Tuesday, October 26, 2004

MR.CHRISTMASTREE is the driving force behind UNETHICAL productions, He is a madman and a workaholic. Ethics mean nothing to this man, only sucess. Sometimes his ideas are a bit off, with products like the toaster fork, or magnetic floppydisk holder.
 
susie bicrazorblade is pure evil. the work spunk could not describe. she is youthful rebellion. There are two sides to her. She is both the subject of marketing and the audience for the products of UP.

Monday, October 25, 2004

my computer makes obnoxious beeping noises... i watched "not annother teen movie" i thought it was like scary movie without the quality of writing, acting or the scary...

Sunday, October 24, 2004

COOL VIDEO WORK

http://www.syndromestudio.com/syn_main.html

PRETTY SITE

http://www.mypetskeleton.com/

http://www.kubicki.info/index_beks.html

http://www.beksinski.pl/

http://cmart.design.ru/

 

NICE AND CLEAN

http://www.xl5design.com/

 
for those who believe in god, no explaination is nescessary, for those who do not no explaination is possible

essay

Brad isdrab Watkins

#0539232

 

 

 

How does Adorno define total society? What is the dialectic of enlightenment? How does society co-opt art in the process of creating the “culture industry”? Why does Adorno focus so much on modernism as his paradigm? How does fragmentation fit into what he is getting at? What is the relationship between truth and the work of art?

 

 

“Total society also attempts to co-opt art and rid it of its moment of opposition to the status quo.”

 

Society lost its chance at enlightenment by appeasing its own antagonisms. This is known as the dialectic of enlightenment. Rather than overcome obstacles, it merely appeases them, and in doing so takes them into itself. The proletariat (working man) has been integrated into the very fabric of the society. Society has neutered him of his chance to be heard. Any revolutionary potential is gone. In this way the total society is the society that has removed all oppositional thought. By integrating these opposing forces the society is made total.

The mechanism by which it does this is referred to as “The culture industry”. The culture industry (the example is Hollywood) makes things that would be mistaken for art. However these things have no content, that is to say that there is no thought stimulated by these things. The products of the culture industry are merely sources of passive entertainment. One could easily think of movies such as “American Pie”. The people in turn accept this “art”-product, and in consuming it are entertained, however this entertainment is actually only the absence of critical thought.

The public can participate in “art” like this without risk of having revolutionary thoughts, without risk of challenging the industry itself. The things it makes are mass produced commodities. These are created to fulfill a function within the society, namely to keep people sedate (TV as the opiate of the masses). While the products of the culture industry do fulfill a need for the people who consume them, it is important to note that those needs are also a manufactured product of the culture industry.

Art in contrast to the “art”-products of the culture industry, is both an effect of the social, and is autonomous. The work of art is a monad. While it is linked to the social sphere, it is also free from the rules and laws ordering it. “The unsolved antagonisms of reality return again in the works of art as the immanent problems of their form.” It is the role of Art to resist the mainstream culture. Art is a tool to destroy the total society. Any constructive effort made towards society would only be taken in to the culture industry.

Adorno’s interest is in non-realist work. He favors the microcosm, the fractured element. His view of the potential of art is like that of a hammer, a tool to use to take down the establishment of the total society. He is very interested in the fragment that hints at the whole, the party from which can be deduced a world. This is the only thing that makes sense compared to the thought produced by the system, which only negates its own moment. Adorno dislikes unity and harmony in work. He is very interested in the fragment that hints at the whole, the party from which can be deduced a world. . “Art of the highest order pushes beyond form as totality toward fragmentation.”

Truth is contained within the great work of Art. But the entirety of this Truth is unexplainable. This is the Truth that provokes thought, that challenges Philosophy to explain it. This Truth contained in Art is art in need of an interpreter. In order to gain translation into language, Art needs a participant. The Truth in Art only becomes apparent when it is interpreted, and neither the Truth nor the Art are erased in the translation. The work of Art remains enigmatic even after interpretation.

The process of receiving this truth is not a passive one. One does not simply glance over at the work of art and receive enlightenment. This process takes active participation on the part of the recipient. The viewer must look at the work and think. Through this contemplation the self falls away and the work is seen from the point of objectivity. That is where truth occurs in art.

