Wednesday, August 26, 2009

concepts







Above image:" whatever you focus your thoughts on, increases"

This is just simple pondering on concept.

With concepts we can shape our world. We can make order to world and arrange our world. Define it.

Concepts are just man made borders to define things. To put things to boxes. In reality no real strict borders exists (between things, etc) or if it exists it exists only because its nature can also do that.

With conceptualisation we can create hypothesis of reality etc. Without concepts we can tap straight into the reality.

Both is good.

concepts

This is just simple pondering on concept. First came the thought then the picture above then the text.

With concepts we can shape our world. We can make order to world and arrange our world. Define it.

Concepts are just man made borders to define things. To put things to boxes. In reality no real strict borders exists (between things, etc) or if it exists it exists only because its nature can also do that.

With conceptualisation we can create hypothesis of reality etc. Without concepts we can tap straight into the reality.

Both is good.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Painting with code

Painting is a process mostly done with brushes and paint. It has certain feeling about it. YOu can feel the canvas, it's richness, it's texture etc. You can smell the paint, feel it and see the concrete work you have done. Painting is physical act.

Painting with digital media has not interested me before, because it lacks the feel of the material. Most programs just try to imitate normal medias of painting. But they lack the odor, the richness and also the physical act feels incomplete. There is nothing material in digital painting. only something on the screen.

Lately I have been interested in alternative ways to use the power and capabilites of digital media. And this has been done through coding. Some easy code languages such as processing gives you the basic tools for accesing computer and digital media. This kind of basic components gives you (or at least me) more the feel that I am doing something, that I am in control of the media, or at least understand it. For me coding seems to be the missing brush for digital media.

This blog is somewhat of a diary of thoughts concerning coding, digital art, and art in general seen through the possibilites coding gives me.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Some thoughts on language and painting


Language

Words put together in agreed order forms a language. If we were to put the words in some non-agreed order we probably wouldn’t understand each other. Or if we were to meet a person who would speak our words put in chaotic order we would probably call him crazy or a poet. To call something a language it has to have syntax to distinguish meaningful expressions from mere sequences of words and semantics to provide a notion of truth and to distinguish true statements from false statements. Usually normal languages have grammar, which serves as the logical base for the language. In the beginning of last century many linguistic theories believed that to learn the language one would only have to learn the grammar, -and the vocabulary, of course, and then one could speak the language. It was thought that every word represents one instance or object. Like the word computer brings us an idea of a computer. But in the late 20th century there has been many arguments about that fact, because language is alive, it is a tool we use in many different ways and it has many notations that grammar cannot tell. Like all the different kinds of meanings for one word, the meaning of the word changes when the intonation changes; one word can have different meanings in spoken language etc.

Ludwig Wittgenstein is one of the famous of philosophers who studied language and the use of language. To Wittgenstein the meaning of philosophy was to study language, he believed that from language philosophy would find all its answers.
Wittgenstein philosophy has two different stages, first one stated in Tractatus logico-philosophicus and the second one born out of it years later and which in fact is quite the opposite to Tractatus, although they share similarities. In Tractatus Wittgenstein rejects Russels, and logical positivisms and states that philosophy can not have the means of science, that philosophy can not be studied by the means of empirical research. No, philosophy is not a science of discovering something unknown; it is not about forming theories and then empirically studying them to be right or wrong and then correcting them, like the paradigmatic process of natural sciences does. It is about language and looking what is language. It is so to speak above or below science. John Hyman states in a book Wittgenstein, theory and the Arts :” Wittgenstein argues in the Tractatus that a language is a system of representation. Words are combined to sentences to form pictures or models of possible states of affairs in the world. Every meaningful sentence can be dissolved by analysis until its only constituents are logical expressions (such as ´not´ and ´and´) and simple unanalyzable names. Each of these names corresponds to an object [in reality] whose name it is. The syntax of a name i.e. the ways In which it can and cannot be combined with other names to form a sentence, reflects the essential nature of the object which it names, i.e. the ways it can and cannot be combined with other object to form a state of affairs. Hence a meaningful combination of words corresponds to possible combination of objects. If the arrangement of the simple names concealed in a sentence corresponds to the actual arrangement of the objects, which they name, then the sentence is true. If not, it is false.

