Archive for February 2012

Medium Specificity

Lucian Freud was reported to have called Leonardo da Vinci a terrible painter, which on the face of it seems old man’s contrarian fun. But it’s not inexplicable.

In Da Vinci’s time, paintings were moving away from Mediaeval stylization toward what we’d consider ‘hand made photographs’. Artists of the time wanted to depict retinal reality, and Da Vinci was the master at this.

Vasari wrote that one could almost perceive the pulse in Mona Lisa‘s neck, an effect which really isn’t unbelievable. In the Leonardo Live broadcast I saw this past week, La Belle Ferroniere appeared to breath, which I attribute to Leonardo’s sufmato, where the softness of the edges echo the effects I once observed in a Rothko – because the edges have no definable boundary, an optical illusion of movement is created, so the Rothko seemed to pulse, and the Da Vinci portrait seems to breath.

Lucian Freud on the other hand, was a master of medium specificity, the modernist mantra promoted by Clement Greenberg in the mid 20th Century. His critique of Da Vinci was precisely from this point of view: Leonardo sucks at painting because his paintings don’t look like paintings. For Leonardo and his contemporaries, this was a success. For the standards of the late 20th Century, it is a failure.

For me, the best example of the medium specificity ethos can be found in Charles Dicken’s 1854 novel, Hard Times:

‘Would you paper a room with representations of horses?’ [asks the government bureaucrat addressing Mr Gradgrind’s school]. “I’ll explain to you why you wouldn’t paper a room with representations of horses. Do you ever see horses walking up and down the sides of rooms in reality – in fact? Of course no.

Why, then, you are not to see anywhere, what you don’t have in fact. What is called Taste, is only another name for Fact.

This is a new principle, a discovery, a great discovery.

You are to be in all things regulated and governed by fact. We hope to have, before too long, a board of fact, composed of commissioners of fact, who will force the people to be a people of Fact, and nothing but fact. You must disregard the word Fancy altogether. You have nothing to do with it. You are not to have, in any object or use of ornament, what would be a contradiction in fact. You don’t walk up flowers in fact; you cannot be allowed to wall upon flowers in carpets. You don’t find that foreign birds and butterflies come and perch upon your crockery; you cannot be permitted to paint foreign birds and butterflies upon your crockery. You never meet with quadrupeds going up and down walls; you must not have quadrupeds represented on walls. You must use, for these purposes, combinations and modifications (in primary colours) of mathematical figures which are suspceptile of proof and demonstration. This is a new discovery. This is fact. This is taste.”

This mid-19th Century anti-imagery disposition is in fact an echo of the ancient prohibition against images that is found in The Bible. That prohibition reasserted itself during the Iconoclastic years during the Catholic and Protestant split, and is also found within the tenants of Islam, from which this official’s prescription may be a parody: in banning representation, Islamic arts developed geometric pattern to a degree we find astonishing.

A century after Dickens’ words were written, it had become the dominant aesthetic ethos. Art historians tend to bring photography into the explanation, since photography was superior and easier to accomplish than a Da Vincian masterpiece. Painting was left to explore its possibilities as a coloured viscous media.

By our early 21st Century, we’ve left aside concerns that painting need to do anything except be a painting. Young people continue to take up brushes because painting is an interesting and fun thing to do, and occasionally wonderful things result.

1854

As noted, Dickens’ novel was published in the mid-1850s. This was a time when photography was just beginning, and the dominant aesthetic movements were Academic Classicism and Romanticism. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood were active, who formed themselves around the idea that art before Raphael (aka Da Vinci) was superior to the work that came after him (the imitation of Michelangelo known as Mannerism).

Realism, as an art movement, was also happening during this time, and 1854 was the year Courbet painted his famous Bonjour Mons. Courbet. Realism, as described by Wikipedia:

attempt[ed] to depict subjects as they are considered to exist in third person objective reality, without embellishment or interpretation and “in accordance with secular, empirical rules.” As such, the approach inherently implies a belief that such reality is ontologically independent of man’s conceptual schemes, linguistic practices and beliefs, and thus can be known (or knowable) to the artist, who can in turn represent this ‘reality’ faithfully. As Ian Watt states, modern realism “begins from the position that truth can be discovered by the individual through the senses” and as such “it has its origins in Descartes and Locke, and received its first full formulation by Thomas Reid in the middle of the eighteenth century.

The Great Exhibition of 1851 had put on display a variety of consumerist products made by machines. Influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, and the writings of Ruskin who championed them, the Arts & Crafts Movement began in the 1860s, led by William Morris. From The Arts and Crafts Wikipedia page:

The Arts and Crafts style was partly a reaction against the style of many of the items shown in the Great Exhibition of 1851, which were ornate, artificial and ignored the qualities of the materials used. The art historian Nikolaus Pevsner has said that exhibits in the Great Exhibition showed “ignorance of that basic need in creating patterns, the integrity of the surface” and “vulgarity in detail”.[25] Design reform began with the organizers of the Exhibition itself, Henry Cole (1808–1882), Owen Jones (1809–1874), Matthew Digby Wyatt (1820–1877) and Richard Redgrave (1804–1888). Jones, for example, declared that “Ornament … must be secondary to the thing decorated”, that there must be “fitness in the ornament to the thing ornamented”, and that wallpapers and carpets must not have any patterns “suggestive of anything but a level or plain”. These ideas were adopted by William Morris. Where a fabric or wallpaper in the Great Exhibition might be decorated with a natural motif made to look as real as possible, a Morris & Co. wallpaper, like the Artichoke design illustrated (right), would use a flat and simplified natural motif. In order to express the beauty of craft, some products were deliberately left slightly unfinished, resulting in a certain rustic and robust effect.

