The Big List
- Kurt Schwitters
-> his studio, his happenings, his poetry - Elsworth Kelly
-> favorite dude of Mr. F(See below) - John Cage
-> another favorite dude of Mr. F … indeterminancy, prepared piano, notations (book) - Fredrich Schinkel, 19th century romantic era
- Cranbrook folks
-> the school during the ‘40s, mom and pop Eames - Swiss graphic design
-> 1950s to present day - Fluxus, graphic design
- Canadian graphic design/film
-> 1960s to late ‘70s (Treudeau era) ... http://www.gdc.net/index.php - Mies Van Der Rohe
-> details, relation to landscape, urban relations - Peter Zumthor, Swiss
- Herzog and De Murion
-> early work to 1997 - Violet Le Duc, 19th century historian, architect
- Alberto Perez-Gomez
-> theorist, direction good, importance of imagination, critique of technology - Alexander Calder
-> for importance of play in one’s work - Henry Moore
-> for the importance of surface and detail and what “figure” can say - Minimalism and Conceptual art
-> the movement from the 1960s to ‘70s (Sol Lewit, Carl Andre) - Traditional construction
-> Japan, for wood details; Peru (Inca) for stone details; Greece (Ancient, Byzantine) for stone; Hopewell/Adena for earth dwellings and their enclosures - Gottfried Semper
-> 19th century elements of architecture … mound, hearth, dressing (screen), roof (shelter) - Computer intelligence
-> Besides Kevin Warwick … Hubert Dreyfus and John R. Searle of UC-Berkley; and David Michel Leven at Northwestern - Phenonmenology
-> Dreyfus (wrote intro to: Being and Time, Being in the World), Martin Heidegger - Victor Jara
-> http://www.msu.edu/~chapmanb/jara/eindex.html
NOTE: Mr. F is my husband and inspiration for creating this hefty list.
Jul 05, 2007, 05:59PM PDT | 0 comments
learn to self-publish on the web
Jan 18, 2007, 09:45PM PST | 0 comments
For a few months, I’ve been thinking about what I need to do to seriously work on this goal relating to my career.
Working for a daily newspaper, it has been very clear ever since the internet became “public domain,” that newspaper companies and their employees were going to have to rethink how to get the message out effectively, clearly, quickly and most of all easily accessibly.
Evolve or die.
Like most newspapers, ours basically ignored this fact until this past year when 2006 became the year of plummeting circulation, fewer ad revenue, craigslist popularity … thus, major layoffs, retirement buyouts, etc. Yes, these trends have been here for awhile, but 2006 was dramatic. The trend will only continue.
So what does a middle-aged visual journalist do with the prospect of being down-sized in the next few years?
Get her shit together. And double-quick.
- Improve my skills by at least 15 percent this year. Thankfully, I have a good assessment of what current skills I need to improve.
- Learn new software by at least 15 percent this year.
- As far as new media is concerned: I need to figure out which direction I must focus and start plowing through.
This last task seems difficult. Where do I start? Technology is changing so quickly, I don’t know where to begin. What will be obsolete in six months? What has staying power? Or what can I learn that is a jumping off point to the next generation of technology?
- Continue to assess online media groups and stick with the ones that definitely “see” the future and embrace it. Learn with them.
*Also, I want to solicit ideas from those individuals who are actively embracing new technologies and will continue to do so over time.
With all that said:
I need a nap.
Jan 07, 2007, 07:37PM PST | 2 cheers | 0 comments
This can be a subgoal to “continue to learn.”
So I’m moving it off of the big list, which seems to be getting redundant with some goals.
Dec 08, 2006, 09:28PM PST | 1 cheer | 0 comments