BeachArts.ca » Fall ’14 https://beacharts.ca School of Art, Long Beach State Mon, 29 Jun 2015 22:46:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Wk13 – Easy Street! https://beacharts.ca/14f13/ https://beacharts.ca/14f13/#comments Tue, 18 Nov 2014 16:29:45 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=6127 Points

All points through Week 12 are now up on BeachBoard. We’ve had 696 points possible so far, and here’s what you should have by now to be on track for each grade level:

A pace = 626 points – 98 peeps
B pace = 556 points – 22 peeps
C pace = 486 points – 8 peeps
D pace = 416 points – 6 peeps
F pace = 415 points – 7 peeps

Overall class GPA (so far) = 3.4

DIY Constellation Pin- Wk 12 Activity from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Top 10

  1. Anna Joy Floresca – 909
  2. Diana Martinez – 903
  3. Evan Huang – 874
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 844
  5. Bowas Yang – 801
  6. Allison Wendell – 801
  7. Antonio Lavermon – 788
  8. Nicole Ilagan – 785
  9. Conny Ramirez – 778
  10. Yesenia Chavez – 763
  11. Dominic Erich – 763

ePortfolio Presentations

On Tuesdays so far we’ve used our time to talk about the week’s Activity, and to look at some of the strong Activities from the week before. Now that we’ve completed our Activities for Fall ’14 we can use the last Tuesdays to let you optionally present your ePortfolio for extra credit. A strong presentation of your ePortfolio is worth up to +30 EC.

NOTE: You can only present YOUR EPORTFOLIO — that is, you CAN NOT show a website of Art110 work. We want to see your Aerospace Engineering or Nursing or Marine Biology or Fashion Merchandising website. And yes, you can show ePortfolios for things other than your major, like your Band, your Zine, your Classic Car Restoration, your Cosplay, your Sports Blog, etc etc. Most of the time these “hobbies” are just that, extra things in life that aren’t your “career.” But sometimes they can overlap. Maybe that hiring manager at that awesome Aerospace Engineering Firm likes you because they’re impressed with the detail of your Car Website. And even though an activity like Cosplay is mostly lighthearted fun, people like Yaya Han have turned it into a full-time income.

Signups will be open through 1pm this Thursday, Nov 20th.
[ninja_forms_display_form id=2]

Activity “Grades”

74 of you chose to do the optional evaluation of our 12 Activities for Fall 2014. Here’s your Up Votes, Down Votes, and Totals for our 12 Activities:

  • Painting +47 -13 = 34
  • Plaster Casting +37 – 14 = 23
  • Your Turn +21 -0 = 21
  • Instagram +26 -10 = 16
  • Corpse +24 -11 = 13
  • Web Design +5 -0 = 5

  • Teach One +6 -6 = 0

  • ePortfolio +10 -16 = -6
  • Drawing +15 -26 = -11
  • Kickstarter +12 -32 = -20
  • CFID +9 -31 = -22
  • vLog +4 -26 = -22

You really liked Painting, Plaster Casting, and Your Own Choice. You really disliked Kickstarter, CFID, and vlogging. I can’t promise I’ll cancel all 3 of those projects for next semester, but I do promise to cancel at least 1 of them, maybe more. We’ll discuss it in class today.

Galleries This Week

Drawing and Painting, BFA Exhibition- Gatov East & West
The Drawing and Painting BFA Exhibition features work from graduating Drawing and Painting BFA students.

Nora Ayala, Printmaking – Merlino Gallery
Nora Ayala depicts body image and objectification through printmaking techniques.

Brittnee Forline, BFA Metals – Dutzi Gallery
Brittnee Forline’s BFA exhibition features metal works referencing a personal desire for a life of fantasy.

Kelsey Zwarka, BFA Ceramics – Werby Gallery
Kelly Zwarka’s BFA exhibition showcases abstracted biomorphic forms that range from small to large-scale.

Gallery Tags

Don’t forget our new, easier tags for your artist conversations! Instead of tagging a different artist each week, let’s just tag the gallery it was in. This way you can already know the 6 tags to cover all the work you’ll look at:

Allison Wendell

Evan Huang

Evan Huang

Justin Toguchi

a group of kids in a garage working on art projects

Spray Paint Art with Justin Toguchi

Diana Martinez

HOW TO MAKE A STENCIL from Diana Martinez on Vimeo.

Denzel Belleza

Chris Espinoza

Antonio Lavermon

How to Make a Sims 2 Video from Antonio Lavermon on Vimeo.

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Wk12: Teach One https://beacharts.ca/14f12/ https://beacharts.ca/14f12/#comments Wed, 12 Nov 2014 22:15:08 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=6105 Connor Bailey & Dominic Erich

Let It All Go- Dominic Erich from Connor Bailey on Vimeo.

Activity: Your Turn

We’ve been saying a bit about this last activity in class for a few weeks now, so hopefully you’ve started thinking a little about it. The best way to learn anything is to teach it to someone else. After doing activities for the past 11 weeks, now it’s your turn to teach! Full details on the Teach One activity page!

I give a bunch of examples of Art Ideas and Art Techniques that you could teach on that page. And remember, it’d also be really cool if you taught something about one of the SOA artists you really liked from the galleries this semester.

EC: Post #4

As I’m sure you know, this week, week 12, is our last week of Activities and our last week of 3 posts. Starting next week you’ll still have 2 conversation posts due, but that’s it, just 2 posts a week for the last3 weeks. So since it’s the last week of 3 posts, why don’t you do 4 posts!?

Extra Credit: Activity Feedback!
Now that you’ve done, or will have done, all 12 activities, I’d really like to get your feedback on them. If you’d be willing to do a 4th post this week, Week 12 – Activity Feedback and tell me:

  • Your 3 favorite activities this semester, and a few words about why
  • Your 3 least favorite activities this semester, and a few words about why
  • Any other feedback on the class – fun? boring? easy? hard? relevant? irrelevant? useful? useless? etc
  • What could make the class better?

I’ll be grateful for your feedback, you’ll help design a better class for next semester, and I’ll give you 12 points of EC for the extra post.

photo of a small scaffold

Scaffold Thingy, SOA Gallery Courtyard

Jack & Corinne!

OMG how awesome is this! You know that scaffoldy thing in the SOA Gallery Courtyard? Jack & Corinne have volunteered to do a dance piece on or around it for us next Thursday, Nov 20, at 11:30am! And they need your help too! They might be able to use a few more cast members. If you have dance experience that’d be cool, but they might be able to work with a few “pedestrian” movers or extras also.

And documentation of course. Photography. Video. Maybe a writer? Illustrator? Zineographer? Oh, and probably some audio too. (talk to me about volume level!)

Not only can you help them create this awesome piece, but you can even get paid for participating! I’ve given Jack & Corinne a “budget” of 200 points for their production. They can “pay” themselves, and anyone they take on to participate out of that. After the performance they’ll give me a list of how they’d like the 200 points distributed.

Interested? Chat them up!

Points

All points through Week 11 are now up on BeachBoard. We’ve had 638 points posted so far, and here’s what you should have to be on track for each grade level:

574 points = A pace = 98 peeps
510 points = B pace = 18 peeps
446 points = C pace = 10 peeps
382 points = D pace = 8 peeps
381 points = F pace = 7 peeps

In spite of the enormous number of “A’s”, the class GPA is “only” 3.3 – those D’s & F’s can really drag the GPA down. BTW the A’s, B’s & C’s are almost identical to last week, but unfortunately 3 peeps have slid from D pace to F pace this week. It’s really the home stretch now and I urge you to turn work in and maintain or improve your grade. For a few of you with extremely low points it’s probably too late now. If the SOA will still let you, you might be better served by dropping at this point. For all of you at the top of the grading alphabet – congratulations! Awesome work!

Top 10

Project 757: A Modern Haiku Adventure from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Everyone who’s doing their best in Art110 is a “superstar,” but in terms of points, it seems fair to say that Anna & Diana are our “points superstars.” Last week our superstars both made very personal videos that expressed a range of feelings. They were both complex, but you might say that Anna’s tended a bit more to the light, and Diana’s tended a bit more toward darkness. And hmm… aren’t those the colors they each mostly wear?

