
Landscape: (noun, often attributive \ˈlan(d)-ˌskāp\) - : a particular area of activity
As I consider life and any attempts to characterize and reduce it down to a conceivable definition, I am continuously reminded of the diversity found throughout our world. As I try to decide what is representative of a significant landscape here in 2010 I remember all of the exceptions to the rule, the cultural variety that contradicts our assumptions, and even our own personal complexity, I am confronted with an intense difficulty to find universal commonalities, a landscape that is felt by all. With this in mind, I resolved to work within these limitations, and to accept that my experience is limited, but no less true. My experiences, though not universal or applicable to everyone, are my own and therefore one of the few places from which I can begin to take steps to understand the world around me.
I took a picture and created an image of someone holding a laptop, using a blackberry, and listening to an ipod. Based upon the broad definition of a landscape as a particular area of activity, I believe that many people here in America, or in the Western World, or maybe just on this campus, spend a majority of their time interacting, working, and living alongside or on a electronic devices. Our lives are constantly spent working on computers, doing homework, emailing family, checking facebook, and editing photos. Computers are used for work and for recreation, play and entertainment. Equally, our cell phones have become very nearly an added appendage, another arm or leg, composing who we are. Phones keep us eternally connected to the world, our friends and family, they wake us up in the morning, take photos of memorable events, and sometimes become the miniature version of our computers when our laptops are not readily available. And the ipod fulfills so many people’s dream (or at least mine) of having a constant soundtrack and background music to my life. Depending on my mood, I can have a song playing in my ears, reflecting, reinforcing, or encouraging that mood. Ipods take us from one place to another, keep us company when we sit alone on the train, or travel with us as we workout, running through neighborhoods. Electronics are a major part of our lives; maybe even a major part of who we are. And since computers, cell phones, and ipods have become the terrain of major activity, they are the reason and composition for my photo of a landscape in 2010.
Compared to earthworks, as exemplified in Andy Goldsworthy, a landscape has the possibility to become more abstract or even more indoors. As my image reflects, a major landscape of 2010 need not bring to artist close to the dirt and insects found beneath a river rock, but can be that which we touch and use and utilize each and every day.
No comments:
Post a Comment