Author Archive

Farewell

Posted in abstract, Art, Jason Gray with tags , , , , on May 25, 2012 by Jason Gray

As some of you may know, I am experiencing two significant moments of my life (adopting/becoming a parent and going back to school), and this has made it very difficult to continue to post my weekly contributions to d’Arte Board. So, with some regret, I am resigning from my post at this blog. I have made several excellent friends, and many more interesting acquaintances, through d’Arte Board, and I hope that you all will follow my much less frequent posts to my personal blog, Hours of Idleness.

Nonetheless, I have invited my friend, Galina Todorova, to take over for me. Galina is a noted painter who lives and works in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Her posts will begin next Friday, so please show her some support. I have spent many long hours discussing painting with her, and I feel like her points of view and passion for art will be a welcome addition to d’Arte Board.

I have included a few examples of her work after the jump–> Read more »

Donna Summer

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , on May 18, 2012 by Jason Gray

It’s been a rough week in terms of producing artwork. Unfortunately also, Donna Summer died, and so here’s a Friday night music video tribute:

Andreas Gursky

Posted in Jason Gray with tags on May 11, 2012 by Jason Gray

Many people know Andreas Gursky from the prices that his images command (twice, his photographs have set records for the amount paid), and possibly also for their scale (his images often are printed as large as some Abstract Expressionist works).  However, Gursky is less understood for his approach to photography, an approach that is as equally contemplative as it is controlled.

“The significant step from representational depiction to representational photographic design comes when the subject, the motif, is no longer shot for its own sake, but is demoted from its own meaning to the status of an object of the design intention.”[1] This quote summates the transition, from one to the other, of the two major, Post-Modern approaches to representational photography, New Topographics and the Dusseldorf School.  While included in the first New Topographics exhibition, Hilla and Bernd Becher were technically the founders of the Dusseldorf School.  The Bechers’ students at Kunstakademie Dusseldorf in Germany, and those students’ intellectual diaspora, represented this new approach, which differed primarily from the first one in that, while the New Topographics were engaged in showing the results of human occupation (depiction), the Dusseldorf School were interested in reorganizing the world in front of their camera (human beings or not) in a way that suited their vision (design).  This photography, including Gursky’s, is formally a way of cataloguing according to common references, like books in a library, but not so much according to the subject as the photographer’s handling of it. Read more »

Pieter Hugo

Posted in Art with tags on May 4, 2012 by Jason Gray

Pieter Hugo, Cape Town, 2004 (click pic to go to his website)

Photography’s strength is not in straight, historical documentation. This is because photographic truth is always a distortion of reality. To accept the reality inside a photograph as actual reality is to negate the unique and important relationship between the photographer and the viewer. Pieter Hugo has added, saying, “The power of photography is inherently voyeuristic, but I want that desire to look to be confronted.”` This is an attitude with pedigree; one which many photographers, as opposite as Graciela Iturbide and Ansel Adams, adhered to in some degree, but Hugo pushes the example one step further. In the photographs of his home continent of Africa, Mr. Hugo seems to question the role of his viewers (and himself) in the situations that he photographs, and although his images often seem exotic, it is impossible to avoid experiencing an underlying human connection to the pictures. In an Aperture story“ on the photographer, Bronwyn Law-Viljoen quoted the novelist John Fowles to explain this phenomena: “All human modes of description (photographic, mathematical…) are metaphorical. Even the most precise scientific description of an object or a movement is a tissue of metaphors.”“` Law-Viljoen commenced to add, “Hugo understands that a photographic metaphor, a way of describing something through reference to something else, is created as much by the elements inside the frame of the image itself as by the carefully chosen distance, what I have called the critical zone, from the photographer’s lens to his subject. It is within this zone that Hugo maneuvers through the muddy waters of political engagement, documentary responsibility, and the relationship of these to his own aesthetic.” Read more »

Also…

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , on April 13, 2012 by Jason Gray

My wife and I are adopting, which is a darn expensive process. If you’d like to help, and are in the area, please consider stopping by the Trivia Night fundraiser mentioned above. If you are not near St. Louis, and you don’t find my Friday posts too annoying, feel free to contribute by using our Paypal option here.

Diane Arbus and the Snapshot

Posted in Art, Jason Gray with tags , , on April 13, 2012 by Jason Gray

Both the bane and the benefit of photography in the Modern Age is camera technology that enables the novice photographer to produce a convincing photographic representation without much training, artistic inclination, or investment expense. Currently, introductory cameras (point-and-shoot compacts, cell phone cameras, entry-level DSLRs, etc.) are so fully automated that almost anyone can pick one up and immediately make a decent picture. This fact implies that photography is not always as complicated as photographers make it seem. For individuals attempting to professionalize the activity of taking photographs, this represents a dilemma; how does one take advantage of streamlining technology, while at the same time, preserving the role of the operator as a necessary component? The answer, of course, has been for the professional photographer to point to the novice photographer’s images and call them “snapshots”, or images made crudely without regard for photographic conventions.