PARADOXICAL SENTIMENTS from Diana Martinez on Vimeo.

  1. Anna Joy Floresca – 827
  2. Diana Martinez – 822
  3. Evan Huang – 795
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 774
  5. Allison Wendell – 736
  6. Bowas Yang – 726
  7. Celine Phan – 716
  8. Nicole Ilagan – 715
  9. Antonio Lavermon – 706
  10. Connor Bailey – 698

Being Generous?

Some of you were kind of nervous about asking classmates or artists for conversations the first week or two. A few of you might still be, but I think after all these weeks many of you have gotten past that initial fear. The great thing about asking classmates to have a conversation is that everyone’s in the same boat – they already know what your needs are, and they also have that need themselves – so I think we’re pretty sympathetic to each other. The artists too, know you’re coming and actually they really look forward to conversations with you. So the good news is, it’s mostly easy to startup these conversations.

But I’ve also heard that some of you are less generous with your classmates. Maybe you already did a conversation and someone else wants to talk to you. It’s already 11:30, and really, how much time are you supposed to put in on one class!

Oh, wait, this isn’t even “homework,” it’s class time! When-how-why did leaving class at least 30 – 45 minutes before it’s over become a requirement? Here’s the crazy thing: you are paying a lot of money to be there… I’m not paying anything, I’m getting paid to be there. So, shouldn’t it me me who wants to leave and you who wants to get every minute of you’re money’s worth?

Of course I know life is busy and the demands on your time are many, but with a courtyard filled with artists, art, and 100+ classmates, it should be a really engaging place. And it is, BTW! This isn’t meant to be a big rant, just a small request to remember to be generous with your classmates. You don’t have to talk for half hour, but give them 10 real minutes. Be there. Be invested in the conversation. Look at some of the art together and discuss is. And if this is your 2nd or 3rd classmate conversation of the day – lucky you! – you get to have a richer CSULB experience with your peers. You can get facts from online courses and online resources, but you can only meet the people you’ll share the future of California and the world with by showing up and being engaged.

Thanks for your generosity to each other everyone!

Minyon Spencer & Shannon Choi

Whisper Challenge from minyon spencer on Vimeo.

Conny Ramirez

Galleries This Week

Timothy Cooper, BFA Ceramics – Gatov West
Timothy Cooper presents large-scale slip cast ceramic objects juxtaposed with multiple cast concrete objects in his BFA exhibition.

Michelle Thompkins, MFA Illustration – Gatov East
Michelle Thompkins’s MFA exhibition features a progression of images that express the evolution of one girl’s perceptions of the world throughout the course of a day.

Kiyomi Fukui, Printmaking – Merlino Gallery
Kiyomi Fukui exhibits an installation depicting the process of decomposition in the greater life cycle.

Lacy McCune & Angie Samblotte, Illustration – Dutzi Gallery
Lacy McCune and Angie Samblotte display drawings informed by subtle visual events of everyday routines as well as the undeniable significance of banality.

Cynthia Herrera, MFA Photography – Werby Gallery
Cynthia Herrera’s MFA exhibition features a sculptural installation and archived media from a project that had engaged the community of Riverside, CA.

Gallery Tags

I know I keep bugging you guys to tag your artists. It’s really important. It’s the only way we have to thank them for sharing months and years of their work with us. PLEASE TAG YOUR ARTIST POSTS!!!

I also know it can be a little confusing keeping track of which tag to use, so starting this week, Wk12, and for the rest of the semester let’s try a new tagging scheme for your artist conversations. Instead of tagging a different artist each week, let’s just tag the gallery it was in. This way you can already know the 6 tags to cover all the work you’ll look at:

Talk To The Artists!

Some of you are not bothering to have a conversation with the artist. It’s true we have had a lot of group shows and shows where the artist is unfortunately not there this semester. But I’m also seeing posts where you didn’t talk to the artist even though s/he was sitting right there. Seeing the art is great, but I’ve asked you to take advantage of this special opportunity and have a conversation with the artist. These artists are mostly about your age, live in your city, and go to your school – it’s a priceless chance to learn about the many ways your peers are perceiving your world. TALK TO THE ARTISTS!

Yesenia Chavez

Evan Huang

Evan Huang and crew on a photo shoot in the mountains

Corinne Sampson

pink goblet and small pieces of blue and yellow glass on a large grey slab

Tony Lavermon

Sims 2 Demo – My Body, Your Body from Antonio Lavermon on Vimeo.

Steven Lozano

Steven Lozano preparing a silkscreen stencil

David Aceves

5 segments of a 3D printed Eiffel Tower
Connor Bailey & Dominic Erich walking down a trail

Connor & Dominic

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Wk11: Your Turn! https://beacharts.ca/14f11/ https://beacharts.ca/14f11/#comments Tue, 04 Nov 2014 17:27:18 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=6086 Activity 11 – Your Turn

After mastering the past 10 Activities you’re ready to design a special Art Activity just for yourself. Try something new! Try something meaningful. Challenge yourself. Have fun! Visit the Activity 11 – Your Turn page for full details. If you want help figuring anything out, be sure to ask me! Right behind the Gatov Gallery is the Art Store and we can go visit if you want to know about Canvas or Gouache or any other sort of art material.

Social Production

You can do any art activity you like for Activity 11. By yourself or in a group. But I’d like to encourage you to think about “Social Production.” Here’s a really impressive example of it, and then some ideas about it:

Points

All points through the end of Week 10 are now up on BeachBoard (I still have some of your messages re late posts to look at) We’ve had 580 points awarded so far, and here’s what you should have to be on track for each grade level:

522 points = A pace = 97 peeps
464 points = B pace = 20 peeps
406 points = C pace = 10 peeps
348 points = D pace = 10 peeps
347 points = F pace = 4 peeps

image of Anna Joy Floresca's demise by a tragic backyard disaster

Anna Joy Floresca

Top 10

  1. Anna Joy Floresca – 761
  2. Diana Martinez – 759
  3. Evan Huang 730
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 712
  5. Allison Wendell – 676
  6. Bowas Yang – 668
  7. Celine Phan – 658
  8. Nicole Ilagan – 657
  9. Antonio Lavermon – 638
  10. Conny Ramirez – 634
  11. Connor Bailey – 634

Elizabeth Banuelos

Elizabeth Banuelos' Landscape with a Corpse

Cheyenne Ochoa

Cheyenne Ochoa bites a poison apple

Marie Mendez

Marie Mendez imagines being struck by a truck in a bicycling accident

Antonio Lavermon

Antonio Lavermon's Landscape with a corpse

Evan Huang

Evan Huang imagines being run over by a car

Tyler Hirata

Tyler Hirata imagines falling down a stairwell to your doom

Kianna Lightborn

Kiana Kightborn imagines her body washing up on the beach

Connor Bailey

Connor Bailey imagines his death by falling in a shower

Conny Ramirez

Conny Ramirez imagines being run over by a truck

CitizenFour

The documentary about Edward Snowden, CitizenFour, came out on Friday. It’s currently playing in Pasadena. I strongly encourage you to see it. For many of you Snowden might be a hero; for others he might be a criminal – your ideology will be your own, but whatever you believe, his work is at the heart of the culture of your time. Your parents and I are creatures of the 20th century, but the 21st century is your time and while everyone in this class will have a different opinion, it’s essential that you’re informed about the issues and ideas of your century.

On a related note, the documentary about Aaron Swartz, The Internet’s Own Boy came out a few months ago. Again, it contains fundamental ideas about the culture of your time. Again, whether you consider him a hero or a criminal, I urge you to be informed about the ideas of your century.

Documentaries

These 2 documentaries are a good moment to think about documentaries in general. Some of you will go on to be filmmakers. Almost all of your are film watchers. Sure sometimes you’re tired and just want to relax with Guardians of the Galaxy or The Avengers. But so much of mainstream film exists in a narrow range. Documentaries can inform, inspire, create change, and yes, even entertain. To our future filmmakers I’d encourage you to think about making documentaries. And to all of us who watch films, consider watching documentaries. They don’t have “Hollywood Budgets” for advertising, so you’ll hear less about them, but they’re out there and I believe they can enrich your life beyond simply one night’s entertainment.