 

more movies

i watched American Pie 2 while i worked on some of the buildings for the city we're building for the show in Feb at a.d. gallery,
 
and while i wrote some essays on Modernism I have been watching Stanley and Livingstone. what can I say its a classic, so the shots are a bit longer than I'd like for them to be, but the quality of filmmaking is enough to merrit watching... I may post the essays soon.
 
"Doctor Livingston I presume..."
 
brad isdrab

orson welles

i heard a story about orson welles, apparently there was no law restricting ambulences to use in medical emergencies. what he would do is hire them to take him from the stage to the radio studio, his busy schedule wouldn't allow for waiting in traffic...
 
badass

cool ass robots

i really dig this stuff
 

more movies

watched face off
and
all about eve (yes, again)

hmmm...

did you see the one with the two clowns fucking?
 
yeah it was fucking in tents...
 
two hyhenas are eating a clown, one looks at the other and asks does this taste funny to you?

Saturday, October 23, 2004

movies

well it shows how quickly i forget, and/or lose interest, i forgot to add the movies i've watched in the last couple days to the list... i will try to recount...
 
the robe (omg, this concept is ridiculous, a roman after buying a greek slave and crucifying jesus, gets cursed by the magic robe of christ. In his quest to break the curse by destroying the robe both he and the slave become christian and end up having to face caligula... wow)
 
snows of kilamonjaro (so technically i havn't finished watching this one, but i will, no really i will... i just haven't been able to sit through it yet... soooo slow)
 
operavox (rigoletto is one of the very besty stop motion shorts i have ever seen...ever)
 
kalifornia (i totally forgot Brad Pit was in this...)
 
all about eve( pretty good)
 
over the top (makes me want to arm wrestle...)
 
league of extrordinary gentlemen ( at this point this one is  background noise, although hyde is still impressive)
 

Monday, October 18, 2004

sometimes it really feels like i am a little kid, pretending to be an adult
 
-brad

freud duchamp

 

Freudian analysis

 

The piece I would like to build up to is Etant Donns (1946-66), by Marcel Duchamp. However but to fully understand this piece, you need to have a understanding of an earlier piece of his.

"The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even" (called The Large Glass for
short) and Etant Donns are opposite views of the same thing. The former
occurs in an unseen, abstract which could be the unconscious; the latter occurs in the visible world that surrounds us.

The Large Glass isn't a painting, not in any normal sense. It is really the
representation of a complex concept. The execution was
completely modern, made of a wide variety of media: paint, lead wire, mirror
plating, foil, dust, two large plates of glass, and one above the other. 
DuchampÂ’s notes for The Large Glass are essential to understanding his
intent. He said the notes were meant to complement the visual experience,
and we are extraordinarily lucky to have them so that we can begin to unravel
this massive work.

In this work, Duchamp created a world occupied by enigmatic symbolic
objects. The Large Glass is an analytical diagram of the interactions
between abstract forces, as represented by these objects. This seems to
start in a realm that Freud would be quite comfortable in. We begin with
symbols so abstracted that they no longer appeal to the sense of sight,
Duchamp is working in the realm of the unconscious, and he chooses to break
away from any preconceived notions of representational art, and communicate
in a language of his own.

"[The Nietzschean] search for the undiscovered country, and the movement
towards a realm that is not immediately experienced, but that will
eventually be penetrated, inform Freud's concept of the unconscious..."
(Norman Cantor, the American Century)

Duchamp shares a lot with Freud. There exists a parallel in their essential
duality. The major duality for Freud is the unconscious and the conscious
mind, whereas for Duchamp seems to divide his work between representational
and intellectual, those things presented to the senses and those equated in
the mind.

What is depicted on The Large Glass is a sequence of actions, suspended in
time. ThatÂ’s why Duchamp subtitled it a delay in glass. We can distinguish
two cyclical sequences within the action on the glass. The first sequence
describes the courtship of a bride by her suitors. Lets call it the Amorous
Pursuit.  It is an attempt to chart; desire, eroticism, courtship ...  This
sequence describes an erotically charged encounter between human beings and
is portrayed as a system of abstract interacting forces.

