Author Archive

DUBAI’S 1X1 ART GALLERY BREAKS NEW GROUND WITH A MIXED-MEDIA PROJECT BY CHITTROVANU MAZUMDAR

Posted on September 25, 2009 by adminLeave a comment

Neha Chandra posted:

1×1 Art gallery

Stall no. B07,

Hall no. 7,

India Art Summit,

Pragati Maidan,New Delhi.

From – August 19, 2009 to August 22, 2009.

As the capital gets ready for the second edition of India Art Summit with every art gallery choosing the customary option of presenting a group of artists, there is one exception that comes as a breath of fresh air, and art! Dubai-based 1×1 Art Gallery is the only gallery to present a solo artist and will be showcasing a brand new series of works by Calcutta’s renowned and equally reclusive artist Chittrovanu Mazumdar at the summit.

Says Malini Gulrajani, Director, 1×1 Art Gallery: “Most people would shy from showing a single artist at such an international platform. I, however, believe that commerce should be the last concern of a gallery and to do justice to Chittro’s work that I admire so much, a solo exhibit was the only way.”

Reciprocating the loyalty in equal measure, artist Chittrovanu Mazumdar has created for this project a brand-new series ranging from three-four large mixed media works in mediums as difficult and diverse as tar, wax, metal, light and photography that will be wall mounted; a series of small photographic as well as wax works and a sculpture-installation. There are works made of lights on mild steel panel with dimmer, speakers and soundtrack; acrylic paint, wax and tar on plywood and mild steel; wax on plywood with gold leaf as well as tinted silver leaf and few digital works of human and landscape imagery with wax and tar on mild steel.

According to Chittrovanu Mazumdar – “The blueprint for my new works is the cohabitation of opposites.” He explains that by using light-hungry, night-dark tar and the trays of light that feed those depths while simultaneously reflecting off them; he has juxtaposed mythical reverberations of black and white. The human weight of history – of making, of handcrafting – bespoken by age-old materials such as beeswax, metal, tar has been combined with sheer virtuality to produce digital prints, screen images and electronic soundscape. The promise of touch foregrounded through the textured tactility of poured colour or the exposed skin are evident in the prints on display. The curved arc of the containing womb-pod with its eternal potential of bursting, birthing and the unsettling presence of the unknown and the known are present amidst all the neatly framed geometric assertion on the walls.

Another highlight at the summit will be Chittrovanu’s video titled ‘Sleep’ which will be shown at the Video Lounge. The fifteen-minute video showcases the interrogation of the surface where the depths erupt unpredictably through cracks in a seemingly seamless skin; the metaphor of sleep and escaping dreams that inevitably rupture the face of an ostensibly calm and tranquil order as aural signs of disruption, chaos, always imminent and never predictable, haunt the mind.

Says Chittrovanu Mazumdar: “I consider myself as an expressionist painter and believe that art is a private activity for the artist, a search within the individual. To me, work is the space of freedom where everything can move, turn around, transform and become something else. There are structures and systems that one follows up to a point but then gets out of them.”

While this would be 1×1 Art Gallery’s first foray into the Indian market, the artist himself is no newcomer. While his last solo show in Delhi was at Bodhi Art Gallery in 2005, Chittrovanu has shown extensively across the globe since his first art outing in 1985. He has established himself as one of India’s leading contemporary artists. Fusing the intellectual with the sensual in a unique way, the artist has exhibited across the world like at Jehangir Art Gallery (Mumbai); Bose Pacia Modern (New York); Seagull Foundation (Kolkata); Latit Kala (Chennai); Aicon Gallery (London). He had also been invited to display at the Victoria Memorial Durbar Hall, Calcutta (1991) and joined the ranks of the previous two invitees M F Husain and Bikash Bhattacharjee.

Born in 1956, Paris, Chittrovanu Mazumdar studied painting and printmaking at the Ecole Des Beaux Arts, Paris in 1983 after graduating from the Government College of Arts and Crafts, Calcutta with a gold medal. Starting his career as a painter with huge canvases, mammoth solo shows and exploring a broad spectrum of media and technology in his work, his range of references is vast, incorporating inputs from his own culturally rich upbringing in Kolkata and Paris and an astonishing range of eclectic reading in three languages – French, English and Bengali. His work pulls from various influences, be it visual, musical or lyrical. His paintings – using bold brushstrokes, layered imagery, abstract images and elements of collage – express the conflicting experiences and beliefs that exist within modern society and man. His canvases exude intensity and vigor and are representational of his feelings of angst and suppression in a fast paced city.  Distinctive by their blaze of colour and a free-flowing application of paint, his works have the ability to seamlessly shift from abstraction to figuration and naturalism. He treats the conventions of modernism not as constrictive theories but as stylistic options, employing abstraction, figuration, the macabre and the jovial all in a single work.