A few years back PBS did a commercial for themselves. They showed vistas of wheat fields and skyscrapers. The tag line at the end was,

There are a million stories in the streets of the cities that we never finished building. And we intend to tell them all.

Marie Mendez imagines her demise while riding a bicycle and being hit by a fast moving truck

Marie Mendez

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Wk10: Photography https://beacharts.ca/14f10/ https://beacharts.ca/14f10/#comments Tue, 28 Oct 2014 16:23:23 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=6066 Image from Izima Kaoru's "Landscapes with a Corpse" photographic Memento Mori series

Landscapes with a Corpse, Izima Kaoru.
Koike Kiko wears Gianni Versace, 2004.

Week 10 Activity: Landscapes with a Corpse

This is the last week that Glenn picks the activities. Starting next week, You pick what you’re going to do. For our last “Glenn” project we return to photography. We looked at Photography in Week 2 with our Instagram Activity. That was Social Photography or Relational Aesthetics. This week we’ll try somewhat more traditional photography. But there’s still a twist. We’re imagining our own demise. Landscapes with a Corpse is Izima Kaoru’s twenty-year-long photography project. This week we’ll try a photograph of our own earthly departure in his style. Full detail on the Landscapes with a Corpse page

Galleries, Wk 10

See our Gallery Page!

Points

All points through the end of Week 9 are now up on BeachBoard. Here’s what you should have to be on track for each grade level:
A pace – 454 – 104 peeps
B pace – 403 – 17 peeps
C pace – 353 – 9 peeps
D pace – 302 – 6 peeps
F pace – 301 – 7 peeps

Wk 9 Activity: V-log/ About Me Video from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Top 10

  1. Anna Joy Floresca – 694
  2. Diana Martinez – 693
  3. Evan Huang – 668
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 652
  5. Allison Wendell – 615
  6. Bowas Yang – 610
  7. Nicole Ilagan – 597
  8. Quynh Ong – 574
  9. Conny Ramirez – 572
  10. Connor Bailey – 572

Amir Kiani

Alonzo Urita

Jack Taylor

About Me ART 110 from Jack Taylor on Vimeo.

Conny Ramirez

Welcome to My Website from Conny Ramirez on Vimeo.

Aubrey Delos Reyes

Dominic Erich

Jake Mercadante

Jake Mercadante

Intro to my blog tho from jake mercadante on Vimeo.

Emily Bondoc

Welcome to the #emilystravels blog! from Emily Bondoc on Vimeo.

Diana Martinez

INTRO from Diana Martinez on Vimeo.

Amber Reyes

Angelica Camacho

Allison Wendell

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Week 9: Video https://beacharts.ca/14f9/ https://beacharts.ca/14f9/#comments Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:17:08 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5984

Wk9: Vlogs

Last week we worked on ePortfolios and this we’re creating a “Hi, it’s me! Welcome to my website!” vlog to put on our “About” or “About Me” pages. Full details on the Vlog Activity Page.

Points

All points through the end of Week 8 are now up on BeachBoard. We’ve had 464 points possible so far and here’s the number you should have now to be on track for each grade level:

418 points = A pace – 103 peeps
371 points = B pace – 18 peeps
325 points = C pace – 6 peeps
279 points = D pace – 7 peeps
278 points = F pace – 9 peeps

Top 10

  1. Diana Martinez – 628
  2. Anna Joy Floresca – 625
  3. Evan Huang – 606
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 594
  5. Allison Wendell – 553
  6. Bowas Yang – 550
  7. Mimi Ly – 548
  8. Celine Phan – 539
  9. Nicole Ilagan – 536
  10. Connor Bailey – 527
screencap of Breanne Lee's website

ePortfolios

Lots of nice work last week! Here are a few samples:

screencap of Nicole Ilagan's website screencap of Antonio Lavermon's website

President Conoley’s blog

csulb.edu/sites/president

screen cap of Allison Wendell's "about me" page

1st Person? Or 3rd Person?

Allison put up a nice “About Me” on her site. She wrote it in 3rd person.

It’s always a question whether to write about yourself in 3rd person or 1st person and people make both choices all the time. For sure it’s YOUR choice!

3rd person does have a certain authorial or definitive quality, but ultimately it feels detached and sometimes a little weird when “I tell you that Glenn is a smart and wonderful person”. In my own opinion, 1st person is stronger. It’s more direct, more connected, and perhaps more honest. It feels more conversational with your reader.

Another question I’ve spent way too much time thinking about is, as an interviewer, if your questions should be phrased “tell us” or “tell me”. Tell us has a nice democratic quality, in that you’re not trying to be Interviewer-God, you’re just the audience member who happens to be asking the questions, so you ask the interesting guest to “tell (all of) us” about something.

In the end though, I think “tell us” has the same disconnected, affected quality. I find “tell me” to be more direct, active, and connected. If your interview is compelling, the audience will be plenty happy to hear the interviewer ask “tell me” of the interesting guest.

Again, I don’t want to press this too hard, since plenty of peeps do prefer to write in 3rd person, but in my judgement, we’re not writing obituaries here! 1st person is more active, connected, and dynamic. It lets YOU talk about YOUR PASSION. And whether you’re trying to be a screenwriter, a fashion merchandiser, a vintage car restorer, an awesome cosplayer, a passionate marine biologist, a rockin band, or anything else, that active and connected communication is almost as important as the thing you do so well. It’s the way you bring people into your world and get them to hire you, play with you, support you, etc. IMHO. :)

Wk9: Galleries – Oct 19-23

Restart
curated by Bethany King, – Gatov West – TAG: king
Restart expresses the impact of spirituality on art. Featured artists express Jesus’s influence on their lives through mixed media works.

Salon des Refusés
curated by André Stevenson – Gatov East – TAG: stevenson
Based on the 1863 salon of the same name, “Salon des Refusés” (“Exhibition of Rejects”) is an exhibition of rejected or unfavorably criticized work from all School of Art disciplines at CSULB.

Christine Hudson
BFA Ceramics – Merlino Gallery – TAG: hudson
Christine Hudson presents an interactive installation of numerous handmade porcelain teeth in her BFA exhibition.

Heather Hassenbein
BFA Ceramics – Dutzi Gallery – TAG: hassenbein
Heather Hassenbein’s BFA exhibition features wall-mounted works that reflect natural and abstract themes.

Sculpture Program Group Exhibition
Werby Gallery – TAG: csulbsculpture
The Sculpture Program Group Exhibition is self-organized and features artwork by the BFA Sculpture program.

screencap of the WordPress.com tag search for "davis"

ARTIST TAGS

Hi guys, I want to remind you to be sure to use the Artist Tag on your post each week. That tag is the ONLY WAY we can really say “thank you” to your peers, the CSULB Student Artists who came in early to open just for us, and also for their months of work preparing their exhibition. A LOT of you are missing Artist Tags and it’s really not fair to the artists.

Last week we had 3 shows. In Gatov West, Gatov East, and Werby was the CSULB SOA “Advancement Show.” In Dutzi was a printmaking exchange show. And our one Solo Artist Show last week was Brian Davis in Merlino.

Advancement tag: csulbmfa – 34 tagged posts
Printmaking tag: csulbprintmaking – 16 tagged posts
Brian Davis tag: davis – 7 tagged posts

Thank You! To the 57 of you who tagged your artists! Unfortunately that means 86 of you did not tag an artist for week 8. PLEASE DO IT THIS WEEK!

WHAT’S AN “ADVANCEMENT SHOW”?

In the arts, like Fine Art or Dance or Theatre for example, there isn’t the “academic” degree of “PhD.” Instead the “terminal degree” (highest you can go) is the MFA (master of fine arts). So artists can get a BA or BFA and then just as some history or philosophy majors get an MA and then a PhD, while others just go straight to the PhD, artists can get an MA and then an MFA, or just go straight to the MFA. When you’re in an MFA program, maybe halfway through, you have to “Advance to Candidacy”. “Advancing” means that the School is approving what you’ve done and where you’re headed and you can now work on completing your thesis. Again, in “academic” disciplines your thesis is typically a long written work, but in the arts it is typically a thesis Art Exhibition, Dance Concert, etc.

