Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Media Techniques For ARtistic Creations

Mixed media art should not be confused with multi-media art, which integrates or moves between visual, aural, oral, computer-generated and other forms of expression in innovative ways and combinations. Mixed media artists, on the other hand, while usually remaining within the domain of visual art, invariably have an experimental turn of mind and are frustrated by the traditional requirement to stick to one of the classic media such as oils, watercolour, pastels or acrylics within a single work, or indeed within their oeuvre as a whole.

Inventive artists have always had the urge to widen their means of expression, whether by using the wrong end of the brush or mixing earth or sand into their paint. This impulse can be seen in paintings from every period, but in the past artists were very much constrained by the physical limitations of the materials they had to hand. Paints at their simplest are a mixture of ground-up pigments added to a medium which not only allows them to be spread evenly, but also retains and fixes them on the surface to which they are applied. Deviating from tried and tested methods might lead to rapid degradation of the work and protests about quality, longevity and value for money from patrons.

In the past there was probably a more pragmatic and utilitarian approach to art as a whole. People expected the art they bought to last, in conditions often a lot more variable and a lot less favourable than today. Storage vaults with climate-controlled atmospheres were a thing of the future; so were sophisticated conservation and restoration techniques. There is still nonetheless a consensus of opinion among many contemporary artists, and their buyers, that applied colour and texture should not fade, rot, brush off or degrade unduly unless this process is a planned part of the work.

However, modern materials allow for this need while enabling a much wider number and combination of materials to be used within a single work. The artists of today have a hugely increased range of products at their service- not only clever new synthetic paints and finishes which prolong drying time and add to the colours and effects possible, but also, crucially, glues, compounds and carrier mediums which allow them to incorporate such materials as metal, plastic, fabric, plaster, and wood into a painted or collaged surface. The technical possibilities for mixed media artists are almost unlimited.

In the past, too, each period had its own ideas as to what constituted suitable subject-matter and techniques for artistic creation. These fashions in turn provoked rejection and innovation. Nowadays there is much less agreement among the art world and the public about what constitutes beauty or interest in the observed world. Almost nothing is off-limits in terms of subject-matter, and this is reflected in the matter of materials. What is more, a growing concern for the environment, coupled with this more dispassionate attitude to the physical environment, has led to an interest in creating art from recycled materials. Today's throwaway society sends to landfill a myriad of manufactured materials which, in their almost unimaginable variety of colours, textures and characteristics, offer a particular challenge and delight to inventive artists. For the first time in history since prehistoric cave art, art materials can be had for the taking!

W9ndows Media Centre And Technology

When I knew I was going to be able to upgrade to Windows XP, I was excited to get the Windows Media Center that was included in the software. Though is okay, it is not what I thought it would be, and I don’t use it very much. I guess it is nice to have access to everything media related on my computer through one piece of software, but I think I thought it would do more than that. The things that it does are great, but they are things I could already do. I was waiting for something new and exciting.

One nice thing about Windows Media Center is that you can open it with the touch of a button, or at least you can on my laptop. I have a button at the top that opens it. In fact, I quite often open it by accident when I am adjusting the volume. This is actually quite annoying. Though it is not as bad as it might be. At least Windows Media Center opens and loads rather quickly so it’s not like it loads forever when I open it accidentally. It tends to close fast too, which is always a good thing.

My husband was excited to have Windows Media Center as well, and I don’t think he uses it as much as he thought he would either. He had it in his mind that it would do more than it does as well, and I think he has gone back to using the same old software that he was using before he got a new computer. All in all it is a nifty program though, and when you want to see everything that you have all at once, this is a great way to do it.

Another great thing about Windows Media Center is that you can skip downloading a lot of different players if you want to, and you can use it for everything. In the end, that might be more convenient for some. It should update on its own, and you will know you have the latest that this type has to offer. You may have problem with it playing some types of different media though. I have noticed it does not like the video files from my digital camera. All in all though, it’s a great idea, it just has some work to be done before it is something that is a must have.