Sunday, November 9, 2014

Blog Post 5: Art Exhibit

In the 2011 work titled Topologies of Belief by Jose Davila, the audience is immediately drawn in.  Davila, who was born in Mexico in 1974, shows an intense absence in his work.  But what does it mean? 
For me personally, I had absolutely no idea what this series of photographs could be portraying, but I was drawn to this picture in particular.  I can see the outline of an architectural structure and what looks to be a man on top of it, but other than what is on the surface, the internal message wasn't present.  After walking around and seeing the other exhibits, it finally hit me. 
What I took this as, which can differ from the many other outlooks and perspectives, is that mankind makes too much of a big deal about architecture and material goods that we can make.  This almost has a stereotypical hippie feeling of "The best things in life are free and we shouldn't focus on the materialistic goods that can be manufactured."  What kills me is that this is actually true most of the time. 
In looking at only is at the surface, I think that the use of black and white portrays more emotion than that of color would.  The whites are lighter where they need to be, and the blacks are dark where they are appropriately needed. 
What I didn't notice until drawing the sketch, which was done very poorly I might add, was that the rock formations remind me of an almost rocky ocean terrain, in which the building happens to look smooth and wave-like.  I really focused more on the missing architecture than what was surrounding it, and after drawing the picture, I noticed that there were clouds and jagged terrain.
I think the work of Davila portrayed a photo that can be looked at differently by each viewer.  There is no right or wrong answer to what the series is about, and can be interpreted in any way.  That's the beauty of it, but also what can be difficult to analyze.  I think Davila's absence of structure showed how much we value the material goods throughout our life, when they will only be around for a limited amount of time.

1 comment:

  1. Nice art!! Is there any particular reasoning behind your version being in green? or with a solely white background? also, why do you believe the cut-out is architectural? Could it not be some sort of natural structure? Overall, you did a good job with this post and went into great detail with you emotions and thoughts. Good job.

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