In this way Duchamp shares ideas of the motivation and driving forces with
Freud.  The nature of this encounter is open to interpretation. It could
mean sexual intercourse, or wedding vows, or an exchange of flirtatious
glances. It can mean all of these at once, but according to Freud they are
all motivated by the libido. Freud believed in the primacy of the libido,
the sex drive. The id is the force, which is essentially perpetuating the
Large Glass. The pleasure principle, which encourages the process.

The surrealist horizon divides the image in two halves the bride and her
suitors.  He referred to this horizon as, the garment of the Bride, which
could also be the boundary of her fleshly being or the threshold of her
psyche.  It is a universe of dualities: airborne femininity versus
earthbound masculinity; fluid, amorphous forms versus dry, rigid, crisply
delineated forms. Most broadly, it is the domain of the creative feminine id
above, and the reactive masculine ego below. Both of these are under siege
by outside forces, chance, fate, and destiny the other sequence describes
these influences, of chance and destiny.

The Fate Machine is an imaginary mechanical contraption, which represents the
interaction of chance and destiny, and for the sake of this discussion it
will represent the super ego, the stifling of outside forces. It consists
of graphic drawings of imaginary mechanical apparatus, each representing an
aspect of fate, chance, the unpredictable, destiny, and the inevitable. A
giant pair of scissors represent the place where the unpredictable
intersects with the inevitable.

Between the blades of the Scissors are what Duchamp called the Eyewitnesses.
This consists of a peephole called the Mandala and three opticians charts.
If you were to peek through the Mandala, you would see none of the Large
Glass. You would look through the glass into the space beyond it, into the
visible world that surrounds you. The Mandala is a peephole, which reveals
nothing because the world of The Large Glass is a realm of unseen, abstract
forces, like the forces at play in the unconscious mind.

The story of the Amorous Pursuit begins in the airborne sphere. The Bride is
an almost insectoid amorphous cluster of semi-visceral, semi-mechanical
forms. She has shed her physical form completely, revealing a naked
instinctual self is stripped bare; she embodies expansive, uninhibited
desire. Specifically think of her as the id, not just the object of desire
but also the desire itself. In the halo above her are broadcast dreams and
desires, in effort to communicate with the lower picture plane. Within the
Halo are unpainted blank sections called the Nets, which function like
openings to the suitors, opportunities.

The Amorous Pursuit begins with the Bride, for as Duchamp puts it she
suffuses the bachelorÂ’s realm with an invisible love gasoline. The Vapors
represent the brideÂ’s erotic impulse. It is free-floating and pervasive.

Below her, nine balloon-like pods called the Malic Molds are stimulated by
the vapors. The Malic Molds are the suitors of this story, the masculine
principle. They are the Brides antithesis, embodying inhibited,
self-centered desire. Alternatively, they could be seen as Freud's Ego. Gas
forms within the bachelor molds, and as they inflate they imbue the gas with
their distinctive characteristics. The gas represents the bachelors' erotic
impulse. Its primary condition is that of constraint. The gas is bottled up
inside the mold, unable to interact directly with the free-floating vapors
of the Bride.

The bachelor gas is siphoned out of the molds into conduits called the
Capillary Tubes, which converge at their tips. Exiting the tubes, the
bachelor gas is captured by a series of Sieves, where its trajectory is
inverted. In the Sieves, the bachelor gas is homogenized and liquefied. The
image that comes to mind is semen building in the glands. What began as nine
distinctive responses to the overtures of the Bride has built up to a single
potential to squirt. The "bachelor fluid" rebounds, splitting into nine
distinct spurts. This has obvious sexual overtones, to orgasm and
ejaculation. (Much of this can be seen as a thinly disguised anatomy
lesson,)

The Splash is the bachelorsÂ’ response, unconstrained at last. It could
represent seminal fluid, or a flirtatious glance, or a marriage proposal. As
they hurtle upward, the Splash trails must pass between the blades of the
Scissors of fate. Their paths may or may not be disrupted, depending on
chance. The intersection of the Fate Machine and the Amorous Pursuit
represents the forces of fate that may disrupt the bachelors.