One of his most unsurpassed exhibitions in the past titled ‘Undated – Night Skin’ had amorphous sounds floating in plangent music. Embedded in the ominous military machines were fragments of human experiences – images of living spaces, dreamlike landscapes, panels of intense red impasto like coagulated blood, flowing water, cries, the lights of a city at night, the wail of an infant, a woman alone, sirens and traffic sounds, stained walls and doors and windows, a female voice pleading, a placid pig wallowing in the filth etc.

Equally evocative is the artist’s photography work that he has showcased in the past. His photographs tells a story of a place where violence, vandalism and death have just taken place, producing a comment on the present socio-political situation of India. One of the digital prints shows a calf’s carcass that lies abandoned to its fate, the potential symbols for death and decay, connoting the cyclical nature of life – what comes from the earth goes back to the earth. Says Chittrovanu: “I had a strong interest in photography and began to incorporate my own photographs in my works with painterly intervention or with a third presence, the intrusion of an exterior world. However, in due course of time, I started using photoshop on it. For the photographic series, I had travelled to Jharkhand where I chose a one square kilometer of desolated marshy land as the location and reworked on my clicked images. It was the textual and visual possibilities of a fictionalized documentary that inspired me to do these series.

Continuously reinventing himself for the past three decades, Chittrovanu has always been ahead of his times and moved in a new direction with every show, simultaneously returning to the most primeval of human emotions – fear, hunger, ecstasy, desire. His art boldly blends elements of pop art with abstract swathes of colour, dealing with human paradox and ambiguity, of the seeping grey of daily life that escapes the purity of black and white. What appears to link the very visually and formally different phases of his work is the intensity of sensual immersion demanded by the artist of both himself and the viewer. The viewer feels compelled to unravel the meaning behind the artist’s often fragmented compositions. Through the layers of translucent and opaque paint over collages of images and text, one suddenly notices the vehement gaze of belligerent eyes or a desperately outstretched hand. Mazumdar states, “I enjoy the fact that it isn’t a definite, complete form. The half-formed figure is always in the process of becoming. It remains a promise, full of possibilities.”

ABOUT 1X1 ART GALLERY

A major force in promoting Contemporary Indian Art in Dubai, 1×1 has organized and presented ‘Af-fair’ in Dubai in March 2008 curated by Bose Krishnamachari bringing to fore works of artist like Anant Joshi, Hema Upadhyaya, Jyothi Basu, Justin Ponmany, Riyas Komu, TV Santosh, Parvathy Nayar, Minal Damani, Vivek Vilsani and Aji VN soon to be launched as a documented book. Few other shows 1×1 has presented lately are ‘The New Place’, ‘Route-en-Route’, ‘Urban/Image’, ‘Art Paris’. Solo exhibits include Chittrovanu Mazumdar, Jogen Choudhary, Jatin Das, Jaideep Mehrotra, Senaka Senanayake, M.F Husain besides group shows presenting ‘Pratul Dash and Rajesh Ram’ and ‘Farhad Husain, Kazi Nazir and Binoy Varghese’.

Tags: , , ,

Is Web Design Dying Out?

Posted on September 18, 2009 by adminLeave a comment

Steve Ceaton asked:

Web design nowadays is getting more involved than ever before.  Gone are the days when a web designer could create a beautiful looking design in Photoshop, and then just slice it into html.  Nowadays this is only the start of the story.

Usability is one of the buzz words going around in the web design world. As are worlds like RSS Feed, Twitter and Call to Action.  A website is so much more about connectivity today than it’s ever been, and a good web designer needs to take all of these things on board when creating a design.

Another huge diversion that web design has taken is in to the world of Flash and video.  Web video is becoming ever more popular as bandwidths have increased and video capability now needs to be thought about and implemented in to our web designs.

With search engines like Google now gaining the ability to read information contained within Flash movies, and even having the ability to decipher human speech, web video is gaining momentum at an incredible pace.  It won’t be long until a standard static website looks as old fashioned as a bowler hat and a dickie bird tie.