In Tractatus Wittgenstein’s says that only meaning of language is to ´picture ´or describe reality. So then the goal of philosophy is to discover this system, the principles of logical syntax that govern the combination of unanalyzable names into pictures of possible state of affairs.
In his later work Wittgenstein came to discover that actually his formulation in Tractatus was actually a theory, which he says is not a way of philosophy. It was theory in two ways; firstly it reduces language to a system of pictures (unalayzable names) and to logical expressions. Secondly neither the system of language nor the reality to which this system supposedly corresponds is visible to ordinary language user. They are something that must exist, a theoretical postulate.

In his later philosophy Wittgenstein became to realize the complicated nature of language, still the main idea of Wittgenstein later philosophy remains; that the quest of philosophy was to study language. That all questions would be answered inside the system of language, that in language there was everything open to view. Ludwig Wittgenstein points out in his later linguistic philosophy that language use is thoroughly interwoven with human behavior. When a child learns a language he or she does not just learn the meaning of word but patterns of behavior within which the use of the word makes sense. Wittgenstein famously compared language to a toolbox containing many different tools. Language is used to give and obey orders, report speculate, sing, guess, joke, ask, thank, curse, greet and pray among many other things. As one of the students of Wittgenstein now distinguished philosopher G.H von Wright puts it: “ To learn a first language is not to be given a catalogue of names of objects and perhaps some rules for correct speech. It is to grow up to take part in life of community, to learn ´how to do things with words´; calling persons, asking for objects and for help, reacting to commands and warnings, answering questions – at a later stage also describing things and events and speaking about what is immediately at hand in space and time.”

All in all language is maybe not so simple thing constituting of just grammar and words, but is more of a interwoven tool in us, which we have learned to use in many different ways.




Is painting language?

When the question of language comes to painting things tend to get even more complicated. Painting does not really have a grammar nor does it have a syntax nor semantics in traditional sense. And how is it possible to define a language then? Still there are many different theories for and against painting as language.

Ben R. Tilghman argues in his essay Language and painting, border wars and pipe dreams against painting as language. He defends his argument by analyzing theory and then the theory of painting as language. According to Tilghman the way philosopher’s work is to make theories, specially when they are looking at art. Tilgham continues that philosophers of art, specially those in twentieth-century have argued that theory of the arts is required to identify works of art, and also that a satisfactory theory of art should provide criteria and standards of artistic values as well. Then Tilgham goes to clarify what is a theory, or proper theory and where it is derived from. He stresses the importance that theory is born out from practice; the theories in science are formed and tested in practice –they are not simply abstract formulations. Theory is needed in science, we couldn’t build machinery, or bridges without a theory of mechanics, but do we need theory to understand art, and to be more specific whether a theory of language is needed to understand art? I must add that from these bases and from here forward it can be seen that Tilghman takes quite tight and analytical road to study this question. Even still such a contrary opinion is refreshing and gives arise for new thoughts. Tilghmans essay continues by stating L.S. Adams: A picture is worth lot more than a thousand words. No amount of words can describe an image or an object exactly, whether it is a picture, a sculpture, or work of architecture. This is because words constitute one kind of language an imagery another, thereby creating a need for translation. Tilghman starts analyzing the thesis of the quoted text from Adams, that words cannot describe art exactly and art is a kind of language. He goes wondering how it would be to describe painting perfectly, would it be something like me telling to my friend that there is a hideous painting in the new exhibition, the one with yucky colors which make you sick? And my friend goes to the exhibition and recognizes the painting immediately, coming back to me and saying that it was exactly as I described it. Or would it be something like slicing the painting in small frames, coding each frame, like a matrix, in a way computers deal with pictures, and then give the exact code to someone? Probably theorists would reject that this wasn’t what they had in mind. Then well, what do the theorist then have in mind? What would be describing the artwork perfectly? Because the theorists haven’t specified the exact description, and since we cant know that, Tilghman argues that the first part of thesis sheds no light to us at all on how we do in fact talk about and describe pictures, nor the point doing so. Then Tilghman goes to the second part of thesis, that words and imagery constitute two different kinds of language. First he says that even though there is so many language-describing expression in art, such as “This artist has something to say”, He made a statement with that painting” and “ she exploited the vocabulary of cubism in her work” that there is something implausible when thinking art as a language. If art is a language, then how do you say “where is the toilet?” in art? So art is not that kind of language, but which kind of language is it then?

