1. Art 21 Project
By: Sadie Garcia
Professor Amy Poff
December 11, 2014
2. “Untitled”, 2002
By: Ann Hamilton
Pin-hole mouth photographs from the series “face
to face”
Ann Hamilton, an artist born in
Lima, Ohio in 1956, often combines
cloth, filmed footage, organic
material, and objects such as tables.
For example, in the image to the
left she uses the method of pin-hole
mouth photography. She achieves
this by covering the lens of the
camera with her fingers in order to
create a mouth shape around the
photograph. Hamilton’s artwork
seem very deep and create a lot of
emotion of the viewer.
3. Response to Ann Hamilton
“Teddy Bear”, 2014
By: Sadie Garcia
When looking at Ann
Hamilton’s artwork, it
constantly reminded me of
scenes in scary movies with
the pin-hole effect. To create
the image to the left, I used
one of my old teddy bears
and to create the pin-hole
effect I simply placed two
fingers on the camera lens in
order to give it the focus and
blurry effect.
4. Artwork from textbook relating Ann Hamilton
“Central portal of the west façade of Reims
Cathedral”, c 1225-90, By: Gianni Dagli
An image from our
textbook that closely
represents Ann Hamilton’s
artwork is “Central portal
of the west façade of Reims
Cathedral” because it is
focusing on one part of the
cathedral instead of the
whole picture. Although
this image isn’t using a pin-hole
effect that the artist
Ann Hamilton uses, it was
one of the more closely
related images I could find.
It can be found on page
453 of our textbook.
5. “Ring Image C”, 2008
By: Robert Mangold
Acrylic, graphite and black pencil on canvas, 96
inches diameter
Robert Mangold, an artist
born in New York in 1937,
uses the simplest of
elements: line, color, and
shape to create abstract
works. In this image,
Mangold combines two
panels to form a ring with
an empty center, with thick
and thin graphite lines on
subtle planes of color. The
combination of color,
shape, and lines create this
breathtaking image. It’s
simple.
6. Response to Robert Mangold
“See within space”, 2014
By: Sadie Garcia
I chose to respond to Robert
Mangold type of artwork, by taking
a picture of the image to the left. It
uses the three elements Mangold
uses: color, shape, and line. Along
with that there is space within the
lines.
7. Artwork from textbook relating Robert Mangold
“Composition II with Red, Blue, and
Yellow”, 1930 by Piet Mondrian
An image from our textbook
that I believe to be closely
related to the type of artwork
Robert Mangold created was
the image to the left called, “
Composition II with Red, Blue,
and Yellow” by Piet Mondrian.
He uses the same elements as
Mangold did: shape, color, and
line. The shape is represented
by squares, the colors are red,
blue, and yellow, and he uses
thick black lines to create
space. This image can be found
on page 523 in our textbook.
8. Production still from the “Art in the Twenty –First
Century” Season 6 episode, “History”, 2012
Marina Abramović, an artist
born in Yugoslavia in 1946,
uses her body as both subject
and medium of her
performances to test her
limits- emotionally, physically
etc. A person's eyes can
portray a lot of different
meanings. In the image to the
left, one can see that her
eyes are slightly reddish and
tired looking. One can
interpret that she is a very
hard worker or one can see
sadness within the eyes.
9. Response to Marina Abramović
“Within those eyes”, 2014
By: Sadie Garcia
I chose to respond to the work
by Marina Abramovic, by
taking an image of my face. I
believe that someone’s face
can tell you a million words
about them. For example, on
the image to the left you can
see a set of eyes that are
gazing into a deep thought. It
could either be happy or sad
thoughts. It is all within the
viewers interpretation of the
face.
10. Artwork from textbook relating Marina Abramović
An image from the textbook that I
think was closely represented by
Marina Abramovic’s artwork, was
this image to the left called “Mask
of an iyoba”. It can be found in our
textbook on page 479. The face of
the iyoba is the artwork itself. The
face resembles different kinds of
emotion from sadness to anger.
“Mask of an iyoba”, c 1550, made by
the Edo people