When we see an “MFA Show” or “BFA Show” in the galleries, that exhibition is the presentation of the student’s graduate or undergraduate thesis to the university and wider community. As you’ve seen, the galleries also have “Group” shows, like Photography Club or Printmaking Exchange. And there are also “non-degree shows,” by both grad students and undergrads. A “non-degree show” is just a way of saying that it isn’t their “Thesis Exhibition,” instead it is some work or some progress toward a thesis exhibition that they’d like to show.

Money!

Asian Cultural Council – Individual Grants
The Asian Cultural Council (ACC) provides funding for artists and scholars who seek to grow in their craft or field to conduct research and study, receive specialized training, undertake observation tours, or pursue non-commercial creative activity in the United States or among the countries of Asia.
Deadline: 11/01/2014

asianculturalcouncil.org/apply/individual-guidelines
asianculturalcouncil.org/our-programs/individual-grants
[email protected]

chest length photo of Sugar Land, Texas fashion model Brittany Binder in a white corset

No, Art110’s “Brittany Binder” is not the fashion model from Sugar Land, TX, but she’s the only “Brittany Binder” I could find a photo of. So here’s the wrong “Brittany Binder,” and I’ll try to have a photo of the right one for next week.

INTRODUCING BRITTANY BINDER

Brittany Binder is going to join me in looking at your collective 429 posts each week! Brittany is a 2nd year graduate in the CSULB SOA Art History program. She’s actually working on TWO degrees, or to be more precise a degree and a “certificate.” She’s working on an MA in Mexican-American Art History and also a Certificate in Museum Studies. I’m not sure if her schedule will allow it, but perhaps she can come say “Hi” in UT-108 on a Tuesday, or spend a few minutes with us at the SOA Galleries on a Thursday. As you might know, in addition to all the Art Galleries at the SOA, there is also the “University Art Museum” (UAM) down on the other end of campus by the Horn Center & the Business Department. Brittany is working on a show that will open at the UAM later this semester. Perhaps we can arrange an opportunity for you to go down, see the show, have a conversation with Brittany, and blog about it for extra credit.

Anyway, I mostly wanted to let you know that Brittany is joining us and I’ll take the liberty of saying on behalf of all of you, Welcome Brittany!

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Wk8: ePortfolio https://beacharts.ca/14f8/ https://beacharts.ca/14f8/#comments Tue, 14 Oct 2014 14:45:24 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5950 Banner for Art110, Fall 2014

ePortfolios!

Yes, it’s that week I’ve been going on about since day 1. It’s time to make “our” websites really OURS! Details on the ePortfolio Activity Page!

SOA Galleries

Visit our Gallery Page for info on this week’s artists and the TAGS you should BE SURE to use with your Artist Conversation post!

Points

We’ve got 7 weeks up on BeachBoard now and the total possible is 406. Here’s how many points you should have to be on track for each grade level:

A pace = 365 points – 105 peeps
B pace = 324 points – 15 peeps
C pace = 283 points – 7 peeps
D pace = 242 points – 7 peeps
F pace = 241 points – 9 peeps

Top 10

  1. Diana Martinez – 566
  2. Anna Joy Floresca – 560
  3. Evan Huang – 533
  4. Marlyn Castillo – 530
  5. Alison Wendell – 492
  6. Mimi Ly – 490
  7. Bowas Yang – 488
  8. Celine Phan – 481
  9. Nicole Ilagan – 470
  10. Connor Bailey – 469
animated gif of Anna Joy Floresca in a big hat waving at the damera
5 college women, 3 in big, dark sunglasses, stand on the beach at Venice Beach, CA and take a summer selfie

The Homies: Stephanie Mejia, C-Dawg, Diana Martinez, Allison Wendell & Anna Joy Floresca

Painting at Venice Beach!

Diana Martinez

VB from Diana Martinez on Vimeo.

Anna Joy Floresca

Venice Beach Week 7 from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Bowas Yang

Kiara Kensie

Venice Beach from Kiara Kensie on Vimeo.

Conny Ramirez

Venice Art Walls from Conny Ramirez on Vimeo.

My friends and I went to Venice to legally spray paint on the infamous art walls as part of our art class assignment, it was a great experience and here's what I was able to get from it.

Blood Moon

Evan Huang shot the last “Blood Moon” (Lunar Eclipse) of 2014!

3 phases of Lunar Eclipse: 1/3 covered, 2/3 covered, and total lunar eclipse or "Blood Moon"

Lunar Eclipse, by Evan Huang

Marlyn Castillo

Photo of Marlyn Castillo standing next to her name "Marlyn" painted on a wall at the Venice Beach Legal Art Walls in Venice Beach, CA

Marlyn Castillo at Venice Beach

Mimi Ly

Mimi Ly standing next to her painting of "#Art110" at the Venice Beach Art Walls

Mimi Ly

Melanie Coli

Melanie Coli painting at the Venice Beach Artwalls

Melanie Coli

Savannah Cheung

Savannah Cheung sitting on a wall at Venice Beach next to her name "Savannah" painted on the wall in white bubble letters with a black outline

Savannah Cheung

Andrew Aragon

the word "Andy" painted in yellow and red and with a black outline

Andy Aragon

Anthony Diaz

the name "Diaz" in geometric purple lettering with white and black outlining as painted by Anthony Diaz at the Venice Beach Artwalls in Venice Beach, CA

Diaz

Andrew Aragon & Anthony Diaz of Plastic Castle. Photo by Diana Martinez.

Plastic Castle! Photo by Diana Martinez

Plastic Castle @ The Whiskey

We finally got a video of Plastic Castle (Andy ‘n Diaz) at the Whiskey thanks to our intrepid reporter Diana Martinez.

Other Exciting News

In other exciting news this week, Glenn got a new surfski (a fancy kayak)

photo of Fenn Mako XT surfski at the Newport Aquatic Center in Newport Beach, CA

Glenn’s new Fenn Mako XT surfski

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Wk7: Painting https://beacharts.ca/14f7/ https://beacharts.ca/14f7/#comments Tue, 07 Oct 2014 16:01:44 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5933 Banner for Art110, Fall 2014

Painting Week!

Yes, it’s Painting Week in Art110! Read all about it where? On the Painting Activity page of course!

Points

With 6 weeks up on BeachBoard the total possible is now 348 points. Here’s how many points you should have to be on track for each grade level:

A pace = 313 points – 100 peeps
B pace = 278 points – 20 peeps
C pace = 244 points – 6 peeps
D pace = 210 points – 4 peeps
F pace = 209 points – 13 peeps

Screen cap of French Girls app: on the left is a selfie of Glenn Zucman & Diana Martinez. On the right is an illustration of a sleeping kitten with the text "Doesn't look like anyone is going to draw this selfie."

Poor Diana Martinez! 447 points & she still can’t get no respect from those French Girls!

Top 10

  1. Diana Martinez – 447
  2. Anna Joy Floresca – 439
  3. Marlyn Castillo – 437
  4. Evan Huang – 432
  5. Nicole Ilagan – 412
  6. Connor Bailey – 411
  7. Quynh Ong – 395
  8. Mimi Ly – 395
  9. Chris Soerachmat – 392
  10. Allison Wendell – 392

Super French Girls & Guys!

With apologies to all our Android students, it does seem like many of you had a lot of fun with the French Girls mobile app. I know it doesn’t help US this semester, but none other than Scotch Mornington himself says they’re working on an Android version, so for Spring semester, it should be available to everyone. Meanwhile, here’s a few cool posts:

SOA Galleries Oct 5-9

Nicholas Gaby – Sculpture – Gatov West Gallery

Nicholas Gaby explores value and space in relationship to collecting and organizing in a sculptural installation.
WP.com tag: gaby

Kenita Hale – BFA Sculpture – Gatov East Gallery

Kenita Hale’s BFA exhibition features sculptural works that reference famous historical circus performers and human objectification within the context of a hand-made circus tent.
WP.com tag: hale

Colette Brown – Sculpture – Merlino Gallery

Colette Brown’s olfactory sculptures measure the lifespan of particular fluids including plain yogurt, balsamic vinegar, beet juice, vegetable oil, and coffee.
WP.com tag: brown

Yee Li &Marguerite Freed – Drawing & Painting – Dutzi Gallery

Yee Li and Marguerite Freed present oil on canvas and mixed media works thematically concerned with feelings of anxiety and insecurity.
WP.com tag: lifreed

Daniel Rivera & Vanessa Gamboa – Drawing & Painting – Werby Gallery

Daniel Rivera and Vanessa Gamboa collaborate in a performance depicting relationship tensions. Their performance will take place on October 15th with documentation of this performance on display throughout the week.
WP.com tag: riveragamboa

Late Night Long Beach – Pilot Episode

College Beat‘s new show Late Night Long Beach premiered this week! Nicole Ilagan from Art110 is the Executive Producer, and Quynh Ong from Art110 also worked on the Pilot. Congratulations Nicole & Quynh!

