39 posts tagged “art”
SECOR GALLERY PRESENTS EXHIBITION OF DIGITAL & INSTALLATION ART
Exhibition Features Toledo Area Artists: Fred Leighton and Fontana
February 7th marked the opening of an exhibit of new artworks at The Secor Gallery located at 425 Jefferson Avenue Toledo, Ohio, 43604, across from the newly constructed Lucas County Arena. The exhibition features the artworks of artists Fred Leighton and the collaborative husband-wife team of Anthony and Sandra Fontana, simply called Fontana. The opening reception was held on Saturday, February 7th from 6-9pm. On display until Saturday, February 21st, this show features installation art, machinima animation, and digital prints. (Check this blog again for the full machinima).
The Secret of Bigfoot Pass
In The Secret of Bigfoot Pass, Fred Leighton has created a large cube comprised of plexiglass, fiber and computer-controlled LED lights along with several digital 3D analygraphic printed images. The title of the work refers to the 1976 TV show and paperback of the same name featuring the Six Million Dollar Man character, Steve Austin. In the story, the legend of Sasquatch is explained as a cyborg created by Alien explorers. Half-man, half-machine himself, Steve Austin confronts Bigfoot and the extra-terrestrials. In this group of works, the artists explores the significance of these characters and the popularity of the themes and subject matter in mid 1970s America, a fascination that continues to today.
Fred Leighton was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1965. He holds a BA from The University of Michigan where he majored in History of Art and an MFA from Savannah College of Art and Design where he studied Interactive Design and Game Development. As Developer and Producer, Leighton has been recognized by HOW, PRINT, WIRED, and Mac Art & Design for his creativity in developing interactive media projects for subjects including artists Rev. Howard Finster and Joe Coleman. Leighton uses physical computing, interactive installation, digital images and sound, online interactivity, and game design to create interactive artworks. Fred Leighton is currently an Instructor in Visual Communications Technology at Bowling Green State University.
We Are Avatars
Since 2005, Fontana has been investigating virtual identities in online social platforms, their economies, and the ways in which relationships are represented in digital forms. In this body of work the Fontana's collaborative search for distinct ways of documenting their avatar's experiences and memories can be seen through blended reality installations, altered avatar representations, and machinima animations. Through their artworks, Fontana's search begins with their digital documentation of their daily lives on social networks, such as Facebook and Twitter, extends through their alternate, imagined, and "real" personas in virtual worlds such as Second Life, and burgeons forth into a space where viewers are able to question the paradox: "Is the virtual real?"
Anthony Fontana has been exhibiting artworks in and about online virtual worlds since 2005 and began creating machinima animaitons using the virtual world of Second Life in 2007 as a way to tell stories connected to humans, yet beyond the experiences of one's own body. He earned an MFA in Painting from Northern Illinois University in 2004 and a BFA in painting from the Columbus College of Art and Design in 2001. Sandra Fontana has worked as a professional photographer and homemaker for the last 7 years. She has toured the country shooting beauty pageants, school portraits, and often using her own children as subjects. Her favorite subject has always been herself, shooting several hundred self-portraits over the last decade. In 2001, Sandra earned a BFA in Photography from the Columbus College of Art and Design.
*****
If you would like to schedule a visit to the gallery or need more information about the exhibition or artists please contact Fred Leighton at fred@artsdigital.com, visit www.ArtsDigital.com, or www.AnthonyFontana.com.
This work is the first by the collaborative husband and wife team known as Fontana. By reflecting on individual personalities and real world identities, similarities between virtual world persona's are expressed through emotive animations common to the Second Life avatar, yet intriguingly unique. These works begin to examine the emerging language of machinima (machine-made-cinema) and its role in the continuum of traditional cinema language; machinima that documents and expresses the memories and experiences of avatars. Through a large aggregation of images, videos, and installations based on the accumulated inventory of the Fontana avatars, Anthony and Sandra supply the viewer with information that is both identifiable and indifferent; bridging connections with those who understand the virtual world phenomenon and those who have not yet begun to understand its impact on society at large.
Some Flickr pics:
Nebulosis Servine's installation work: The Chasm
This machinima debuted last weekend at The Fuse Factory in Columbus, Ohio for their inaugural exhibition: "Ignition".
I am currently working on re-shooting most of this work and creating a working prototype of the menu bar in Second Life.
I arrived in Dallas with the sun shiny and warm and then never saw it again. It rained, the wind blew... it was very gray.
I attended a panel on art blogging at The Dallas Contemporary where I met Duncan from the Bad at Sports podcast; a Chicago/San Fran art thing. There was also a really great show up which you can see here. The show incorporated short videos from several different artists which were made daily. The works were being sent via email or upload to the DC and hosted on the website. My favorite work was by artist Maria Olsen, who later presented at the New Media Caucus panel on Newer Media (she was sick and in NY, so she sent a video of herself for the presentation).
The last night I was there I went to a fashion show my friend Patric Lichty was involved with called "Social Fabrics". Each work looked at social interaction as the main concept. Some were functional pieces and some where artistic. The two pics I have here show an electrical interference cloak and two people wearing "vacuole bags" that made a variety of sounds as they moved. For more on wearable social arts check out the latest issue of Intelligent Agent, a free downloadable arts journal on Lulu.com.
I also presented at the conference (1st pic on right). My presentation will be recorded with the slides and put on my new blog (The Polychronic Classroom will be moving):
The Multichronic Classroom.
I'm struggling to get in the grove today... working on an illustration job and I just can't seem to get back in the swing of it. I hate getting out of practice.
Anyway, I thought I'd share the progress on this work, from sketch to illustrator image. I recently discovered the open source version of the vector drawing program illustrator called "Inkscape." It seems to work just great! I just haven't had the time to figure out all the shortcuts... so for this job, I'm still working in Illustrator. Actually the little model building here was made in Google Sketch Up and then "traced" in Illustrator.
I'll post the final when I'm done.
I'm not a big Bjork fan but I am a huge Michel Gondry fan (Eternal Sunshine). This video has wild environment which is obviously about art making. Check it out.
I know I've been quiet lately... I've been busy! Here's a few shots of the Machinima I am making for a show at The Gallery Project in September.