A “snapshot”.

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Dystopian

Posted in 35mm with tags on April 6, 2012 by Jason Gray

New pics.

Nikon N80 with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens.

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Generate: Collaboration

Posted in Art, art on paper, awareness, Drawing, Jason Gray, Painting, performance, St. Louis, video with tags , , , , , on April 1, 2012 by Jason Gray

Unfortunately, I did not have this quite ready to post on Friday night, so I am usurping Sunday to share it with you. I recently finished a collaboration (maybe the first of more) with St. Louis-based artist, Ann-Maree Walker. The video is part of her project, “Generate”, which was a recent feature of the Luminary Center for the Arts exhibition, Something Happened. My contribution deals with the idea of instantaneity; specifically, its relationship to the public’s perception of how artwork is generated.

See more of Ann-Maree’s “Generate” here.

More stills and the full video after the jump. Read more »

Mississippi Update

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , on March 23, 2012 by Jason Gray

I spent a bit more time out on the Levee recently. I hope to begin printing the results of my labors soon, and exhibiting them soon after that. I’ll keep you posted.

Friday night music vid:

Levee-tation

Posted in Art, Jason Gray with tags on March 9, 2012 by Jason Gray

Recently, I have been working on a new series of images involving work made while out on the Mississippi flood plain. This area is otherworldly, simply put. The levee system near St. Louis consists of several earthen mounds running parallel to the river, and it is obvious from the landscape between them and the river that devastation is a yearly occurrence. My waders on their way. More to come on this series…

Read more »

Place 7

Posted in Art with tags , on March 2, 2012 by Jason Gray

Miles Not Davis

Posted in Art, Jason Gray with tags on February 17, 2012 by Jason Gray

Some of you might recall that post that I did some time ago on the Miles Mausoleum. Anyway, here are the first prints from that session (these are from the 35mm that I shot that day). Definitely more to come on these…

All Nikon 8008s with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens and Kodak T-Max 100 film.

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Place

Posted in Art, Jason Gray with tags , , , on February 3, 2012 by Jason Gray

What’s up, Darteboard? Here are a couple of examples from a photographic experiment that I have been working on.

A Pic and a Video

Posted in Jason Gray with tags on January 27, 2012 by Jason Gray

Pics and Music Videos

Posted in Jason Gray with tags on January 13, 2012 by Jason Gray

Model: Lindsey Davidson

Music: from STL


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Sun-Kissed

Posted in Art with tags on January 6, 2012 by Jason Gray

Location: Springfield, Illinois; Archer Elevator

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Miles Mausoleum

Posted in Art, film, Jason Gray, landscape with tags on December 24, 2011 by Jason Gray

As promised several weeks ago, here are some of the shots that I took on a visit to a nearby abandoned mausoleum. All photos were shot with a Bronica ETRSi and 75mm f/2.8 lens on Kodak T-Max 100 film. Images were scanned, which contributed to the funky color-cast, and appear completely unedited (save the watermark). I’ll include some scans from the final prints at a later time.

From Wikipedia:

Stephen Miles, a veteran of the War of 1812, was buried here by his son Stephen W. Miles. The mausoleum is located atop Eagle Cliff midway between Columbia and Valmeyer in what is known variously as Eagle Cliff Cemetery or Miles Cemetery. Due to its size and position on the bluff, the mausoleum is visible from several miles away, and has thus gained a prominent position in local legend. It has been a frequent target for vandals, and as a result all bodies were removed and reburied elsewhere; the fifty-six crypts are now empty and open, and the door to the mausoleum is gone.

More–> Read more »

Music with Moving Pictures

Posted in Art with tags on December 2, 2011 by Jason Gray

I developed four rolls of film this week from my trek last weekend to an abandoned mausoleum and Civil War era cemetery in Southern Illinois. I hope to have some prints ready to scan by next week.

Biden Thyme

Posted in Art with tags on November 25, 2011 by Jason Gray

Nothing new here except a Friday Night Music Video by Salem (may want to turn your speakers down a bit). Tomorrow, I plan on exploring an abandoned mausoleum, so hopefully that will turn up some goodies for next week.

I’ve been on Hiatus…

Posted in Art with tags on November 18, 2011 by Jason Gray

…and I apologize. It has just been really hard to post lately, and I haven’t done too much art-makin’ neither. Anyway, I hope to have something more for you all soon, but until then, enjoy this friday night music video.

P.S. I am looking for volunteers to pose for my next photo-series. So, if you can make it over to STL, I would love to take your picture!

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