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These blog entries represent the views of their authors, not necessarily those of the CWRL, the University of Texas at Austin, or any of its affiliated entities.

visual art

The University: instituting culture, institutional culture

Submitted by Jillian Sayre on Mon, 2007-11-26 17:44. | | | |

UT tower with illuminated #1

This summer I taught a rhetoric course that focused on the idea of a University. The course used Cardinal Newman's nineteenth-century treatise as a jumping off point but also looking at other ways a university might define itself as an institution. One of the more interesting discussions in class was one in which we investigated the relationship between art and the university...

The University of Texas, our home institution and object of study, has an archive (describing itself as a "world-renowned cultural institution") that not only houses important pieces of visual, textual, and performing art but also has its own galleries to put these objects on display. The building itself was recently renovated, and the atriums converted into "galleries" themselves that display the Center's significant collections on etched glass windows:

Women in Art (more rhetoric of the montage)

Submitted by Jillian Sayre on Wed, 2007-11-07 20:04. | | | |

Perhaps a good point of departure for a discussion of Women in Film would be the creator's earlier attempt to give us an overview of Women in Art:


Does high art create/communicate normative body structures or gender roles in the same way as popular culture?

Shepherd Fairey Has a Posse

Submitted by erinhurt on Mon, 2007-11-05 14:49. | | |

I remember when I used to live in Portland in the late 90s, and I would see these stickers of Andre the Giant in all the bus stops. I never knew what they meant, but I liked them well enough to peel one off a bus stop wall and stick it on my bike.
Shepherd Fairey's

Dylan's Theme Time Radio enters the visual realm

Submitted by Justin Tremel on Mon, 2007-10-29 18:32. | | |

Those of you who subscribe to XM satellite radio may have come across Bob Dylan's weekly radio show Theme Time Radio. Recently comic artist Jamie Hernandez created an imaginative promotional poster for the show.
bob dylan's theme time radio poster by jamie hernandez

Boing Boing reader Simon Nielsen took Hernandez's poster one step futher and made a short movie tribute using Hernandez's artwork and the audio from Ellen Barkin's evocative voiceovers that open each episode of Theme Time Radio Hour. Nielsen writes:

Science as (body) art

Submitted by Jillian Sayre on Wed, 2007-10-03 13:53. | | |

o-chem tattoo
Following our earlier discussions about the intersection of science, art, and rhetoric, I bring you the o-chem tattoo. I think the tattoo not only promotes science as a field of visual representation but is also among a growing corpus of "geek" tattoos. These tattoos frustrate the long standing assumption that body art and body modification is an unintellectual enterprise, one in which you tear at, pervert or destroy the body. In this way, these tattoos also work against the mind/body split, demonstrating how thought is not separate from but also occurs on and through the body.

Check out the following link to see a group of geek tattoos at ModBlog

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