Designing a successful website is now demanding a multitude of skills, and the emphasis on teamwork is stronger now than ever.  Ideally before the web designer is even involved a website project should be shown to a search engine marketing specialist.  They will know what social networking widgets will be needed to be worked in to the design, and they should be well versed in search engine optimization, so as to know what will work for the search engines.

Then maybe a graphic designer would be more of a benefit than an actual web designer, to design the back drop and scenery that will contain any ,web presenters or Flash movies.  After this an expert in Flash Actionscript may be required to make any Flash animations, menus or movies interactive and usable.

Finally then a web designer may be able to take all the pieces and put them together to create the website.  It is getting much more difficult now to be a web design one man band, and maybe as the Internet progresses the web designer will play an even lesser role.  We can see a point in the future where websites will be fully animated mini TV shows.  The entire website may then be filmed in a studio, and built in Flash, with a graphic designer designing the peripherals and effects.

It’s all great news for web users, but not so great for web designers.  My advice to any web designers out there both new and experienced it to either learn some new skills (most specifically Flash), or starting building a team to manage to coming onslaught of new website marketing media.

Tags: 

Tips On Finding Free Adobe Photoshop Tutorial

Posted on September 18, 2009 by admin11 Comments

antmtl710 asked:


So after many videos of speed retouching I’ve gotten tons of emails from YouTubers that wanted an actual tutorial. Not just speed retouching to music. Unfortunately I’m kept very busy shoot fashion and commercial work to do these but right now its the holidays and i have some down time. Enjoy! PS: Sorry for the sound quality, this was my first podcast and first time recording my voice, I have since gotten a better mic so future videos will me clearer sounding. :)

Tags: , ,

Tips On Finding Free Adobe Photoshop Tutorial

Posted on September 18, 2009 by adminLeave a comment

Mario Churchill asked:


You may have been amazed at how your friends or family have manipulated photographs from way back when or truly impressed by the visually stimulating personalized electronic greeting cards you received from your colleagues. No matter what your ulterior motive is for buying that graphic editor software, such as Adobe Photoshop, the question now is how you are going to learn how to use them and impress yourself or other people on how creative you can be with such tool.

Unless you want to be a professional graphic designer, it is advisable that you first learn the basics of the software from free Adobe Photoshop tutorial available to you. You may be extremely excited to weave magic on your digital images, but you need to know that you cannot just enhance or create beautiful pictures if you do not know even just the fundamentals of the software you just bought. It would also be futile to pay for advanced Adobe Photoshop classes or tutorials because you might not be able to fully comprehend what your instructor is saying, especially if you are not really very familiar with computers, because you don’t even know the basics.

Do not panic. The first free Adobe Photoshop tutorial that is available to you is from the software CD itself. After installing the software, navigate and look for a tutorial or help section. Such software usually has tutorials that will show you what you can do with your new acquisition. Chances are you will be able to know what the icons on your screen signify and do with the help tool provided by the manufacturer of the software.

Another way to get a free Adobe Photoshop tutorial is to ask a friend to teach you. This is one of the best methods to learn the software because you will have someone guide you while you trying out the software. Moreover, this tutorial is interactive so you can ask your friend questions if some things seem difficult to understand. However, usually a tutorial from a friend is actually not entirely free. It would be nice to treat your friend to lunch or dinner after he or she has painstakingly explained and showed you how to use Adobe Photoshop.

Actually, if you have a son or daughter who is into computers, you could also ask their help. Children nowadays are so adept at using the Internet and new computer trends and software. You won’t have difficulty in asking help from your children because they know that they have to teach you well or else their allowance might be compromised.

Another way to find a free Adobe Photoshop tutorial is through the Internet. Just search “free Adobe Photoshop tutorials” in whatever search engine you usually use and you will find a lot of sites that offer tutorials that you can download for free. Be sure to type the word free when searching for tutorials because there are also a number of websites that require you to pay for certain file downloads.

Aside from downloading files on how to use your Photoshop, you could also join forums and discussion groups. Such venues will help you learn tricks and new ways of doing things from the experiences of people who have been using the software for a long time.

Lastly, the best way for you to learn is to practice. Do not be afraid to put the things that you have learned from the tutorials to use. No matter how many paid or free tutorials you attend, you will not be able to learn how to completely manipulate the graphic editor if you do not try it out. Go ahead be creative and experiment.

