect for nature, or for the gain of prey.

Plan

Annotation

  1. Numbered list item

Quoted from the English scripts of Earth, Sea, and Sky: Nature in Western Art: Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art: From early times, people struggling to understand powerful natural forces imagined them as human in order to mitigate their fear of the unknown. The tradition of personifying nature continues to this day, for example in the practice of giving personal names to hurricanes.