implicit art

art and ecology, fiction and geek stuff, culture and philosophy, parenting and life, etc

implicit art

stimulus

Archives

01 June 2009 by nathaniel

how to write an artist statement, part 1

Like making art, there are no steadfast rules to writing artist statements – and even the best of us fail sometimes – but there are of course some decent guidelines one might consider following. Below is an ongoing list I’ve started giving to my students: 3 things that should be in an artist statement, and 7 guidelines for sticking to them. Bear in mind here that there are two kinds of artist statements: one for an individual work, and one for your overarching practice. Always start with the former (which is what these guidelines are about); the only way to know what “all” your work is doing is to be familiar with each piece first. Hope this helps!

Art work descriptions and statements should be about 300 – 500 words, and strictly address the following:

  1. What “is” the work? Describe it as an object, installation or situation in a way that enables visual and/or sensual comprehension. This is not what the piece is about. I mean it literally / physically: what are your art piece’s individual components and materials, and how do they work together as a whole?
  2. What do we see or experience? If it’s an installation, consider a walk-through, a description of how it looks, sounds, smells, feels (again, not emotionally or conceptually, but physically), and what actions viewers have taken in and around it. If it’s a situation, describe the relationships (and power structures) you are intervening in and how participants might perform them. Many works would likely need to address both what we experience and what we do as an audience or participants in front of it / around it / with it. How do viewers relate to the work, to the artist, to each other…?
  3. What’s at stake? Why is this important to you? Why should it be important to me / others? You can briefly address or allude to conceptual issues here, but be specific rather than general. How does the piece itself address these concerns? How do we encounter them in our experience of it, and what value lies in that encounter?

Some guidelines to follow:

  1. This is not a mystery novel. Start with a one-sentence description that encompasses all of the above to some extent – especially what it is – then unpack each of the listed items as is needed.
  2. No generalizations. Do not make assertions about art works in this field generally being “like this” or how “the majority of people” think or act a certain way; rather explain your interests in certain areas of investigation in implicit relation to (un)said state of the arts.
  3. Avoid phrases like “viewers will experience.” You do not know what they will experience, and most readers will think it arrogant (if only unconsciously) if you try to pull this off. If you desire this approach – to describe what the piece does to people – say what you (personally) see or have made in the work, or what viewers have actually said or done (“in the past, I’ve seen participants”), rather than asserting what they will do or say in the future.
  4. Do not put all your interests and tie-ins and interwoven ideas here. This is a concise description of the work – what it looks like, what we experience, and what is at stake – that can be read into by others, and everything else should be built into the piece itself. Feel free to be ambiguous with a small amount of language, to allude to larger / more concepts towards the end, but you must explicitly state one through-line only in this statement.
  5. No undefined terms. Do not use words like “performative,” “poststructural,” “deconstruct,” or “postmodern,” “other,” “gaze,” or “feminist,” without defining them. If you can’t describe what you mean by these kinds of jargonny words in a short sentence (which is preferred to actually using them), then you yourself do not understand clearly enough what they mean in/to your practice/this piece, and so neither will we, the readers. Even poetic, simple terms – especially hyphenated ones – should be avoided unless you explicitly describe what you mean by them.
  6. DESCRIBE. Remember: an artist statement should enhance my experience of your work by describing it, not justifying it, obscuring it, or simply listing the ideas you were thinking about or papers you were reading whilst you were making it. The biggest mistake artists make here is to think that because they were reading or thinking about a specific concept when they made the piece, then the piece is about that. Listen to critique, watch others with the work, and relate what it is actually doing and how. The statement is about looking and watching your work then describing what you see, not producing a project then justifying its existence.
  7. Excite your reader. This should be fun and interesting. If it’s not, you lose me. Think journalism: first summarize the whole thing, but simultaneously make me want to read on (and experience the work for myself); the rest should unpack it, give me a sense of some understanding but also make me want to see or research more on you and the piece.

Hope this helps!

Next up: how to write an artist statement, part 2, on how to write an overarching statement

Posted in art, creative commons, me, stimulus, theory ·

Archives

22 May 2009 by nathaniel

Jimmy Wales talks Art and Wikipedia

Nice to see Jimbo talk about Art and Wikipedia. It’s worth a read if only to hear how carefully Wikipedia’s figure-head thinks and speaks in relation to notability and possibilities with arts coverage on Wikipedia. I agree with all of what he says (although it’s admittedly very noncommittal – so hard to disagree with), and wish most of the Wikipedia editors were as even-handed as he seems to be in this interview.

Link to part 1; link to part 2.

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, milwaukee art, news and politics, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

10 May 2009 by nathaniel

Night Work / Distill Life

Documentation of several pieces from Night Work, with printmaker Jessica Meuninck-Ganger, is now live.