Starship One – Sizzle Reel

Meanwhile, Stephen Boyer just shot the Sizzle Reel for his upcoming short film Starship One. He’ll be launching a Kickstarter campaign to fund the project later this month.

Stephen Boyer & Ian Daniel Raymond on the set of Starship One

The Whiskey

Rumor has it there was a cool concert there on Sunday. Apparently Art110 peeps even went. But I didn’t see a thing about it in anyone’s blog! :(

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Wk6: Drawing https://beacharts.ca/14f6/ https://beacharts.ca/14f6/#comments Tue, 30 Sep 2014 16:18:03 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5906 Read more »]]> ScreenCao from FrenchGirlsApp website showing a diptych of the original photo selfie and what the French Girls user drew in response.

Drawing Week

It’s drawing week in Art110! Full details on the Drawing Activity Page!

Points

All points are now up to date on BeachBoard. We’ve had 290 points so far, and here’s the numbers you should have to be on track for an “A”, “B”, etc:

A – 261 points – 97 peeps
B – 232 points – 23 peeps
C – 203 points – 6 peeps
D – 174 points – 4 peeps
F – 173 points – 13 peeps

Top 10

  1. Diana Martinez – 384
  2. Marlyn Castillo – 375
  3. Evan Huang – 373
  4. Anna Joy Floresca – 371
  5. Connor Bailey – 355
  6. Nicole Ilagan – 352
  7. Mimi Ly – 335
  8. Rachel Price – 334
  9. Quynh Ong, Dominic Erich, Chris Soerachmat & Allison Wendell – 331

Wk 6 – Sep 28 – Oct 2

  • Angel Franco, Isaiah Ulloa, and Juan Martin, Sculpture – WPcom Tag: francoulloamartin
  • Emily Gross, Drawing and Painting – WPcom Tag: gross
  • Rosa Vazquez, Photography – WPcom Tag: vazquez
  • Brian Davis, Ceramics – WPcom Tag: davis

Angel Franco, Isaiah Ulloa, and Juan Martin display provocative large-scale creatures stylistically informed by various mythological beasts. Emily Gross’s exhibition will feature paintings completed “en plein air” (“outdoors”) while traveling along the West Coast and through Australia during the summer of 2014. Rosa Vazquez displays a documentary-based archive of photography, text, and video representing United States deportees from recent years. Brian Davis explores formalistic qualities related to color, form, and space in an exhibition based on the different stages of his life.

Counterfactual Identity

Lots of amazing work last week! Here’s a small sampling of some of your activities:

Antonio Lavermon
Jerome Guzman
Brandon Middleton
Aubrey Reyes
Alberto Macias
Shannon Choi
Kevin Cordova
Yu Tung Lin
Yiwen Lu
Yesenia Chavez

Photos coming on Wednesday!!

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Wk5: Identity Art https://beacharts.ca/14f5/ https://beacharts.ca/14f5/#comments Tue, 23 Sep 2014 16:21:34 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5856 Identity Art

This week Halloween comes early with our “Counterfactual Identity” project. Read the full details on our Counterfactual Identity, Activity Page!

CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

School of Art Galleries

Another full slate of galleries this week. Be sure to add the URL for your Artist & Classmate Conversations. Be sure to use the Correct Tags! Visit the Gallery Page to be sure. Also, here they are:
Wk 5 – Sep 21 – 15

The Photography Symposium features artwork from local community college faculty and video work from School of Art BFA photography students photography program. Mike Lewis engages with unregulated space in his hometown by displaying it in photographs and found objects. The Photography Club hosts an exhibition thematically centered around connection and disconnection in relation to the internet and internet culture.

CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

Points

Points through the end of Wk4 are now up on BeachBoard. We’ve had 232 possible, and here’s the number of points you should have if you’re on track for each letter grade:

  • A pace = 209 – 92 peeps
  • B pace = 186 – 28 peeps
  • C pace = 163 – 8 peeps
  • D pace = 140 – 2 peeps
  • F pace = 139 – 13 peeps
Connor Bailey at the beach showing his plaster casting of his hand

Connor Bailey

Top 10

  1. Connor Bailey – 327
  2. Diana Martinez – 320
  3. Marlyn Castillo – 313
  4. Evan Huang – 313
  5. Anna Joy Floresca – 306
  6. Nicole Ilagan – 294
  7. Rachel Price – 280
  8. Mimi Ly – 276
  9. Chris Soerachmat – 272
  10. Quynh Ong, Dominic Erich & Alonzo Urita – 271
CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

Stylin’ Websites

Artist & Classmate Conversations

Lots of great work by many of you. But others are really pushing the limits of short-and-not-saying-much. You’ll notice I’m starting to deduct points. What does good work look like? Check out:

CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects
CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

Sublime Iced Tea Experience!

CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

I cast, therefore I am.

college student holding a plaster casting of her hand and smiling

Rachel Peng

Plaster Casting

Chris & Chris

Chris Espinoza takes it to a whole other level! Go Experience It!

Greg Violan & Evan Huang

Anna Joy Floresca

Wk 4 Plaster Casting Activity from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Music: https://soundcloud.com/jameswalkermusic/seaside-ukulele-instrumental

Aubrey Delos Reyes

Jerome Guzman

Kylie Hazehara

Lyna Salameh

Marie Mendez

Marlyn Castillo

Emily Bondoc, Matthew Savedra & Cheyenne Ochoa

CSULB, School of Art, Art110 Students at the Seal Beach Pier working on their Plaster Casting Projects

By an amazing coincidence Stephen & his FOUR sisters just happened to show up at the exact same beach & time where a bunch of us were doing Plaster Casting Activities! :)

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Art110 Projects https://beacharts.ca/art110-projects/ https://beacharts.ca/art110-projects/#comments Wed, 17 Sep 2014 18:06:15 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5838 Crowdfunding projects from the students of CSULB Art110, Fall 2014.

As you know our CSULB Curated Kickstarter Page is currently in the approval process here at the University. I honestly don’t know how long it will take. Perhaps just a couple of days. Perhaps a lot longer. I’ll keep you posted. But meanwhile, here’s a page to present projects from your classmates.

Connor Bailey

“Couch Potato” – Indiegogo Promo from Studio J on Vimeo.

The pitch video for our short film's crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo.

David Phan

photo of David Phan and his dog

David Phan

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Wk4: Sculpture Experience https://beacharts.ca/14f4/ https://beacharts.ca/14f4/#comments Tue, 16 Sep 2014 15:04:37 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5814 Anna Joy Floresca

KS for SFSH (Art 110/Wk 3 Activity) from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

Kickstarter Videos

A lot of great project pitches from so many of you! Here are a few on this page. One small but important detail that a lot of you overlooked is that on group projects you didn’t list your partners full names and give links to their websites. I can’t stress how important this is on so many levels. Please be sure to check these “small” details!

Points on BeachBoard

Your points through Wk 3 are now on BeachBoard. Please be sure to check yours! We’ve had 174 points possible so far. If you have 157 or better, you’re on “A” pace. If you have 103 or less, you’re on “F” pace. Here’s the breakdown so far:

157 points – A – 99 peeps
139 points – B – 23 peeps
122 points – C – 7 peeps
104 points – D – 3 peeps
103 points – F – 11 peeps

14 peeps have a perfect 174 points! And 60 peeps have more than 174! Great job almost everyone! But if you are at the bottom end of the scale, now’s the time to take action. Need help? Ask me! Need to get serious? Just do it! Need to drop? This week is better than next week!