A Look Inside dekePod–Beware of What You Might Find

Posted on September 17, 2007 by adminLeave a comment

by Derrick Story
05/03/2006 In this interview, Deke McClelland introduces dekePod, his new video podcast devoted to computer graphics, digital imaging, and anything else that happens to spill out of his head. Lasting a mere five minutes (short enough to watch three times in a single coffee break), the pilot episode shows you how to scan and open money in Adobe Photoshop.

dekePod pilot screenshotTo watch the dekePod pilot, click here. To subscribe to dekePod in iTunes, click here.

In the United States, it’s legal to integrate money into artwork as long as you follow specific guidelines. (To research those guidelines or explore the rules for non-U.S. currency, go to www.rulesforuse.org and select a country.) But erring on the side of caution, Photoshop sometimes recognizes money and tries to stop you from using it. Fortunately for law-abiding citizens who are smart enough to follow rules, Deke knows a workaround.

Derrick: You’ve really created a wild visual experience here, Deke. Tell us a bit about this video.

Deke: This is something I’ve been itching to do for a while. After listening to and watching other people’s podcasts, I thought, I’ve got to take a swing at this myself. I’m not necessarily talking about the tech stuff either. It’s the really entertaining shows that grabbed my attention. Jack Black, French Maid TV, Ricky Gervais–they’re just too great! All the time, I’m thinking, how can I make imaging and design training–the stuff I really love–that much fun? So I hooked up with the guys at Flying Moose Pictures, and we came up with dekePod. It’s edgy, it’s ironic, with a bit of music video pacing thrown in for good measure. Really tightly produced, too. We’ve set the bar high on this one. It looks brilliant. I’m stoked about that.

Derrick: I agree that the production and the content are terrific. Seems like you’ve got a great team here. Ironically, though, I think of you primarily as a teacher and book author, not as this wild guy in the video. What attracted you to this new medium?

Deke: I think most folks think of me first as a writer because that’s where I started, and I still write two or three books a year under my One-on-One brand. But I’ve done lots of video. About a decade ago, I had a cable TV show called Digital Gurus. We filmed nearly 100 episodes in all. And I’ve created a couple hundred hours of video training for Total Training. Even my books contain video training. Lately, I’ve become obsessed with my video iPod; there’s something wonderfully Jetson about holding a TV set in your hands. I just knew I had to create something for it. And it’s so new, I don’t think we’ve begun to exploit the possibilities of this medium yet. An environment this wide-open is very attractive.

Derrick: As you look into your crystal ball, what kind of future do you see for podcasting and vidcasting? I know many people thought that this was just a fad. But based on what I’m seeing in the iTunes Music Store and around the Web, a lot of talented people seem very serious about this, including you.

Deke: One of the amazing things about this is, podcasts are nothing new. I mean, what’s a podcast? Free downloadable content; that’s all. I think of Harry Shearer, who has been posting his Le Show broadcasts on Audible as free MP3 files for years. Those are podcasts. Heck, iTunes lets you podcast a PDF file!

But some wonk coins the term “podcast.” It gets up on iTunes, then the video element enters the picture, and suddenly it’s on fire. I met the Flying Moose guys at Scott Sheppard’s Podcast Summit a couple of weeks ago. First year they’ve done it, and it’s the #1 attraction at NAB’s Post-Processing World. There’s so much interest, so many wacky ideas.

We were joking that podcasting looks to be shaping up into a miniature version of the old dot-com balloon. But no, I don’t think it’s a fad. As screen sizes increase, and iPods and other devices improve, I imagine this little cottage industry is going to grow into a major medium. Granted, the days of a couple of guys pointing a camera at themselves–sitting on a couch, drinking beer, reading viewer email, and calling that a podcast–those days are limited. Mercifully limited, I might add. But I see a real heyday for quality content producers and hungry subscribers alike.

Derrick: What kinds of ideas do you have for upcoming episodes? Can you give us a teaser or two?

Deke: I want to take broad topics–things everyone wants to do–and boil them down into the simplest, most streamlined techniques. Like, how do you make someone look thinner? How do you disguise flab and other body defects, stuff your friends and family are sensitive about, with a bowl of flowers or some other deftly placed object? How do you repair really difficult red-eye, make someone appear less cross-eyed, or open someone’s eyes when they’re closed? How do you repair a missing detail in a photo, put two people in the same photo together, assemble artificial vacations, create family reunions where none actually existed, make family portraits that include dead ancestors? You know, imaging miracles–little supercharged bursts that make you think, “Yeah, I could do that,” with just enough real info to maybe help you pull it off yourself. A little bit of empowerment, a little bit of fraud, all boiled down into a five-minute micro meal. I’m calling it a syringe of information to the visual cortex. Tiny imaging multivitamins: each dekePod episode a different color and flavor, and shaped like Flintstones or Scooby Doo characters so you get hooked on them and you keep coming back.

