Monday, 19 October 2015
Image Analysis - Study Task
Empire Marketing board - 'East African Transport Old Style' and 'East African New Style' by Adrian Allinson, from the 'Colonial Progress Brings Home Prosperity' series of posters.
The Uncle Sam Range (1876) Advertising Image by Schumacher and Ettlinger, New York
These images both display pride of colonisation and empire. It is promoting the idea that the West (particularly the U.S and the U.K) is culturally, socially and technologically wise superior to the rest of the world. In the current time both of these images could be seen as racist or xenophobic in it's themes whereas at the time they would have been socially acceptable. Both images are patriotic to either America or the British Empire.
'Uncle Sam Range' is an advertisement for a range cooker. This advertisement is in the 100 year anniversary of America's independence (1879) which is marked by the clock .The gold title indicates wealth to depict that if you buy this cooker you'll be seen as wealthy - probably being sold to the aspirational middle class. It is a garish and bright poster, using the American flag in every chance it gets to really show how patriotic these Range cookers are. To give the sense that you'll be a 'real American' if you buy it. The range isn't even the focal point of the cooker which shows how big the celebration on the anniversary is. During times of national occasions, companies usually use these to sell their products even if two and two do not go together and the product has no relation to the occasion. The advertisement is trying to show how strong the U.S has come since becoming independent and shows that with the metaphorical bill which has mocking list of stereotypical foods that immigrants of the East Coast of America would eat i.e Irish immigrants would have moved America because of the potato famine and America has helped them. This advertisement also portrays the backwards-ness in social attitudes at the time. The white man in this picture looks tall, powerful, well dressed and affluent. Whereas the woman in this picture is serving the man, kept in her place, not necessarily allowed at the dinner meeting. The black man is even smaller, demoting his worth.
The Empire Marketing Board's advertisments are less so to sell a product and more to sell an idea. These posters will have been to prove that the empire is still a good idea to the people of Britain and also to encourage the wealthy people of East Africa who would probably had British education to invest in new infrastucture. The Old Style shows women, men and children working together, slowly and have unhappy/ angry faces to say that this style is not working for them. In the New Style, it is only black men working maybe implying that women are to weak to do these building jobs. I think it's trying to say that the new style would benefit everyone, however the bridges they have built are probably purely to benefit Britain with importing goods and the African people are just dehumanised workers. The white man is higher than the African workers to show he has the power. He is the hero of the colony and without the white man's intervention Africa would carry on being 'backwards'.
Both of these advertisements are trying to promote inclusivity and 'working together' but the white man is still the focal point and he will always be superior. They put black people at the bottom and dehumanise them from actual humans with minds to just simple workers - slaves perhaps. Even though both of these advertisements were created after the abolishment of slavery, proving that the idea of black people had still not progressed. These images try to justify stealing other people's land through nationalism and depictions that we're better than them so it's acceptable for us to steal their land. In a historical view, these advertisements try disguise the horror and brutal attacks within these areas of history while still blatantly showing them up through the undermining images of black people.
"To what extent does advertising construct our ideas of gender?"
A few basic things I hit on while researching through this question
- There is a distinct lack of black women in advertising, either being in the background or not being present at all
- There is a distorted view of women or lack of women in advertising because only a 25% of the advertising directors are women (however it has progressed up 4% in recent decades)
- Even when women are meant to be 'empowered' in adverts it still plays along their looks and the 'natural beauties' are still airbrushed and in proportion to be acceptable to our societal ideals of the female body. (whereas men are allowed to be disgusting...)
- Something makes me recoil in horror at trying to sell products through a 'real beauty campaign' - 'you have real beauty as long as you buy these products'.
"What is the role of print media in the digital age?" - Group Task
Print media - In the art of printmaking, "media" tends to refer to the technique used to create a print
Printmaking normally covers only the process of creating prints that have an element of originality, rather than just being a photographic reproduction of a painting.
Digital print - used by computers, perhaps photoshop and other adobe programmes.
Analogue print - screenprint, woodcut, engraving, etching, mezzotint, lithography etc
Printmaking normally covers only the process of creating prints that have an element of originality, rather than just being a photographic reproduction of a painting.
Digital print - used by computers, perhaps photoshop and other adobe programmes.
Analogue print - screenprint, woodcut, engraving, etching, mezzotint, lithography etc
Dan Hays, Nuclear Winter - 2009. This is a digital print. Used with pixels to create a whole image which is more recognisable from a further viewing distance.
Jim Dine. A woodetching print.
There are pros and cons to both methods of printing:
- Analogue printing has a authenticity that it is one of a kind and originality, no same print will look exactly the same whereas digital print has the option to make thousands of the same print (which could also be a pro).
- Digital printing can be more exact to how you want it to look - however this could be a hindrance because an accident with analogue print could open your eyes to a new process or look that you might want to explore.
- Analogue printing could be a waste of time and money if something goes wrong, however with digital print you have the option to do it over as soon as it goes wrong without any particular cost.
Friday, 2 October 2015
Preparatory Task
Social definition -
- relating to society or its organisation.
- needing companionship and therefore best to living in communities.
- an informal social gathering, especially one organised by the members of a particular club or group.
“People are fascinating. Especially the ones who hate me.”
― Rebecca McKinsey
― Rebecca McKinsey
Marion Barraud
- relating to the idea, customs, and social behaviour of a society.
- relating to the arts and to the intellectual achievement.
“Sometimes we feel we straddle two cultures; at other times, that we fall between two stools.” - Salman Rushdie
Cachetejack
http://infotraveleasy.blogspot.com/2012/10/brazil-thriving-african-culture_30.html
Technological definition-
- relating to or using technology.
Historical definition -
- of or concerning history or past events.
- belonging to the past.
- set in the past.
“History written in pencil is easily erased, but crayon is forever.” - Emilie Autumn
Amandine Urruty
Political definition -
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