Tilghman notes that painting does not have the characteristics needed for language, it does not have semantics nor syntax. And if in some cases we could call painting as language these particular cases cannot be generalized.

Another approach to painting as language is given to us by Ferdinand De Saussure. His philosophy, which later was developed to semiotics, language is thought as a code for expressing thoughts. Language itself is a system of signs and sign is defined as a union of meanings and what calls sound-images; both which are said to be psychological entities. Example would be when two people are talking to each other. In the brain of the speaker a sound-image is associated with a concept. Spoken this triggers reversal process in the listener and the sound-image is transferred to the same concept, or concept very similar to it. Simplified the theory is that the meaning of a word is what it is associated with, what it refers to. So the word gets it meaning from standing for something. Tilghman explains it this way:” In this theory, words are thought of as signs and we must suppose that they are thus one with billboards, stoplights, darkening clouds and a host of other things. Now apply that idea to paintings. Paintings represent things, and it is tempting to say that in that way they refer to them. Given that temptation we may as well that in that respect pictures are like words of language, not to mention advertising hoardings, traffic light and all the rest. They are presumed to acquire their meaning in just the same way.” The problems then are that if the theory of signs is to have value it must show that there is unity among the range of apparently different things it is willing to call signs. And that the unity must be found in relation between the sign and what it means, and furthermore the relation must be true to all signs.

Here we can remember what I wrote earlier about Wittgenstein, because he says that the words in our language have many different uses, comparing the language to a toolbox. Wittgenstein named the vast characteristics language uses to language games meaning that the many different ways we use language still does have rules, like games have and also that playing a game is human activity embedded in human life and so is language. Wittgenstein says in Philosophical investigations :” Here we come up against the great question that lies behind all these considerations. –For someone might object against me: ´You have taken the easy way out! You talk about all sorts of language-games, but have nowhere said what the essence of a language-game, and hence of language, is: what is common to all these activities, and what makes them into language or parts of language…. ´
And this is true. –Instead of producing something common to all that we call language, I am saying that these phenomena have no one thing in common which makes us use the same word for all, -but that they are related to one another in many different ways. And it is because of these relationships, that we call them all language.”

Now looking the general theory of signs in a light of Wittgenstein’s note we come to see the problems of such theory. These problems become even more clear when applying them to painting, a women drawn in painting stands out for, or can stand out for, something completely different than the women pictured in a door of public toilette. No general laws of signs can be made to painting thus making the general theory of signs kind useless when talking about painting and painting as language.

It seems that it is difficult to categorize painting to be a language. When we consider language in traditional terms. But as all the words have so many meanings so does the word language have many meanings. And when we speak about painting as language we do get some kind of picture what it is. Maybe it used because we want to communicate what we see and feel when looking at art. We want to share that experience to other, and to be able to communicate, discuss about it. Just as well we want to discuss other happenings, experiences we have had during our day, or life. For me painting is kind of language, it makes sense to talk about my own work as an artists and also about other peoples work in that way. It might be that we don’t need a theory of painting as language, or that we need as much of them we can get; language of painting is changing, it is not fixed and it has even more implications and games associated with it than normal language in itself.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Wittgenstein and theory of the arts


For the past weeks I´ve been desperately trying to find something intresting theoretical writings for my final written work for the MA here in Bergen. I have doubted myself that maybe I´m not so good contemporary artist cause i dont find any intrest in postmodernistic theories from Barthes, Derrida, Foucalt, Zizek, Lacan... - I mean lots of brainwork there and all, but I just find it utterly boring. What has this to do with art, I ask myself, or if this is art do I want to be part of it?

But then, enter Mr. Wittgenstein and his later philosophy. Calmly and arrogantly Wittgenstein (or Wittgensteinian philosophy) states that even though all the theories have made certain succes in their fields, nonetheless they are false! In a book Wittgenstein, theory and the arts Richard Allen and Malcolm Turvey state that according to Wittgensteins autonomity of language, Theorys in such, falsify themselves as all the theorys (This is very generally put, and filtered through my limited understanding of wittgensteins philosophy) reduce the plurality and richness of human expression, thought, meaning to one principle. Also they assume that the reason why people do something is something hidden, unknown. This unknown varies, but it is still there.

