Jujube/openings: Difference between revisions

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= my heart =
= theory =
 
"[T]heory (and meditation, for that matter) is not supposed to make you a "better person" in any sense. It is supposed to expose hypocrisy, or if you prefer, to examine the wyas in which ideological illusions maintain their grip." 12
 
beautiful soul syndrome
 
encounter with nonidentity
 
Ecology without Nature, Timothy Morton
 
= criticism =
 
I have tried to approach my work as honestly as I can. That includes being honest about criticism.
 
I used to think that one needs to justify one's work by reasoning. That was part of the architecture training. A designer talks with reason (or a seemingly sound logic loop) and knows how to convince.
 
I gave that up after the first year during the Master's.
 
To look deeply is to see beyond the correctness. I don't want to make correct work. I want to make works that touch the heart, hold the hand, and look into the eye. I want the work to support, to understand — the things it portrays, and the people who watch it. The work is nourishment.
 
So when many a time B or D point out the ambiguity of my images, I felt a bit lost and I felt that I must persist.
 
When I started the Master's I said I did not care about aesthetics, or that creating for an aesthetics is easy. Now I can revise that phrase because I am clearer about what I was hinting at.
 
What I meant, and mean: aesthetics comes after meaning, and with meaning. It is not a container in which to put meaning (because then aesthetics adds confusion to the meaning, or generalizes quite specific stories.)
 
Recently when I watched a piece of work by two artists responding to the topic of climate change, I find myself unmoved. The artists are knowledgable about the subject — for it is a complex subject — but that does not necessarily mean a piece of work needs to be overtly didactic.
 
 
I wanted to ask: do you think your images encourage new ways to think about this issue? I think the question is not that people do not know about climate change but rather how they relate to it. By complicating the issue it might open someone's eyes to beyond the rudimentary and now stereotyped "polar bear" image, but it does not necessarily make people relate to the suffering of others. The promotion of justice comes from, fundamentally, compassion, rather than opposition or a sense of superiority.
 
I also wanted to ask: who are your audience? I get a clear feeling that people who go to "experience" an exhibition are already part of the echo chamber.
 
I do acknowledge that for within the echo chamber (people working on policy, advocacies, etc.) the works are comprehensive, valuable research and sound speculation.
 
= epistemology =
 
I am here to find a epistemological position
 
in the process of finding one
 
every pursuit is one that is personal (including anything in the framework of academia)
 
= the right livelihood =
 
https://www.brainpickings.org/2014/07/07/buddhist-economics-schumacher
 
= if i were to do a phd =
 
it would be to contribute to a marginalized, undernoticed, understated discourse
 
autotheory
 
it would be the bridging of quiet rustles in a yoga studio, the lime light at the Academy Award and "fling with the philosophers" (Nelson)
 
= photo-taking as an extension of the body =
 
Talked to Ine and spoke about my involvement (or the lack of) with taking photos in Iceland.
 
I wanted to see with my eyes and I wanted to speak with a sculpture...


https://www.brainpickings.org/2019/05/23/my-heart-corinna-luyken/?fbclid=IwAR0A6eeH5e8jZMdVMpKCf9K_V67W-CracBcWoejKVvOOL4l1HqbL6C6S8-A
I made a rule for myself to not take photos or write. Even asked my friend to bring back the analog camera I carried with me.


= films in summer =
I broke the rule during my trek. It felt necessary to take the photos.


So Long, my Son - 3hrs did not feel long. Sadness because I understood their pain. Prolonged moments of silence — something I recognize aesthetically and culturally. One cannot separate oppression, suppression, depression, stoicism, friendship, belief, livelihood, hope, suicide easily in this film.
"It's saying I am here. I am present," Ine said, "do you feel what you see online are the same as the photos you took yourself?"


Good Boys - there was a glitch on the screen for half of the movie, but no one left. A good narrative, a compelling story overall > pure aesthetical images
"No. I took them after hiking up a mountain. There was rain, wind. I was isolated. I was cold. The moment makes it different."


Tadre Para Morir Joven - beautiful color, melancholic yet not moving. See Good Boys.
"It's an energy... When you see these snapshots from others it's as if something has been ripped from you."


Tigers Are Not Afraid - sat in the wrong theater and saw this by accident. Fantasy horror - still can't stomach gruesome images of ghosts and bodies, but what makes it better than other horror film is that all seems to be a child's dream, and in this case, nightmare. Scene of the Morro (5/6 years old) getting shot led to immediate tears: Morro looked down at the wound, hand covered in his own blood, silent - shocked - confused. Memorable scenes:


- depiction of an odd and desolated environment (plastic dolls with two heads)
= my heart =
- abandoned theater filled with juxtapositions: hall with broken fish tank and a puddle of fish (Estrella and Shine sits across the puddle), kids playing with the balls they find, talent show where 'rappop' beatboxes
- kid gang setting the piano on fire; the conversation darkens as the piano burns down
- CLOSEUP: Shine finishes painting, touches the painted hand, CUT TO wider shot of the graffiti of the three kids saying goodbye to Morrito


Handheld cinematography is a deliberate choice. In a story filled with fantasy and drama, handheld brings the viewers back to reality: the feeling that "this happened" and "this exists."
https://www.brainpickings.org/2019/05/23/my-heart-corinna-luyken/?fbclid=IwAR0A6eeH5e8jZMdVMpKCf9K_V67W-CracBcWoejKVvOOL4l1HqbL6C6S8-A


= morri =
= morri =

Latest revision as of 11:11, 21 July 2020

theory

"[T]heory (and meditation, for that matter) is not supposed to make you a "better person" in any sense. It is supposed to expose hypocrisy, or if you prefer, to examine the wyas in which ideological illusions maintain their grip." 12

beautiful soul syndrome

encounter with nonidentity

Ecology without Nature, Timothy Morton

criticism

I have tried to approach my work as honestly as I can. That includes being honest about criticism.

