Thursday, June 16, 2011

Alviso's Medicinal All-Salt

I chose to examine Jon Cohrs and Morgan Levy’s web page in which they advertise a product called Alviso’s Medicinal All-Salt. This is a web-site dedicated to a false product that claims to have all the curative properties of most of the pharmaceuticals people take. This is because they harvest it out of the San Francisco Bay. Their site is here. The two artists posit that many of the pills, including antidepressants and antibiotics that humans take are not filtered out of waste water in water treatment plants. This water is then pumped, in this case, out into the San Francisco Bay where they suggest in a roundabout way through satire, that it may have an effect on the aquatic flora and fauna. The site has a picture of their product seen to the left, as well as a video that is a parody of a drug commercial that can be seen here.

Cohrs, and Levy raise some really important questions concerning what we dump into our water supplies. Though much of their site contains juvanalian satirical, containing lines such as “We don’t yet know how most plants and animals are enjoying their new treatment, but we do know that pharmaceuticals are designed specifically to act on the human body, even at low concentrations, thereby making our salt a viable and effective medicinal product for you and me!” Obviously animals are not enjoying their treatment. The site is very humorous however despite this humor, a general feeling of concern is raised. The question our overuse of drugs as a society, and raise important concerns about how we are unable to truly purify the water coming out of a water treatment plant.

I think the site is absolutely perfect. The bottle of Alviso’s Medicinal All-Salt harkens back to cure all tonics prevalent during and before the early 20th century. The descriptions they use are witty, humorous and informative. The movie they made is excellent. Opening with a panning shot of flowers, flashing “Organic” and having hands sift through the apparent all-salt, is comical and is a direct parody of drug and food commercials. You would almost want to get the salt if you didn’t know what was in it. I think that the humor is easy enough to get so that the satirical message of their site is not lost. The concept for the site and product seems like an excellent way of raising awareness and convrying their message.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Remix

Artist Blog Post




The Artist I chose to write about in my blog is Nova Jiang. She is currently doing an exhibition piece called the Ideogenetic Machine. It is a program she has developed that takes pictures of the people visiting the exhibition, loads them into a computer program and develops an image of them in her style of drawing. These images are then placed into a comic book. This concept is novel for a variety of reasons. The computer program is designed to never repeat itself. The pages and stories that it generates are unique. In addition it provides blank speech bubbles. After visiting the exhibit, the person can go home and download a free pdf of their comic book. In essence Jiang is stimulating interaction between people and technology as they act out the various scenes in the comic book and creativity on the part the of gallery visitor because they are encouraged to fill out the blank speech bubbles.


Jiang works with two programmers, Sephiroth Li (obviously a fan of Final Fantasy 7) and Andres Colubri, in order to render the images into what resembles hand drawn portraits. Jiang’s concept for this piece is very ingenious because it makes the viewers of her artwork not only part of her artwork, but involved in its creative process as well. It is a fascinating concept because she is sharing the process of creating art with the people coming to see it. Not only do they get to watch it being made but they are a part of its making. It involves the admirer of the art in a new and creative way.

Jiang’s concept is really captivating. According to her bio, one of her main concerns in creating art allowing people to relate to each other. She also wants to share the creative process with them. The Ideogenetic Machine seems to incorporate both of these concepts. The images that are produced by the machine are still a work in progress. They are very comic book in appearance but lack color. I don’t know if she is planning on trying to make the images in color or not, but none the less, the images seem to invoke a desire to create.