Night Work, an exhibition featuring Milwaukee-based art professors and instructors at the artist-run Armoury Gallery, premiered my new body of collaborative works with printmaker Jessica Meuninck-Ganger. Playfully called “Distill Life,” this ongoing series of art objects combines hand-made works on paper with time-based video images looped on LCD screens.  We first capture and edit video from real and virtual worlds, and download these files onto hacked digital photo frames. The liberated screens from these frames are then placed behind or embedded within prints, drawings and sculptures. Sometimes, we use a Sharpie and draw directly on the screen. Our intention is to incorporate technologies and aesthetics from traditional printmaking – including Japanese woodblock and engraving circa the 1800s, present-day etching, stone lithography, photogravure etc – with the technologies and aesthetics of contemporary digital, video and networked art, in order to create new forms.

See Night Work for more images and video.

Posted in art, art and tech, me, milwaukee art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical, youtube ·

Archives

30 April 2009 by nathaniel

Deconstructing Wikipedia

Mary Louise Schumacher pens a great piece on Wikipedia Art in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, entitled Deconstructing Wikipedia. Snippet:

Two artists staged an art intervention within Wikipedia, turning the “free online encyclopedia that anyone can edit” into an art medium.

By making a sort of readymade art object from a Wikipedia page, Nathaniel Stern, of Milwaukee, and Scott Kildall, of San Francisco, have challenged the conventions of art in a way that doesn’t happen everyday.

The wikiwar that’s erupted is not unlike the outrage inspired by Marcel Duchamp‘s urinal or Andy Warhol‘s Brillo Boxes.

“Wikipedia Art” was, to the artists’ minds, both an artwork and a legitimate Wikipedia page.

Read more.

And just for fun:

A Disclaimer

A Disclaimer

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, milwaukee art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

24 April 2009 by nathaniel

Art Connect

Implicit Art gets a thoughtful and good review on Art Connect. It’s rare to see so much time taken to reflect what makes a good blog, or a good art site, and this space does both. Check it.

Posted in art, art and tech, inbox, Ireland Art, Links, me, milwaukee art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology ·

Archives

23 April 2009 by nathaniel

UW-Milwaukee Grad Student feature: Sarah Holden

This is the third in a series of MFA student features from the graduate program I work in at Peck School of the Arts, the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. These will be cross-posted on the MyArtSpace.com blog.


Creative Commons License
UW-Milwaukee Grad Student features are licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License

Sarah Holden is a graduate student in the Jewelry and Metalsmithing department at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee . She received her BFA in Craft: Material Studies from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA in 2008. She works in a variety of materials from precious metals to plastics, fiber, steel and reclaimed items, although her formal training is concentrated in the field of Jewelry and Metalsmithing. Since the field of adornment utilizes such a variety of media to explore the current definitions of jewelry, Sarah creates work that exists somewhere between adornment, performance, fashion and sculpture. She is interested in how the language of adornment communicates information about its wearer through cultural signifiers.

TALK ABOUT YOUR CURRENT PRACTICE. WHAT DO YOU MAKE AND WHY IS THAT IMPORTANT TO YOU?

I am working on a series of personal devices that are reactive to the emotional unrest of being separated from all that is familiar. I have turned to Feminism, Fetishism, and Ritual as ways to approach understanding the wearer of my work. The work in my studio now embraces the theory of woman as objectified possession through scopophilic gaze, and attempts to confront, retaliate, and threaten through the power of amulets. The most current piece I am working on is in the form of a brassiere, simultaneously exploring constriction and freedom; demanding the viewer to gaze upon the wearer and then punishing them for doing so. The wearer or subject matter of my work is most commonly me, however I feel the subject matter is universal and relates to the story of many others. I am intentionally working with fiber, a material known for its gendered history as female and I wish to reclaim it as something dangerous and powerful. The line of the thread has become an important part of my visual language as well, evidence of the act of making, understood in the same way as the written word. Working in this way is allowing me to analyze why working with the body is so important to me as well as investigate the power of emotion in art.

WHAT GOT YOU TO THIS POINT? WHAT WERE YOU DOING OR MAKING BEFORE AND HOW DID THAT LEAD YOU TO THIS KIND OF PRODUCTION?

Fashion, adornment and the human desire to decorate have always interested me. What I learned in my undergraduate experience is that the absurdity of accepted Western dress is also an important thread in my work. Three of the most successful pieces I made during my BFA reflect these ideas . “Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” and “Sea Anemone for Daily Wear,” are part of the same series dealing with my fear of physically being injured, extending out to emotional or psychological threats.

“Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” was first in the series and is a two-piece swimsuit constructed of felted orange tubes or anemone “fingers” which posses the hunger to consume anything that might want to approach the wearer of the piece in the water. After making the anemone suit I felt like this protection could be widened to daily life. “Sea Anemone for Daily Wear,” is by first glance a brightly colored container that resembles the form of a sea anemone living on a coral somewhere. Upon closer inspection the container is fabricated of formed copper and silver. The surface is revealed to be a mixture of paint and colored pencil that mimics the same hue of the fuzzy fiber “fingers” found inside the compartments of the container. The “fingers” are offered parts of a brooch to be collected and then constructed, with the assistance of magnets, on the wearer as daily protection from negative energy that might harm the wearer throughout the day.