I used to think that one needs to justify one's work by reasoning. That was part of the architecture training. A designer talks with reason (or a seemingly sound logic loop) and knows how to convince.

I gave that up after the first year during the Master's.

To look deeply is to see beyond the correctness. I don't want to make correct work. I want to make works that touch the heart, hold the hand, and look into the eye. I want the work to support, to understand — the things it portrays, and the people who watch it. The work is nourishment.

So when many a time B or D point out the ambiguity of my images, I felt a bit lost and I felt that I must persist.

When I started the Master's I said I did not care about aesthetics, or that creating for an aesthetics is easy. Now I can revise that phrase because I am clearer about what I was hinting at.

What I meant, and mean: aesthetics comes after meaning, and with meaning. It is not a container in which to put meaning (because then aesthetics adds confusion to the meaning, or generalizes quite specific stories.)

Recently when I watched a piece of work by two artists responding to the topic of climate change, I find myself unmoved. The artists are knowledgable about the subject — for it is a complex subject — but that does not necessarily mean a piece of work needs to be overtly didactic.


I wanted to ask: do you think your images encourage new ways to think about this issue? I think the question is not that people do not know about climate change but rather how they relate to it. By complicating the issue it might open someone's eyes to beyond the rudimentary and now stereotyped "polar bear" image, but it does not necessarily make people relate to the suffering of others. The promotion of justice comes from, fundamentally, compassion, rather than opposition or a sense of superiority.

I also wanted to ask: who are your audience? I get a clear feeling that people who go to "experience" an exhibition are already part of the echo chamber.

I do acknowledge that for within the echo chamber (people working on policy, advocacies, etc.) the works are comprehensive, valuable research and sound speculation.

epistemology

I am here to find a epistemological position

in the process of finding one

every pursuit is one that is personal (including anything in the framework of academia)

the right livelihood

https://www.brainpickings.org/2014/07/07/buddhist-economics-schumacher

if i were to do a phd

it would be to contribute to a marginalized, undernoticed, understated discourse

autotheory

it would be the bridging of quiet rustles in a yoga studio, the lime light at the Academy Award and "fling with the philosophers" (Nelson)

photo-taking as an extension of the body

Talked to Ine and spoke about my involvement (or the lack of) with taking photos in Iceland.

I wanted to see with my eyes and I wanted to speak with a sculpture...

I made a rule for myself to not take photos or write. Even asked my friend to bring back the analog camera I carried with me.

I broke the rule during my trek. It felt necessary to take the photos.

"It's saying I am here. I am present," Ine said, "do you feel what you see online are the same as the photos you took yourself?"

"No. I took them after hiking up a mountain. There was rain, wind. I was isolated. I was cold. The moment makes it different."

"It's an energy... When you see these snapshots from others it's as if something has been ripped from you."


my heart

https://www.brainpickings.org/2019/05/23/my-heart-corinna-luyken/?fbclid=IwAR0A6eeH5e8jZMdVMpKCf9K_V67W-CracBcWoejKVvOOL4l1HqbL6C6S8-A

morri

via The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows

https://www.dictionaryofobscuresorrows.com/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=182&v=1asBOCAmgaw

one thought

The more I make film, the less I care about art [exhibited with a lot of wall text].

what is your purpose

my emotional register as a filmmaker

grammar is related to purpose - there is no inherent right or wrong

film poem

defining purpose makes editing easier

haiku

minimalist

honest

taking control is okay

repeat, taking control is okay

just because you are good at something doesn't mean you shouldn't do it...

confusion

What is in an image? Does the image conduct my intention?

Gee, if my intention is blurry...

If I become aware and articulate all the decision-making in the making of an image...

I feel exhausted.

This thing about moving image is...

I have a ton of footage. I want to be precise. I am not always motivated to edit...

images

For a few years I drew rectangles.

Everything happens within the bounds.

In the beginning, screens are flattened, senitized surfaces.

Now.

Projections are light without a screen.

The screen catches.

What is the materiality of light... Memory image.

Cameras are portable.

I like to be centered when everything else moves.

I do not like moving much, to be honest.

I enjoy moments when things are quiet, when I am quiet.

I enjoy being quiet.

untitled

The hierarchy of images is not dependent on the way they are produced, it comes from within. I have distrusted that within, but I will change now.

I am precious with this image and will not show it until it is done. Test the boundaries.

RSVP photo booth with curtains.

what I used to find beautiful

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Jujube/abyss