Monday, December 10, 2007

Reaction to Generation Flash

GENERATION FLASH looks at the impact of Flash graphics on art in a new era. One thing I first found interesting, is how Manovich categorizes the artist, the media artist, and the software artist, and distinguishes them by separate time periods. For instance the ‘romantic/modernist artist’ is said to be of the nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century…Does this mean that it is no longer possible for an artist who composes art from scratch to create something new/original? Have the years that have passed since the second half of the 20th century made remixing the only mode of production? Manovich says that the new romantic is the software artist, but is that really the only possibility? I’m not sure if I would agree here. I think it is possible to integrate the paradigms of the new generation, as he says, in more mediums than just software, though software is one good medium (it isn’t the only possibility). (Of course this isn’t necessarily what Manovich is saying, since the article is centrally about Flash).
Software artists intellegintely use media to carry a new meaning, rather than former media artists who were simply remixing in competition with commercial media. They creatively and mathematically (through code) use ‘economical systems’ rather than sampled ‘icons’ to as Manovich says, offer us intelligence rather than ignorance (of media). They also trust the audience's intelligence, providing them with the tools and graphics to interact with and create/understand the intended meanings, rather than overtly throwing them at us, in an almost cliched way as media does, so that they make sure we understand the meaning directly (with no room for discovering meaning on one's one).

Monday, December 3, 2007

comment on slash fan fiction

When reading slash fiction, I think one would first assume it to be written by a male homosexual. It seems to be written for the purpose of extending preexisting characters into an extended world in which they take on homosexual identities that they wouldnt normally take on in their original setting (film, tv show, etc.). This allows fans to bring the characters into their own world, and share cultural similarities with the characters, that people of the heterosexual culture can already do. ..When I read more on slash fiction on wikipedia, it said most slash fiction is written by women (whether this is true or not, of course I dont know for sure), but i found this very surprising. I dont entirely understand the reasons for a heterosexual woman, who is the fan of something, to take its characters and place them in a homosexual sex scene, unless they are just playing with gender roles through their this free creative space. I would really need to research more on the motives of the authors of such fan fiction to really understand it. (especially between male and female authors)