The wish behind such theorethical hypothesis is that in future the theory will be verified. Like a scientific theory, like we can verify that earth is in orbit with sun and not vice versa even though we cant see it, by measuring certain things. But in humanistic theories such a verification is not possible, it either reduces all the human functions to mere physiologial functions, or reduces the plurality of causes to one specific cause,("-This reason is why we do all this") or/also then assumes something hidden force behind our actions. And that force can not be verified by scientifical means, cause we cant have scientifical evidence about it. The discovery of such hypothesis cannot be awaiting empirical discovery, according to Wittgensteins conception of the autonomity of linguistic meaning. If we are to form a theory we will have to form it from the things that are there; from things which are open to view in our practices with art.

I really dont think that I have been capable of clearly describing Wittgensteins critique on theory or his linguistic philosophy. Maybe it doesnt even matter, if you are intrested I can recommend the book "Wittgenstein, theory and the arts", edited by Richard Allen and Malcolm Turvey. But what for me is intresting that such critique was for me like a breath of fresh air, giving the freedom to not be intrested on such theories. And still be part of the discussion, or part of contemporary art field.

The meaning of art doesn´t have to lie in any theory. For me the most intresting part is experience. And experience, in itself doesnt need any verification of theory, if it is there it is there. We don´t have to understand it through our intellect.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Painting as language


I am doing MA-final work now in Art academy of Bergen, Norway and I have also written work to do, so I thought I post some parts from my written work (which is far from ready...) here and see if it gets any comments. My written text is about Painting as Language. here we go:

Words put together in agreed order forms a language. If we were to put the words in some non-agreed order we probably wouldn’t understand each other. Or if we were to meet a person who would speak our words put in chaotic order we would be probably call him crazy or a poet. In pictures the language is not so defined. We have lot of agreements globally and culturally linked, but generally the language in pictures is freer.
Rudolf Arnheim compares language and images in his essay “The reading of images and the images of reading” According to Arnheim Visual and written language are similar in a way they both depend on images, the way they both communicate is by crating images to the viewer. The difference comes in that the images created by words are indirect “ They are [images from written text] mental images deriving for the most part from direct perceptions that are gathered during the person’s life” Where as images created by visual arts are direct in a sense that they are, or they have the possibility to be direct visual perceptions. More differences appear when the artist’s task is not just in describing physical situations or actions but also in rendering the thoughts that distinguish human experience. Language has the ability to refer directly t concepts, such as “love”,”envy”, “ambition” etc. Whereas visual language is only equipped with shapes, and colors. In Arnheims essay he quotes Eugene Delacroix’s Journals which I site here also:” I confess my predilection for the silent arts, for those mute things of which Poussin said that they were his profession. Language is indiscreet, it goes after you, it solicits your attention and stirs up discussion. Painting and sculpture seem more dignified-one must seek them out…The work of the painter and the sculptor is all of a piece like works of nature. Its author is not present in it, he does not engage you like the writer or the orator. He offers reality that is somehow tangible, yet full of mystery.”
Nowadays of course one might disagree with Delacroix that the author of painting is not present in the work. Nevertheless it points out the different approaches of these two medias to the subject.

Monday, October 24, 2005

World as it is


There is a world called Tellus, which we humans, amongst many other creatures live upon. Human population reaches soon six milliard people. In this tiny planet of ours (Jupiter is about 300 hundred times bigger) we have six milliard people living in their own world, interpreting this world in unique way. One could say that there is about six milliard ontology’s of this world/existence.
In one world there exists so many worlds; is there connection between these worlds? -A question many have asked. Renee Descartes famously concluded, “Cogito ergo sum” I think, therefore I am. But who is that is thinking, can I be sure it is I, might someone ask. We can’t be sure of anything actually. We can’t know in the pure sense of knowing that there even is these six milliard other people, or the world, nor Jupiter or whatsoever. We live in our subjective world; we see world through our eyes only.
Interesting then is, that we all believe we live in the same world, that there is something we all see and hear. And we have cultivated this believe very far, we have constructed our whole “objective world” upon it. We have defined our objective world, what it is and what it isn’t. We have invented science to explore this world. We have gone so far that we don’t remember anymore that the objective is only a belief, something commonly agreed.
All this is fine, we need to believe in order to live and function. But what makes it problematic is that this belief has been dogmatized. And people who contradict are not listened. We have lost our own subjective experience in order to build objective experience. Paradoxical and also ironical part is that in our age certain kind of individualism has also gone to the extremes. Individuality whish is born out of the collective objective truth, not out of our subjective experience.
What if we could build our objective world differently? Could we accept the fact that we may not have a clue what is really going on here? Could we wonder about this? Can there be something in our existence, which is common to all of us without the need to compromise? As science and our objective believes of the world relies on rationality and logic, could we leave all that behind and search if we have something in common in more humane level; in irrational feeling based level?
Life is irrational, chaotic, the law of cause and effect is only an invention, mere belief, which does make the world easier place to be, but is not necessary true. Nonetheless it doesn’t always work.
The world as it is, is a mystery. Something our logical mind cannot reach. That doesn´t mean it can’t be experienced.