Top 10

  1. Diana Martinez – 255
  2. Marlyn Castillo – 249
  3. Evan Huang – 247
  4. Connor Bailey – 239
  5. Anna Joy Floresca – 238
  6. Nicole Ilagan – 236
  7. Rachel Price – 222
  8. Mimi Ly – 215
  9. Dominic Erich – 210
  10. Christopher Soerachmat – 210

Connor Bailey

“Couch Potato” – Indiegogo Promo from Studio J on Vimeo.

The pitch video for our short film's crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo.

Quynh Ong

Lyna Salameh

Lia Alessandra Giordano

Kim Tang

Jonathan Garcia

Diana Martinez, Conny Ramirez & Allison Wendell

Kickstarter – Golden State Of Mind from diana martinez on Vimeo.

Plaster Casting

Welcome to Week 4 and our Sculpture Experience. In Wk1 we made websites. In Wk2 we played with Instagram. In Wk 3 Kickstarter. It’s already Wk4, and we go to a school called The Beach, and as you might have noticed, it’s a million degrees outside, so it seems like time we should have a project to go to the Actual Beach! Here it is!

3 CSULB students holding up plaster casts made of their hand or foot

Full Details on the Art110 Plaster Casting Page!

PS: It seems like a lot of you are not reading the weekly Activity pages. The have all the details on the project & your blog post. Be sure to visit them! :)

Christopher Soerachmat

Marlene Gonzalez

Maeghan McBee

Antonio Lavermon

KickStarter Vid from Antonio Lavermon on Vimeo.

Anthony Diaz & Andrew Aragon

Corinne Sampson & Jack Taylor

Amir Kiani

Adriana Macias

Kickstarter Film Festival @Griffith Park

The Effect of KSFF LA 2014 on My Dad from Anna Joy on Vimeo.

photos of CSULB students

Michelle Morte, Jack Taylor, Diana Martinez

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Wk 3: Arts Funding https://beacharts.ca/14f3/ https://beacharts.ca/14f3/#comments Tue, 09 Sep 2014 00:52:24 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5756 Banner for Art110, Fall 2014

Last Week: Instagram Day (Relational Aesthetics)

Above: a small, sublime moment from IG day by Kari Maehara.
Below: Jack Taylor posts the IG of the day!

Good Post Names

Almost everybody is using great post names! But a few of you are using “bad” post names that make my job really hard. For maximum points, please use good post names. There are examples in the syllabus:
beacharts.ca/fall14-syllabus/#rubrics

Points on BeachBoard

All Wk1 & Wk2 points are now live on BeachBoard. Note that this isn’t really a “percentage” class, it’s a “points” class. Your goal is to get 900+ points and earn an “A”. There’s no way for me to turn off the percentage stuff on BeachBoard, but please don’t be confused by it. In fact, don’t even look at it! (yes, just like Nigel Tufnel’s guitar, don’t even look at it!)

After Wk2 it might say you have 100 points or 10% or something like that. That’s because it’s calculating your current points out of the entire course 1,000 possible. Mostly you should just be working your way to 900+. We had 58 points for Wk1 & 58 for Wk2 or 116 possible. 90% of 116 is 104, so if you’ve got 104 or better, then you’re on “A” pace. If you’ve got under 104 you either didn’t post some things, or if you did post everything then you probably lost a few points for bad names or missing photos or overly short / simple posts. I talk about all of these elements in the syllabus:
beacharts.ca/fall14-syllabus/#rubrics

Diana Martinez

black and white, chest length photo of Diana Martinez and Conny Ramirez

Diana Martinez with Conny Ramirez from Conny’s website


Just in case you’re wondering who’s #1 after 2 weeks, it would be that amazing Diana Martinez person with 155 / 116 for a “perfect” 134% Will Diana finish the semester #1 and wind up in the Art110 Hall of Fame? She might. But she’ll have to fend off Marlyn Castillo, Sam Gold, and a whole bunch of other peeps who are right on her tail!

Velveth Alarcon

Speaking of #1 Students, after class on Thursday, like many of you, I wandered around Week of Welcome. OMG so many great groups and activities to participate in! And who should I run into Salsa Dancing in the middle of the sidewalk but Velveth Alarcon. This time last year she was a freshman psychology major on her way to finishing #1 in Art110. Like this semester it was 900 out of 1,000 for an “A,” and Velveth finished with 1,142. Now she’s on the CSULB Salsa Team! She might come visit our class some Tuesday and see if she can recruit a few of you to join the CSULB Salsa Club.

Michelle Morte

I think everyone knows that Michelle Morte was the keeper of the ID card envelope on Thursday. Great job Michelle! Thank You! Who will hold The Envelope this week? Stay tuned!

This Week: Kickstarter (Arts Funding)

From the Medici Family of Florence to America’s National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) we’ve always grappled with ways to fund The Arts. “Popular” artists like Katy Perry or Michael Bay can make bags of money, but we also like to see less “pop” work also be a part of our culture. There’s probably no Craft Beer alive that will ever do even a tiny fraction of the sales that Bud Light does (45 million barrels & 5.3 billion dollars in 2011) yet for many people, drinking a beer that not everybody else drinks is part of what they value in the experience.

What if you don’t have a rich patron like Lorenzo de Medici or Eli Broad or Charles Saatchi? Or an NEA Grant? Or a contract with Universal Studios or Sony Music or Condé Nast publishing? One solution, since April 28, 2009, has been Kickstarter. With Kickstarter you ask for enough money to do your project, say $5,000. When people pledge to your project, Kickstarter takes their credit card number, but it doesn’t charge them anything. When your campaign ends, if you made your goal, Kickstarter charges everyone’s cards and delivers your money to you. If you don’t meet your goal, say you only got $2,500 in support, then your project goes “unfunded” and no one’s credit card is charged anything.

This can make for a little stress on the artist, but it also encourages you to be serious & realistic. Kickstarter doesn’t want to take donor money, give you half of what you need, and then have a half finished project that doesn’t deliver what it promised. Sometimes the deliverables are physical things like an ice chest, or an iPhone accessory. The “deliverables” might also by intangible, like a dance performance. Overall, about 60% Kickstarter projects fail. Of the 40% that do reach their goal and get funded, a few get many times more than they asked for.

Lucky you, we’re not doing full Kickstarter projects for real, so you can skip the stress of meeting your goal. But it’d be pretty cool if sometime before you graduate from CSULB, you did. This week we’re just making hypothetical Kickstarter pitch videos. Even though this one is “only a rehearsal,” I urge you to take it seriously. If you do a “late night infomercial” you might get a couple of laughs out of it, but it’ll pretty much be pointless. If you use this as an opportunity to be in front of a camera and express yourself to people who might be interested in your work, you’ll gain something really valuable.

Full details for this Activity are on our Kickstarter Activity Page. There’s also a few sample Kickstarter Pitch Videos there, as well as many thousands more on the Kickstarter website. I’ll just post 1 here in our Art110 Weekly post to get you rolling. Since we’re all using WordPress, you might find it interesting to hear this pitch from John O’Nolan. He was a WordPress developer for a couple of years and then decided to launch a new blogging platform, Ghost. Here’s how he pitched it:

Kickstarter Film Festival

If you recall, we have 4 Extra Credit opportunities this semester, and the Kickstarter Film Festival this Friday is Opportunity #2. The event is in Griffith Park in LA. It runs from 6-11pm and is free. If you’d like the EC, just:
1. Go to the event
2. Take some pix
3. Do an extra (4th) post this week with a couple of pix and a few paragraphs about your experience

Do a nice job and I’ll add up to +30 of EC on top of your up to 30 points of Regular Activity for this week. 30+30=60!

Group or Solo

You’re welcome to do this project solo if you like. But what a great project to do with someone else in the class! It’d probably be more fun and you might wind up with a more compelling project.

