Showing posts with label change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label change. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Changing Scene

Late October can really creep up on you. Where did the summer go? Where did fall go? It snowed the other day.


Photo: Jeremy Clowe / Norman Rockwell Museum
As the seasons turn, I am reminded that our exhibitions will also be changing at Norman Rockwell Museum. This is your last weekend to see Rockwell and Realism in an Abstract World, which ends on October 30.

This exhibition has examined the shifting trends in the art world during the twentieth century, when traditional narrative painting fell out of favor for more conceptual work. Abstract expressionism really took hold in the 1950s, with artists like Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko becoming the new gold standard. Illustrators, on the other hand, attracted even more criticism, and perhaps none more so than Norman Rockwell. Over time the prejudice has faded, and realism has found a place again in the contemporary art scene (fortunately for our Museum). 

My father, an industrial designer, was a big fan of Rockwell but also tried his hand at some Pollock-style paintings back in the day. I don't know that the shifting fashions of the art world, largely fostered by art critics, really bothered him during the AbEx movement. 

Personally, I am attracted to strong expression and concepts in visual art, but equally impressed by a realist approach. This has been an interesting show, inviting visitors to think about what they consider art, and view a style of work not normally on view at our Museum.

I was tasked with creating a video for the exhibition. Once again, I had the pleasure of visiting a handful of artists in their studios (Marshall Arisman, Robert Cottingham, Eric Forstmann) and learning about their background and work. It's quite a window for me, and useful in my own knowledge of the creative process.



The challenge comes in putting it all together. Not to overstate things, but it is like approaching a blank canvas. In this case, the video was narrative, so I needed to figure out how to connect the artists' various stories. I enjoy letting personalities come through, and have been told that I have a knack for making people feel comfortable in front of the camera. Indeed, Robert Cottingham became so relaxed, that I just kept rolling as the photorealist settled into painting in his studio (it's my favorite part of the finished video). 


Sound + vision: interviewing Marshall Arisman in his NYC studio, May 2016. 
Happy with the material I collected, I faced a bit of a creative obstacle when it came time to edit. As I separated the audio channels, I discovered that the lavalier mic I had been using was spotty. In most cases, the on-camera mic was a suitable backup, but some of the rooms proved less conducive to our recording. A hard lesson to learn in the middle of post-production. Oy. 

Making the most of a stressful situation, I got a crash course in audio sweetening. Delving into my Adobe Audition and old Soundtrack Pro software, I learned a thing of two about EQ, compression, and high/low pass filtering. I appreciated the help from experts who explained possible solutions. Once I worked out some of these kinks, I was able to find a couple great jazz tracks that helped the flow and really brought the piece together. 

Onward! Our next show should be fun: a look at the art of animation studio Hanna-Barbera. I grew up with those cartoons, and had the opportunity to conduct a promo video with two of the original animators. Stay "tooned." 

In other news, the Museum recently received a generous grant from the George Lucas Family Foundation to support its multimedia efforts, and has initiated a feasibility study to look at expansion. A wise philosopher once said: "There is nothing more constant than change."

View from the office. Photo: Jeremy Clowe / Norman Rockwell Museum

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Talk To The Hand

Today at work I conducted an interview with a hand model...... yes, it's come to this. And to think, back in 2005 I was on the red carpet at New York Fashion Week... at least the image is cool.

I keep thinking about the White House videographer... wonder what he's up to this week. I didn't watch much of the convention last night, but it sounds like Michelle Obama "knocked it out of the park..." at least that's the term I keep hearing... seriously, find a new metaphor!

Image: atriam.threadless.com (JFMan66)

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Shoot The Moon

I've been having trouble sleeping lately.... not quite insomnia, but I have been regularly waking up at 3 or 4 in the morning over the last couple weeks... It's pissing me off. 

I think what has been keeping me from sleep is a constant wondering of how I am going to move forward in certain areas... how I'm going to complete various video productions that I have lying around... how I can find sustained fulfillment as a creative person. 

I have been trying some new tactics... figuring out ways to get ahead of things in my day-to-day... budget my time more effectively.

News came over the weekend that astronaut Neil Armstrong had passed away. I was born exactly a year after the historic Apollo 11 spacecraft landed on the moon, and Armstrong took his "one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." I can only imagine what   the world was feeling on July 20, 1969... a sense of wonder and hope... achieving the impossible... especially after a decade that had ended so violently...



Instead, I grew up in a time where space travel and flights to the moon had become routine events... only perhaps fully realizing the risks involved after the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in 1986. I have, however, grown up in a time of great changes and achievement... the development of the internet... smartphones... that boggles my mind, after growing up in the era of the landline phone.

I have had the opportunity to interview an astronaut: Story Musgrave flew several missions for NASA, repairing the Hubble Space Telescope along the way. He grew up on the Linwood Estate in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, which is now the grounds of Norman Rockwell Museum. When I interviewed him at the Museum back in 2004, Musgrave talked about growing up on the former farm property, climbing up trees and running tractors at an early age. He had a very peaceful and philosophical sense about him... something I gathered he might have acquired from viewing the world outside of our own. 

Apparently Neil Armstrong also grew up in a small town, mastering flight even before he got his driver's license. People talk about how, despite his great achievements, he was a humble and quiet man--he avoided the spotlight.

I'm interested in learning more about individuals who reach such heights... literally. What type of character finds a way to mount the insurmountable? Now that is humbling... maybe it is about just doing your thing... not giving up... operating from the gut. Maybe certain people don't have this type of personality... this level of intelligence...

One thing I appreciated from my wedding was when the rabbi listed the favorite things both me and my wife and had shared with her about our each other: one of Sarah's was my persistence... not giving up. That both surprised and pleased me, because I often don't believe it myself... get easily frustrated... lose sleep. It's easy to forget that even Armstrong had a co-pilot (Buzz Aldrid) to help get where he needed to go...



Related Links:

"Man on the Moon" (blog post I created for Norman Rockwell Museum), August 27, 2012

"Neil Armstrong, First Man on the Moon, Dies at 82," New York Times, August 25, 2012

"Neil Armstrong: Private Man, Public Hero," Life magazine slideshow

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Uncle!

un.cle

"n. 1. a. The brother of one's mother of father."


 Sam I am. Helping out with the "I Miss America" pageant/
protest, Schenectady, New York, May 2008.
Photo ©Schenectady Neighbors for Peace. All rights reserved.
So, I just received the news... I'm an uncle again-- for the sixth time! My new niece looks adorable. Of course my friends are asking me "isn't it about time..." yeah. I know. Hanging out with my lovable new nephews is making it harder to come up with reasons not to...

"Idiom: 1. cry/say uncle 
Informal
To indicate a willingness to give up a fight or surrender."

Well, I can't take that definition to heart, but life sure gets tough sometimes... I wish I could make changes happen sooner in other areas. It's been a long time comin'...