Communication In Art

I chose two artists who both used their art to communicate messages. One boldly and with actual statements, the other more subtly through images portrayed in his works. These two artists are Mark Tansey and Barbara Kruger. First we will explore a little bit about Tansey. Born in 1949 to art historians I’m sure Tansey grew up exposed to all kinds of art as well as techniques. Tansey tends towards monochromatic imagery but his paintings are powerful nonetheless. Some of his works had a social message like Purity Test painted in 1982.

native Americans

Purity Test 1982

The spiral the Native Americans are looking at is called Spiral Jetty by Robert Smithson, however the native Americans don’t know it is supposed to be art and are trying to interpret it as a symbol. I think this is a commentary on what we do every time we look at art. Effectively I believe Tansey is equating the viewers with the Native Americans looking for symbolism when there might not be any. Or conversely thinking an event is natural when in fact it is man-made. Apparently the Spiral Jetty disappeared when the water level of the body of water it is located in rises, I”m sure this appeared quite mystical to native Americans at the time.

Tansey also painted The Innocent Eye Test in 1981 which I believe is also a commentary on the way we view art. In this painting a cow is being shown a painting by some gentleman, and they want to see what the cow’s reaction is. I believe Tansey was attempting to show us that when an artist is unveiling a new piece, we are the cow and he simply wants to see what our reaction is. It is quite a funny painting it has all the ceremony of an unveiling…but with cows instead of people!

Innocent Eye test

The Innocent Eye Test 1981

Something I noticed was the use of the word test. When I think of tests I think of passing or failing,and I wonder what exactly the reaction would have to be for the piece to fail. The last piece I chose by Tansey is a little bit more humorous, and in keeping with his style monochromatic. I particularly love the impatience the female character is communicating to the man who is attempting to open the gate with his key. You can see it in the way she holds her body, tilts her head, and how he appears to be rushing to open the gate. This painting to me communicates the attitude of women of the era he chose to portray, which I think is the 40’s or 50’s as he has several paintings featuring people from that time period. Glamorous movie stars like the woman I imagine in that gown didn’t wait for anything and certainly not for a man to find The Key!

phantasmaphile

The Key 1984

So where Tansey communicates his messages through humor, reflection, and more subtle cues, which makes the viewer work more to understand and digest the message; my second artist Barbara Kruger literally pastes statements across imagery to challenge the viewer.

Kruger is a social activist and often uses her art to draw attention to her cause. Kruger was born in New Jersey in 1945 and is an avid feminist and fights against the idea presented by consumerism that women’s bodies are a commodity. Kruger often selects images in popular magazines and then creates phrases designed to incite passion, stir thought, and challenge beliefs. I chose several pieces because I love the boldness of her work.

barbara-kruger-your-body-is-a-battleground-19891

Your Body Is A Battleground 1989

This piece is a commentary on the issue of abortion and how rights regarding women’s bodies, and things happening inside of them are being decided by external forces (legislators) and yet directly affect women’s lives. I absolutely love how Kruger speaks directly to women and basically has created a call to arms. Kruger’s message is no subtle blending of cues, it is a kick to the face and I appreciate that boldness.

Pro Life Barbara Kruger

Pro-Life for the Unborn Pro Death for the Born 2000

Again this piece is a commentary regarding abortion and the hypocrisy surrounding fighting for the right of an unborn fetus to be brought into this world only to starve, live on the streets, not have access to medical care by cutting entitlement programs and not supporting mothers. This piece asks the question why do the people making these laws care about the child before it is born and not once it is outside the womb. I think she specifically pictured Bush because he was a representative of the party known for pushing the anti-abortion agenda. Again she is not subtle, she is communicating quite clearly her opinions regarding this hypocrisy.

barbara_kruger_14

If We Can They Can Unknown

I picked this piece because of all the legal changes regarding gay marriage lately. I love the symbolism of two people holding hands, united, and that she used the bold red color to divide the image. I think this symbolizes the way some are trying to keep gay couples apart by not legally recognizing their unions when they are actually already a unit. I love this piece and how she again chooses to communicate so boldly, however I do think this piece has more of a hidden message due to the placement of the color on the photograph.

Both of these artists communicated with their viewer and what I really enjoyed was the variety in how they chose to do so. Tansey evoked ideals of days gone by, his color palette was deliberately old fashioned, and because of his painting method he had to create his works very quickly. Kruger used a more modern medium of magazine photographs covered with bold colors and words but both artists communicated the need for their viewer to think, really think about their world and what goes on in it.

Sources

http://www.artchive.com/artchive/ftptoc/tansey_ext.html

http://www.evl.uic.edu/davidson/CurrentProjects98/ET_VisualInfo/Mark_Tansey.html

http://www.barbarakruger.com/biography.shtml

http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/feminist/Barbara-Kruger.html

http://www2.palomar.edu/users/mhudelson/StudyGuides/20thCentLate_WA.html

2 thoughts on “Communication In Art

  1. I really liked both the artist you picked. I also like that one of them uses humor without words to show his audience what he is talking about. And how the other uses words which are direct in telling the audience what is being talked about. I like how the older art form is obvious works like the key which use photography and paintings to express which is with the times then. Then images like your body is a battle ground use negaitves, technology and current media type which goes to show that it is more current to our times. I like how each reflect where the art world was, one with photography and another with media.

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