SOA Galleries on Thursday

After 2 weeks of the giant GLAMFA exhibition, this week we begin the “standard” gallery program with 4 or 5 different CSULB SOA student artists showing work in the galleries every week. You’ll see 4 different categories of exhibitions:
1. MFA Thesis Exhibitions
2. BFA Thesis Exhibitions
3. Non-Degree Exhibitions
4. Group Exhibitions, Curatorial Projects & other special Exhibitions

Wk 3 – Sep 7 – 11

  • Vav Vavrek, MFA Sculpture – WPcom Tag: vavrek
  • Jesse Lubben, Photography – WPcom Tag: lubben
  • Chelsea McIntyre, Sculpture – WPcom Tag: mcintyre
  • Patricia Rangel, Metals – WPcom Tag: rangel

Vav Vavrek’s MFA Thesis exhibition will consist of an installation utilizing an overlapping of video processes across the spectrum of display technologies to create an experience of an alternate present.

Jesse Lubben will display a series of photographic prints that play with relationships between three-dimensional sculpture and the two-dimensionality of photography.

Chelsea McIntyre presents a performance piece featuring two actors engaged in a heated discourse. Visitors are welcome to engage the situation however they please.

Patricia Rangel integrates dirt, cement, metal, and silk in a series of sculptural works that range in dimension and configuration.

Precision is key.
— Duckliife

Is it just me, or did Duckliife just quote that Jaguar commercial?

Alison Meets Anna

It seems like everyone who talks to future nurse & drawing lover Anna Joy Floresca has a great conversation. Last week it was Diana Martinez, and this week it was Alison Wendell‘s turn!

Ally snapped this cool IG with Anna. Unfortunately then this old creeper swooped in and made her take one with him too! (eww)
BTW, Ally’s really rockin that Giant Eyeball T, isn’t she!?

ScreenCap of Anna Joy Floresca's home page

Psst, check out Anna’s cool website at ajfloresca.wordpress.com


 

screen cap of David Ngo's website featuring a big group photo and the headline "Welcome to my life"

Check out David Ngo’s website – what a great way to draw people in!


 


 

screen cap of Maeghan McBee's home page

I love the way Maeghan McBee’s website has her photo and brief bio right up front.


 

Art110 students sitting on a large stone in the CSULB School of Art, Art Gallery Courtyard. Long Beach, California. ]]>
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Wk 2: Relational Aesthetics https://beacharts.ca/14f2/ https://beacharts.ca/14f2/#comments Tue, 02 Sep 2014 15:30:23 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5714 Banner for Art110, Fall 2014

Gallery Etiquette

Hi everyone, I hope you enjoyed the CSULB School of Art, Gallery Complex, experience on Thursday. One important thing to mention is how to behave in an Art Gallery or Art Museum. Galleries and Museums or “Cultural Institutions” have some things in common with Libraries, but also some things different. In a Library you’re supposed to be quiet. And touching the books (most of them) is encouraged. It’s the opposite in a Gallery or Museum. You don’t have to be quiet. You can talk, you can laugh, you can interact with your friends and the work.

Don’t Touch

But in most Galleries & Museums most of the time, You NEVER TOUCH the work! It might be a 500 year old masterpiece from Florence painted by one of the geniuses of the ages, and it might be a 5 day old painting from a CSULB student, but either way, it’s tremendously important NOT TO TOUCH the work! Don’t touch it with your hands. Don’t bump into it. Art is a human legacy. Sometimes it’s priceless to our entire culture. But all art is priceless to someone. And with so many people moving through these spaces, we can really damage work in the process of appreciating it. So please by very, very careful. VERY!!

Backpacks

Backpacks are kind of a problem for us. Most galleries and museums won’t allow them in their galleries, you have to check them at reception. However we have an additional problem at CSULB, which is a lot of theft. For sure you should never leave your stuff unattended. An unwatched laptop can literally be gone in 60 seconds. So we have to try to balance the Backpacks don’t belong in the galleries problem with the I don’t want my stuff ripped off problem. If you have a chance to leave a backpack in a locker or dorm on Thursdays, that might be cool. Just bring your mobile or laptop or whatever you need. If you do need your backpack, that’s understandable. But then be EXTRA CAREFUL in the galleries. If you’re taking a photo for somebody, remember a backpack can extend you way back and if you’re backing up to snap the photo you can walk right into a painting, video monitor, sculpture, or other fragile piece of work.

Contacting GLAMFA Artists

Week 2 will be the same plan as last week. We’ll look at the GLAMFA exhibition in the SOA Galleries, have a conversation with a classmate, and write up another work from the show, letting the GLAMFA Website and the Artist’s Website as stand-ins for conversations with the artists. Next week, Week 3, we’ll be on the “normal” track for the rest of the semester with 4-5 different shows each week and the artists will usually be inside or at a table outside the gallery.

The Organizer of the GLAMFA Exhibition, CSULB Grad Student Dawn Ertl has also offered to put you in email contact with any of the artists if you’d like to ask them some questions. You can email the artist’s name and your questions for them to Dawn, and she will forward them to the artist for you. This is optional. You don’t have to do it. If you would like to ask any artist questions, you can email Dawn at: [email protected]

Questions

I received a lot of questions over the weekend for things that were in the syllabus. I don’t really mind, after all, enrollment in Art110 comes with “unlimited questions,” and I’m sure sometimes the syllabus needs a little explaining, but just FYI, you can find a lot there. I’ve expanded the Syllabus Table of Contents to help make more info more easily available:

Syllabus TOC

  1. Introduction
  2. Format
  3. Points & Grades
  4. Other Details
  5. Activities
  6. Interviews

Subsections of Special Interest

This Week

This week we’re doing some Photography. Later in the semester we’ll do a little bit more traditional photography where we try to compose a photograph and think about its aesthetics. This week we are taking pictures, and we’ll no doubt have aesthetic considerations, but the focus of our experience is to use our Mobile Cameras as tools to explore and express social relations.

Our Relational Aesthetics Activity will use Instagram. Most of you already have IG accounts. If you don’t, you can just make one for the day. If you don’t have a smartphone, you can work with someone, or you can use my iPad during class on Thursday. Thursday, Sept 4 is our “Instagram Day.” From when you wake up in the morning till you go to sleep that night, take at least 4 IGs. Or more if you like.

Full details on the Instagram page

NOTE:
Even though we’re Instagramming on Thursday, you still have to do a POST on your website by Sunday night. TO GET CREDIT FOR THE IG ACTIVITY, YOU MUST DO AN ANALYSIS POST ON YOUR WEBSITE! Details on the Instagram page

Your Websites (last week)

You all did great work last week getting your websites launched! Did you realize you could have your own website with the design and content of your choice that fast? In Week 8 we’re going to focus more specifically on making Your Passion be the focus of Your Website. I’ll show you how you can easily put your Art110 work off to the side, and let your website feature your Fashion Merchandising, Dance, Nursing, Business Marketing, Recreation Therapy, Hospitality Management, or any other career focus. Of course, you don’t have to wait till then. You can use your website for anything you want right now. Want to write about Health & Lifestyle? Or Politics? Or Student Life? Just click New Post and start typing on your keyboard or talking into your mobile.

Designing a “You” Website

In school we spend a lot of “head down” time just focusing on requirements, like “what’s due this week?” That’s legit. But in the long run, I believe a compelling ePortfolio will serve you far better than just an “I turned in my homework” website. Sooner than you think you’ll be wanting things like internships and later jobs and careers. Why not start making a place where anyone who wants to know about you can find the work that you’d like to show?

Here’s Stephen Boyer’s website. Just like so many of you Stephen did a great job in Week 1. He got his site up and wrote 2 nice pieces on a Classmate and a GLAMFA Artist. He even bought Stephen S Boyer.com – Awesome!

I’m totally not dissing Stephen or any of you here – gosh, we’re just getting started! – but nice a job as he did with Week 1, what his website doesn’t show me, is what he really cares about, and how strong his work is. Lucky for me, Stephen found me on Twitter last week and that led me over to his Vimeo Channel. Wow. Stephen’s only an incoming freshman, but he’s already done so much remarkable work. Here’s one, a short film called Paradigm:

For a filmmaker like Stephen, an analysis of April Bey’s artwork is great, but a film like Paradigm is really his raison d’être. I hope before this semester is over Stephen has a website that shows his work, talks about his ideas, and chronicles what he’s working on now.

I hope that’s true for all of you.