Derrick: Thanks, Deke. I’ll be one of those people coming back for more. Great chatting with you, but I think it’s time for me to watch the video just one more time…

Deke: It’s a pleasure, Derrick. Thanks for the opportunity to hype my hype.

Derrick Story is the digital media evangelist for O’Reilly, as well as the author of Digital Photography Hacks and Digital Photography Pocket Guide. You can listen to his photo podcasts and read his tips at The Digital Story. Aperture fans might want to check out his co-authored video training on Lynda.com titled, Aperture 1.5 Beyond the Basics.

Partial Face Transplants Pictures Gallery

Posted on September 17, 2007 by adminLeave a comment

Partial Face Transplants Pictures Gallery

Advanced Photoshop Pictures Gallery – 20 image entries
Partial Face Transplants
Contest Directions: [ A year after a Frenchwoman received the world's first partial face transplant, doctors say the operation was a success and she is gaining more and more sensitivity and facial mobility. British and American doctors already have plans for a first full-face transplant. ]
Even if full face transplants become successful, politicians will never accept them. It’s just too expensive to get transplants on two faces.
In this contest you are asked to perform partial face transplants on politicians and celebrities. The right half of a face has to be from one celebrity and the left half from another. Jessica Biel can be a good image source as well as others. Politicians and celebrities face mixes are also allowed and cross gender face breeds too. Tags: partial face transplants

Top 20 Contest Gallery Pictures


This contest is fueled by the following news:

 
 
Web freakingnews.com



This photoshop gallery of pictures only contains our top 20 picture selections from its parent contest Partial Face Transplants. All 37 contest pictures gallery and contest information can be viewed here.

  • Register free to participate here.
  • Browse the Best of FreakingNews picture galleries.
  • Recommend this picture gallery to a friend.NOTE: This picture gallery is copyright protected. You may not repost any of the pictures inside this gallery on external sites (including message boards and non-profit sites) without express permission from FreakingNews.
    X-Men Face Transplant pictures
    X-Men Face Transplant
     
    Orlando Bloom + Johnny Depp pictures
    Orlando Bloom + Johnny Depp
     
    Natalie Portman + Keira Knightley pictures
    Natalie Portman + Keira Knightley
     
    Paris Hilton + Jessica Simpson pictures
    Paris Hilton + Jessica Simpson
     
    Bill and Hillary Clinton pictures
    Bill and Hillary Clinton
     
    Will Smith + Bill Clinton pictures
    Will Smith + Bill Clinton
     
    Henry Kissinger pictures
    Henry Kissinger
     
    Maryl Streep + Paris Hilton pictures
    Maryl Streep + Paris Hilton
     
    TomKat pictures
    TomKat
     
    Katherine Heigl + Milla Jovovich pictures
    Katherine Heigl + Milla Jovovich
     
    Queen + Elton John pictures
    Queen + Elton John
     
    George W Bush + Indian Chief pictures
    George W Bush + Indian Chief
     
    Julia Roberts + Jessica Biel pictures
    Julia Roberts + Jessica Biel
     
    Condi Rice + Hillary Clinton pictures
    Condi Rice + Hillary Clinton
     
    Alice Cooper + Al Pacino pictures
    Alice Cooper + Al Pacino
     
    Tom Cruise Partial Face Transplant pictures
    Tom Cruise Partial Face Transplant
     
    50 Cent + Tom Cruise pictures
    50 Cent + Tom Cruise
     
    Carmen Electra + Elizabeth Hurley pictures
    Carmen Electra + Elizabeth Hurley
     
    Owen Wilson + Ben Stiller pictures
    Owen Wilson + Ben Stiller
     
    Oprah Winfrey + Condi Rice pictures
    Oprah Winfrey + Condi Rice
     
    Kofi Annan + Bill Cosby pictures
    Kofi Annan + Bill Cosby
  • Retouch

    Posted on September 17, 2007 by adminLeave a comment

    Client: Ministry of Health and Social Affairs
    Title: Retouch

    The media world is becoming increasingly fixated on appearances. And the number of tricks used to achieve the increasingly exaggerated ideals is growing. Many models have plastic surgery and even more are retouched so they appear to have bigger breasts, smaller stomachs or fuller lips.

    We wanted to show how easy it is to change someone’s appearance in this campaign.

    « Previous Page