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Discussion

Helou Katri also! Nice to hear from you!! I do notice there is a nice discussion going on about art, just thought I copypaset it here so its easier to read

So I wrote:
We just had this seminar about hybrid art practices, in other words, the role of artist nowadays. What is art and artist anyway? Its a open question.. We all do art dont we?

I just had a exhibition with two of my friends, and even as it was a really nice exhibition and all, I started wondering why the hell I am doing this? It costed me a lot of money and took lots of time to make this exhibition, and what do I get out of it - One article in newspaper, some thoughts in the opening. some experience. Maybe the wish that sometime in the future something will happen...

And its like this with lot of artists, they provide something and pay for it. Maybe it´s just me, but I think something is missing here...

Hybrid art in one way offers a way for artist to pursue new ways for their art, in one way it´s a way to survive as artist in this world.

Pessi said...
Terve vaa juu - - -
How nice to write in English - I don't need to insert a & o umlauts via character map or 'special characters'. /// Yes, art-as-a-job isn't really happening, at least not in Finland, eh? I wish to have artistry as my JOB, not as a hobby. If art really was integrated to the society, it would be a profession instead of a subsidized activity. Farming in Finland is somewhat similar: without EU subsidies, no one would be a professional farmer in Finland.
Maybe this started way back with the Enlightenment, and the 'disciplinarizing' of the arts (G.E. Lessing: Laocoon, about 1766). Since then, arts have resided in more or less separate camps.
Interdisciplinary art doesn't segregate, or close itself in an ivory tower, it can be integrated into everything else: look at almost any old or even indigenous culture and you'll find things that point to this: First Nations of Canada, Gamelan of Bali or Java, flamenco, african music/dance; all consisting of a multitude of parts, each autonomous, yet inseparable from the whole.

15 October, 2005 01:35


Katri said...
Wow! Hello Pessi and Tomi! First thank you Tomi spending your time putting up this blog. It´s an excelent idea, and gives joy. Perhaps that´s why you did it.

Pessi; I liked your compair between agriculture and art in Finland.

I recognise the feeling one sometimes gets after putting up an exhibition. For me it is not only related to spending all my little money in it, put to the idea that why should that be the way to communicate with art.
( I couldn´t make it to your opening, but visited there one day after it - it was one of the energetig ones I saw that day in Tampere.)
I`ve started to reed Like´s published book about International Situationists. IS has always been so exciting for me. It is connected to the idea of fading the border between art and life. (I have had and still do have difficulties of using the word ART...Should I invent another word for what I do and want to do?) In the first pages there were written; " We should not change the way people see pictures, but the way they see streets".
Rain or broken overdrived tomato on asfalt can be so much stronger than paintings on the walls. Jari Jula answered to my essay on second year in AMK, that;" You should remember, that only thing rain can do is to make you wet. You make the rain touching." So can it be really compaired? Picture made by human carring perhaps a meaning/message and natures´ powers?

Back to me again...
Maybe we should change also our view how, we look at people looking at art? And I think thats a great ideat, we all should do - to change the way how we look at life, things around us etc.
First time I came to Bergen and saw the fjords and little wooden houses adn everything I was amazed, so charming. Now lately, when I came to bergen I was listening to music in airport buss and lost in my thoughts, or when I go to library and wal across this beatiful bond, and where you can see the mountains, I rarely look at them... It´s so easy to get used to things. And when you get used to something, it stops being intresting. We lose our respect to that thing in a way.
Wouldn´t it be great if we could all the time see everything as fresh, without limiting boxes, -you know this is this, this is this street, there are the mountains. Then we could see that smashed tomaton in the street and look how beatiful it is.