Others of you also have strong work to show. Some of you might think, well, I don’t really have anything great yet. Or perhaps you think, I’ve done some nice work, but it’s not really visual, like Stephen’s short film is.

Your Best Face Forward

You can find a way to put anything on your website! Words. Images. Graphics. Charts. Audio. Video. The website for a future CIA agent is going to look pretty different from the website for a future Tattoo Artist, but anyone can show their work. And if you don’t think you have much yet, I’d encourage you to put up anything you have. The great thing about the web is how easy it is to revise things or replace them with new, better work.

You Are Creative

Remember that “creativity” is everywhere. It’s easy to look at a film like Stephen’s or a painting or a performance and say, wow, they’re so talented! But what about the Accountant who creatively rearranges a spreadsheet in a way that no one ever has before and discovers how you’re losing a lot of money or ways you could be making a lot more? That’s “creativity”! And it really matters! Looking from lots of angles. Thinking differently.

The Medici Family from Renaissance Florence are easily the greatest art patrons the world has ever known. One family was so influential in fueling and shaping The Renaissance and sponsoring artists like Michelangelo, Leonardo, Botticelli, and many others. But the way the Medici Family rose to power is that they were bankers and they were early inventors of double-entry accounting. You can be “creative” in any field!

More of Your Work

Here’s a few more of your websites from last week.

Here’s Marlyn Castillo’s website. Looks great. Nice posts. I love her choice of the “Visual” theme. Traditional “blog” themes have one post rolling down the homepage. That’s pretty good. But what if I’m not so interested in that one thing? Marlyn’s theme puts a lot of content, a lot of choice right up front on her home page. It’s a great way to feature a lot of the stories you have to tell. It’s also a great way to show off your work in an ePortfolio.

Marlyn also did something small but powerful that many of you haven’t gotten around to yet – but you can at any time! She made an “About” page. That’s a great place to say who you are, what’s up, and perhaps include some contact info.

screen cap of Diana Martinez website

Diana Martinez / DC Martinez.com

Diana Martinez shows what us what a conversation is all about! Be sure to drop by Diana’s website and read about her “Conversation” with Joy Floresca. It’s wonderful work. It’s the kind of connection we should all try to make more of.

Great site by Samuel Gold. You can really feel his presence. And BAM, there’s his “About” right on the home page. He’s not making the visitor do too much work, he’s got where you are, and who I am, right there.

Check out the interactive rollover effects on Evan Huang’s home page. We all know that we’re engaged when our online actions feel alive and interactive, and Evan’s homepage gives us exactly that. His “Pictorico” theme is a really nice way to design your site and present your work.

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Wk 1: Web Design https://beacharts.ca/14f1/ https://beacharts.ca/14f1/#comments Tue, 26 Aug 2014 00:26:12 +0000 https://beacharts.ca/?p=5635 Banner for Art110, Fall 2014

Welcome!

Hello everyone – Welcome to Fall 2014 & Welcome to Art110!

This semester we have 66 Freshmen, 60 Sophomores, 5 Juniors & 8 Seniors in Art110. It’s exciting to have some seniors spending their last year at CSULB with us in Art110. And it’s great to have so many Sophomores & Juniors here – Welcome Back! But especially to our 66 Freshman spending the 1st or 2nd day of their college career in Art110 this morning, Welcome!!

We have majors from all over the campus, like:

Lots of Engineers: Civil, Electrical & Mechanical
Computer Engineering & Computer Science
Lots of Business, Management, Marketing, International Business, Finance & Accounting Majors

A woman on the CSULB campus puts a banner up on a wall with many posters

“CSULB 024″ by Bernard Delmundo

Anthropology
Athletic Training
Biochemistry
Child Development
Communications
Community Health
Criminal Justice
Dance
English
Environmental Science
Fashion Merchandising
Film & Electronic Arts
Food Administration
Geography
Health Care Administration
Hospitality Management
Human Resources
Journalism
Kinesiology
Liberal Studies
Linguistics
Marine Biology
Nursing
Political Science
Psychology
Recreation Therapy
Sociology
Theater Arts
Undeclared

That “Undeclared” major is really popular with about 33 of you in it. Other popular majors are the Business areas totaling about 15 of you, Film & Electronic Arts 14, Engineering 13, Nursing 8, Psychology 7, Kinesiology 6.

Stress?

College is a time of so much excitement and new ideas and growth! It can also be a time of stress. Simple things like where my class is or what exactly my homework is. And more complex things like what if I hate my major or how to go on after the love of my life just dumped me. CSULB has so many people who can help.

A college woman buries her head in her hands as she is surrounded by a large stack of books

“5/365″ by anna gutermuth

The person sitting next to you might be a good person to talk to. Or faculty like me or your other instructors. And CSULB also has lots of counselors: academic counselors, psychological counselors, student health, and more. We’ve all been shocked that someone as “happy” as Robin Williams could suffer from depression. Sometimes the hardest thing is to ask for help. Whether it’s confusion about your homework, or confusion about your life, try to reach out to someone.

And for sure, try to do more than just collect a bunch of grades here. Try to thrive at CSULB. I’m sure you know all about the many options: Groups in your major, Sports, Clubs, Greeks, Student Media like our TV Station, Radio Station, Newspapers & Magazine.

Chat

You can say Hi! to your classmates, and ask any questions now or in the future on the Art110 Chat Page:
beacharts.ca/chat

Art110

In The Syllabus you can read the long version about the class. (and you should actually read the syllabus! :) But here’s the SparkNotes: Do 3 things every week:
1. An Art Activity
2. Have a Conversation with a CSULB Artist in the School of Art Galleries
3. Have a Conversation with an Art110 Classmate at the School of Art Galleries

And “turn in” those 3 things with 3 posts on your blog. Creating your blog is our Week 1 Activity. More on that in a sec. And that’s it. No exams. No books. No lectures. No papers other than your 3 posts. No pop quizzes. Just try something new every week, have 2 conversations about art & life, and blog it.

Activities

For each of our 12 weekly Activities there’s a Learning Objectives Overview toward the bottom of The Syllabus and there’s a page with all the details to make that Activity a success. Here’s the page for our Week 1 Activity: Web Design
beacharts.ca/art110/web-design

And here’s a little How 2 Setup Your Website Video Tutorial:

Setting Up Your WordPress.com ePortfolio from Glenn Zucman on Vimeo.

The Class

Every Tuesday we’ll meet in UT-108. We’ll talk about some of the Activities you guys created last week, and go over the info for this week. Every Thursday we’ll meet at the CSULB School of Art, Art Gallery Courtyard located in between FA2 & FA3. There are 5 Art Galleries there:
• Dutzi Gallery
• Werby Gallery
• Merlino Gallery
• Gatov Gallery East
• Gatov Gallery West

There’s a new set of Student Art Exhibitions there every week. On Thursdays you can look at the art, have a conversation with one of the artists, have a conversation with an Art110 classmate, and do at least part of the weekly Activity.

Conversations

In your Conversations and your “analytic” blog posts about them, try not to get bogged down in lists of facts, but instead try to understand something important. You’ll have a chance to see a lot of different work in the student galleries this semester. Some of it might be easy, accessible, and exciting for you. Some of it might be cofusing or even off-putting for you. One thing that’s true, in all cases you’ll be looking at months or even years of someone’s work. Their “language” might be hard or easy for you to understand and their ideas might seem compelling or confusing, but try to understand something of the artist, their work, and their process. Just like you they’re human beings who work hard and strive to do important and powerful things.

Similarly with your Classmate Conversations, try not to obsess over facts and small details, but instead try to learn something about this person and try to discover how the two of you see the art in the galleries similarly or different.

When you write up these conversations tying things to Art, Culture, Life, and Personal Experience is more important than just typing out a lot of mechanical facts. If you’re not sure what to say, sometimes starting with the details can be a nice way to get talking about something, but try to come to a place of personal understanding before you finish. If you can explain something real and important about this Artist or Classmate, then you’ll have made that conversation your own and it can be a small part of your CSULB journey and of your life journey.

LMK

I’m excited to be spending a part of your Fall ’14 semester with you. LMK when you have questions about anything. Or if you’re curious about any art ideas. Have a great year!

— Glenn

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