Tag Archives: CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY

ARTIST OF THE WEEK: JAMES R. SOUTHARD

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

James R. Southard is a photographer, videographer and 2011 MFA graduate from Carnegie Mellon University.

My eyes were visually seduced for over two hours whilst pouring over James Southard’s photographs. Forget film, these works put the cliched phrase “lights, camera, action!” to shame. Going high contrast and high drama in his series Tooth and Nail, 2011 (images #1-4 above), Southard created epic scene sets which seemingly depict historical events al la Caravaggio or Delacroix. A second glance however reveals bizarrely out of place objects: a ukelele used as a spear, a bike used as a horse, taped paper hats in place of metal helmets, oh, and LOTS of crepe streamers. Awesome. It’s like your first grade class went to war…except these guys are actually sneaker laden adults.

As for the second series, titled The Inherent Pull, (images #5-8), Southard fabricated dramatic, film-noir-like environments with simple materials such as construction paper and plastic. Don’t see it? Take a look at his process in the video below:

The final series shown, Neither Here Nor There, is a step-by-step documentation of people in movement and how their paths intersect and overlap over brief periods of time.

Tagged , , , , , , , ,

ARTIST OF THE WEEK: N. SEAN GLOVER

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

N. Sean Glover is a Boston-based sculptor and 2011 MFA graduate from Carnegie Mellon University.

Interested in the dialogue between old and new technologies, Glover’s sculptures blend the ancient tradition of fresco painting (method of painting on wet plaster) with the new-age construction of styrofoam. Although these components couldn’t be farther apart from one another (fresco painting = Michaelangelo’s go-to method for painting the Sistine Chapel; Styrofoam = McDonald’s coffee cups), Glover manages to mesh them together in a way that is completely fresh and surprisingly complimentary. The largest sculpture pictured, entitled Beyond the Sea, 2011 (images 1, 3, 4) also has sound that goes along with it – listen to it here.

Tagged , , , , , ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

%d bloggers like this: