Friday, February 14, 2014

Photoshop Artist Statement


Kelsey Best
Digital Creativity
Project 1: Photoshop Postcard

            The place I have chosen to feature in my photoshopping project is my car. This in itself is interesting because not many people would consider a car to be a “place”, but more of a means of getting from place to place. For me, I consider my car to be a place as well as a means of transition, simply because it is often the only place I can go to be alone. In a world full of busy streets, roommates and crowded classrooms, my car acts as a shelter. The comfort I experience when I’m in this space is the aspect I want to examine in my work. I have been fortunate enough to avoid any sort of accident in my car thus far, and have attempted to create a life-threatening scenario that would eradicate all sense of comfort and safety.
            My first postcard depicts my passenger side door and window. On the inside of the car, all is calm. Likewise, the side view mirror shows a clear sky and empty street. However, a raging fire from a neighboring car is shown through the window with emergency lights seeping in through the ceiling and walls. The feeling I worked to portray is panic. I want the viewer to experience that sinking feeling of dread when they allow themselves to become absorbed by the visual experience. The use of the side mirror is but one option in choosing surrealist techniques to alter reality. It could be reflecting the recent past, before becoming engaged in an accident, or perhaps a manifestation of where the driver should be in an alternate reality.
            The second postcard is made with a photo of the ceiling of my car, accompanied by a cropped image of the rear view mirror hanging from the windshield. The sky and treetops showing through the windshield have been altered in a chilling away. Again, alarm is the primary emotion that has been instilled into this photo. An inverted color scheme and transparent layer of tree trunks work to build the illusion that the car has crashed. A ghostly black and white reflection in the rear view mirror is reminiscent of skeletal structures or perhaps the bars of a cage. The white tree branches that stretch across the background are meant to remind the viewer of veins or perhaps the nervous system, hinting at our own fragility and mortality.
            My last postcard involves my hand as well as the steering wheel. This immediately references the relationship between my body and the car itself. The idea that a person can be in control of something so powerful is somewhat wishful. Cars will do what we ask most of the time, however, people will often describe a car accident as “losing control of the vehicle”. I worked to represent this notion with repetition and layering to create movement. A frantic jerking of the wheel is a typical reaction in such situations, and this type of frenzied motion often makes the situation worse. By inverting certain sections, I have suggested a lapse of time or perhaps a flashing between the present and future.
            The idea of taking a false sense of security and flipping it on itself is explored in these works. Together and separate, they suggest a chilling narrative. I feel that this is a relevant topic in today’s world simply because of our attitudes toward our cars as a society. Useful, necessary and often taken for granted. Creating and viewing work like mine reminds us that a car is a dangerous place to be, no matter how safe you feel.

Photoshop Postcards




Friday, January 17, 2014

What is Creativity?

What is creativity?

     Creativity is, simply put, the ability to create something as a means of further analysis or inquiry of the world. It is the avenue through which novel ideas travel into reality. Artistically speaking, creativity is the specific ability to either do that which has never been done, or to change that which has already been done in a profound way. Similarly to the idea of invention, one can either invent a new object or find a different use for a preexisting object. Creativity is liberation. Having said this, creativity is not the same as intelligence and it is not the same as artistic. A person can be all of these things, as they often go hand in hand with each other. However, an intelligent person is not necessarily creative just as an artistic person is not necessarily creative. Similarities exist between them, but several differences exist as well.


Am I creative? How can creativity be learned?

     I do consider myself to be a creative person. However, creativity was not innate for me. It was a long, gradual process that is still under construction. Creativity is learned by first studying people who are already recognized as being creative and learning about the methods they used to either change or manifest a new idea. One must also learn to be observant and take note of things that are often overlooked, as profound truths about the world are everywhere. Taking the information learned about the history of creativity and it's methods, one can then apply it to the modern world so that it makes sense in the present context.


Why is creativity especially important now?

     Creativity is crucial now more than ever because we are living in the era of rapid societal change. New technologies and advances in science demand that we keep up in order to function, and realizing that there is more than one solution to every problem is an important first step to a creative approach. As a future art educator, I personally feel that creativity is crucial for optimum mental health. Creativity is one of many healthy outlets for extreme thoughts and emotions, and it can be used as a means of communication. It acts as a translator between people who may not speak the same language, whether literally or figuratively.


How can technology be used to enhance creativity in learning through the visual art?

     Technology is a great tool to use in the quest for creativity. Like uncorking a wine bottle, technology taps into people who may not have technical painting skills or the means to make a bronze sculpture. It opens up the exclusive Creativity Club, so to speak, to a wider range of people. Great visual arts can be produced digitally, broadening our educations with this new medium.



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