Crossing the Horizon can mean unveiling the Bride, denuding her figure, 
physically penetrating her (the act of coitus,) or breaching her mysterious
psyche, and perhaps having some kind of real contact. In the abstract world
of The Large Glass, it can mean all these things at once.

But, having penetrated the Brides realm, the bachelors' fluid misses the
Nets completely, and they vanish from view, leaving behind nine holes
drilled in the glass.

Which brings me to the piece I originally wanted to discuss. The full title
comes from one of Duchamp's notes for The Large Glass: Etant donns: 1. la
chute deau 2. le gaz dclairage. In English: Given: 1. the waterfall 2.
the lighting gas. Water and gas are the elements animating both The Large
Glass and Etant Donns. But from these common premises the two pieces
proceed to astonishingly different ends.
From an artist who enjoyed contradiction, Etant Donns may be his most
surprising. It is thoroughly unlike anything Duchamp made before. Its high
degree of craft is startling from someone who sought to remove the hand of
the artist from the creation of art with ideas like his ready-mades. Its
visual appeal is surprising coming from an artist who disdained "retinal
art".

The piece presents the viewer with a massive wooden door. On it you find two
peepholes. Behind the door is a three-dimensional construction, a diorama.
There, in midday lighting a naked woman sprawls on a bed of dry twigs, face
turned away, with her legs spread, exposing her vagina. The voyeur strains,
unsuccessfully, to see the "face" of the eerily realistic nude female form
, which lies supine on a bed of twigs. The voyeur is now the suitor, eternally
unsuccessful in his attempt to get through to the bride, the door becomes
the horizon. Included in The Large Glass was a peephole into the visible
world, which revealed nothing. Here, the peephole reveals all.

The mechanisms are still present but now they only exist in the abstract
realm.  The two works combine in the mind of the viewer to create an
epiphany, the same idea communicated in opposite means.  Taken together
these works speak simultaneously to either part of a person, when inner and
outer worlds merge, the mind and the senses.

It is, in the end, a comical look at the uncertainties of human romantic
aspirations. The absence of any real contact between the bride and her
suitors seems very existentialist, like in Sartre's "No Exit", there is an
attempted communication between the bride and her suitors, but they never
really break across the center horizon line. Each element is essentially
alone in the end.

todays movies

i finially saw Cecil B. Demented, thought it was good, like john waters does existo
and i saw audition, awfully slow at first, but it got weird, and the editing was excellent

Sunday, October 17, 2004

 
 
is it good? i'm not sure yet, i should offer to do their music videos
 
good comic, i actually like it

these guys are cool

i need this, need to find this, there is too little of this in my life, real life, not
 
http://www.irishwriters-online.com/conormcpherson.html

IMDb user comments for
One of the best from the series The Complete Beckett. Gambon is dreadful and brilliant. I found myself utterly riveted. As the TV ads here said when the full series was shown recently, many will find Beckett pointless. A fortunate few will find him brilliant. Thank heavens this series was made

Endgame (2000)

movies

    in effort to keep better track of my mind, i have decided to write down the movies i watch, lets see how long i can keep this up...
 
last night,
run ronnie run... amusing, alot funnier then i expected
snatch... still one of my all time favorites
 
today,
texas chainsaw massacre part 2
thing

nice work

 
 
brilliant aftereffects animation with CONTENT...
 
 
cute flash

We Have Decided Not To Die

this trailer looks wonderful, i wish i could see the whole thing...
 
 
erik fensler - comic genius, or something like that
 
 
 
why i shouldn't make a kids show...
 
 
i need
 
i'm almosy embarrased for him...
 
 

pic


Saturday, October 16, 2004

Re: some links




really fucking cool flash site...kinda makes me want to learn swift 3d, i hate myself for thinking that
http://www.2advanced.com/flashindex.htm

art i like
http://www.btinternet.com/~brain.love/artad.html

oh my god
http://www.cthulhulives.org/Musical/cdinfo.html

developmental drawing... where am i?
http://aaalab.stanford.edu/child_development/dev_drawing.html

my new desk, actually i want to do my whole room like this
http://www.console-manufacturers.com/

i like their attitude, i wonder what they can make for me...
http://www.bannermarketinggroup.com/#NGAT

Friday, October 15, 2004