These pieces were introduced fiber into my metal work, which I feel has been a successful step towards the work I am making now. The anemone pieces also started to push my work from a more intimate scale to acknowledge the entire body as the frame for my pieces. “Empire Line Posture Device,” is when I started to become fascinated with the absurd history of modern dress and one of the largest pieces I have made to date. The welded steel construction has a hinged steel strap, which rests at the empire line, just under the breasts and is connected to a melon-sized ball of sliced steel circles, which extends out about 5 feet behind the wearer. This piece speaks to the nonsensical and accepted evolution of western garmetry which has allowed me to consider a certain level of fantasy in my work.

WHO INSPIRES YOU – THAT YOU KNOW PERSONALLY, AS WELL AS HISTORICALLY OR IN CONTEMPORARY PRACTICE?

I love being an artist because I am surrounded by creative people who are interested in all the weird things you don’t hear about every day. My friends are what push me to continuously investigate and allow me to be a weirdo without penalty. Erin Williams was a graduate student when I was in undergrad and she taught me to always question why. I look up to her and feel like her work is the lens through which I understand my own work. In the arsenal of visuals that I always return to are the extensive variety of African and Asian tribal dress as well as the history of western dress from corsets to high heel shoes. I find the reality of these images interesting and try to apply the same absurdity in my own work. In contemporary practice I pull imagery everywhere from the avant garde fashion of Commes Des Garcons, Issey Miyake and Jean Paul Gautlier to performances of artists like Vito Acconci, Jana Sterbeck, Rebecca Horn , Annie Sprinkle and Carolee Schneeman. The fashionistas make us look at the body in unusual ways while the work of the performance artists amazingly transforms the body into the artwork to be viewed. Although I do not consider the work I am making now jewelry per se, I am very aware of the work that is being made in my field and find that the work of Katja Prins , Iris Eichenberg , Gerd Rothman and Pia Aleborg specifically deals with the body as subject however different the methodologies are utilized to create their discussion.

TELL US ABOUT YOUR FAVORITE AND LEAST FAVORITE WORKS OF ART FROM YOUR ENTIRE REPERTOIRE – WHY THEY DESERVE THOSE TITLES AND WHAT YOU LEARNED FROM THEM.

The least favorite work that I made was last fall when I was working primarily in gold. I received a very prestigious fellowship from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, VA to purchase gold and incorporate it in my work. First, I have to say that it was amazing to be included in the Fellowship and I am so glad that I had an opportunity to include gold into my vocabulary, but something about the finished work just didn’t make sense to me. I am completely comfortable working in gold now because of the opportunity, and feel like it will come back into my practice one day, but trying to force it into that work specifically did not work. I was researching scent, and the olfaction system as an identification method and the research was very interesting to me, however when it came to the execution of the work, something just didn’t work. I think now it was the gold itself. I told myself I was going to work in gold, I needed to know this language in order to be a proper metalsmith, but something just wasn’t happening for me. For about six months I was making work I really wasn’t into, but I felt like I needed to make that work, to get back to the work I enjoyed. I think this was the clearest example for me that I can never decide what material I am going to work in before I finish my research and begin making the work. My favorite work was definitely the “Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” and “Empire Line Posture Device.” At that time I was really excited about my research of tribal dress as well as avant garde fashion, sculptural garmetry and prosthetics. It was also a time when I was completely invested in the research and not worried about entering shows as much. Allowing myself to experiment without deadlines proved to be a very productive time in my practice.

WHAT ARE YOU WORKING ON RIGHT NOW, AND WHERE DO YOU SEE YOUR WORK HEADED NEXT?

Right now I am making a series of objects that exist in the area of the neck and upper body, you could say neckpieces and brassieres, and I can’t decide if they are just one or both. I am very interested in Feminism and how that applies to my work, which always exists on the body, and deals specifically with sexuality. This is my second semester of graduate school and although I feel like I am starting to understand my practice, I certainly don’t have everything figured out yet, but I am in a very exciting stage of discovery. The making and the research has proved to be a very emotional investigation into the type of work I feel I need to make to feel successful. The objects that I am making now are active, while the body itself is passive. I want to continue this farther, not by activating the body and performing the objects but by somehow creating an electrical component that activates the objects as the viewer interacts with them closer and closer. So the objects themselves start to have this life, which is because of the body they are ‘living’ on or a part of, but the interaction is between the objects and the viewer.

More on Sarah Holden:

website – www.sarahholdenmetalsmithing.com
blog – www.insideamakersmind.blogspot.com
blog – objectifiedbodies.blogspot.com

Posted in art, me, milwaukee art, pop culture, stimulus ·
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

Tags

aesthetics alice wilds art artist feature avant-garde books briefiew coding comics concern culture digital studio drawing ecology engineering fantasy fiction goods for me google ilona andrews jon horvath kate daniels milwaukee mo gawdat nathaniel stern paduak philosophy public property reading review sean slemon self-enjoyment Steve Martin syllabus sharing teaching technology TED TEDx trees urban fantasy web-comics webcomics whitehead world after us writing

nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

Ecological Aesthetics book cover
Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

from Amazon.com

All content © 2026 by implicit art. Base WordPress Theme by Graph Paper Press