In 1908, Adolf Loos published his (in)famous essay ‘Ornament and Crime‘ (trans to Eng: 1913), which argued that ornament was a waste of energy, in addition to applying racist and moralistic interpretations (equating the tattoos of the South Pacific natives with primitive barbarism). As Wikipedia notes, this essay is an historical marker as a reaction to ornamental style of Art Nouveau:

In this essay, he explored the idea that the progress of culture is associated with the deletion of ornament from everyday objects, and that it was therefore a crime to force craftsmen or builders to waste their time on ornamentation that served to hasten the time when an object would become obsolete. Perhaps surprisingly, Loos’s own architectural work is often elaborately decorated. The visual distinction is not between complicated and simple, but between “organic” and superfluous decoration. He prefigures the Brutalist movement that spreads from the 1950s to the mid 1970s.
(Wikipedia: Adolf Loos)

This post was edited on 3 Nov 2013 for clarity

Impressive

I can’t believe somebody did this.

From a Tumblr. Work credited to Aubrey Longley-Cook.

Applying timeless page design principles to the web

This morning I found Alex Charchar’s page on ‘the secret canon & page harmony’ as presented in the past by Jan Tschichold.

Using the Van de Graaf Canon, one divides the a page spread thus:

This is based on a 2:3 ratio page size. However, the spread makes the overall ratio 4:3.

Not coincidently, our monitor resolutions are based on a 4:3 ratio:

1024 = 4(256) = 1024
768 = 3(256) = 768

1280 = 4(320)= 1280
960 = 3(320) = 960

We can apply the Van de Graaf Canon to a 1024 x 768 webpage like this:

As Tschichold showed, the circle is indicative that height of the resulting textblock is equal to the width of the page, or in our case, ½ of the page (1024/2 = 512).

Tischold’s summarized Van De Graaf’s geometric method as the simplest way to create the outlines that were also used by medieval scribes, which all result in a text-block that fits within a 9 x 9 grid.

(animatd gif from Alex Charchar’s article)

Essentially, we can determine the size and position of a content block by taking any page size and dividing it up into a 9×9 grid.

A book spread which divides both pages into 9 columns results in a grid of 18 columns and 9 rows: however, our 18 rows can be condensed into a 9 x 9 without loss of effect. (Eighteen columns merely subdivides the otherwise 9 into halves).

The content block sits 1 column in, two columns above the bottom, and 1 column from the top.

Responsive Web Design

All of this would create a wonderful guideline for laying out the basics of a webpage were this still 2005 and 1024×768 had become the ne-plu-ultra after years of 800×600 CRT monitor resolution settings. Today (early 2012), a webpage needs to resolve on a variety of screens, from iPhones to giant monitors.

In order to have responsive content, it helps to code elements as percentages rather than specific pixels.

Our 1024 x 768 example creates a content block with an 87px top margin, a 166px bottom margin, and side margins of 112. The content box itself measures 800x 512 (the height is equal to half: 1024/2 = 512).

Coding anything in pixels though is unreliable since browser windows are never consistently sized across machines, and padding creates effects which makes pixel precision difficult.

What is needed is to achieve this 9×9 grid with percentages, so that this proportion can be rendered across resolutions.

In order to determine this, I coded a 9 row and 9 column table with a div overalyed using z-index. I fiddled with the css’ size and margin until I got something that matched the constraints.

The result is:

#container {
margin-left: 11%;
margin-right:11%;
height:67%;
width:78%;
margin-top:11%;
}

The page looks like this:

Demo

Hello Mammal Lovers!

This Friday (February 10) at the Drake Lab (1140 Queen St. West), in coordination with our current residency, “Open Cheese Office Grilled Songwriting Sandwich,” we’ll be cooking, hosting and celebrating the FOURTH annual Timothy Comeau Award, and you are invited! Swing by at 7pm or after to eat, be merry and find out who the winner is this year! Bring yourself, your friends, your drinks, your musical instruments, and the rest (an abundance of decadent cheese-variation sandwiches) will be provided.

The Timothy Comeau Award was created to recognize individuals who have shown exceptional support, interest and love for Mammalian. Recipients of the Timothy Comeau Award have been participants in many of our activities and have also offered insights, analysis and criticism. These are people without whom our events and existence would feel incomplete.

The 2010 winner of the Timothy Comeau Award was Sanjay Ratnan. Sanjay has been hanging out with MDR and participating in Mammalian events since he was a fetus. He continues to contribute his talents, ideas and super-star personality to Mammalian as a member of The Torontonians.

The 2009 winner of the Timothy Comeau Award was Kathleen Smith. Kathleen is not only a super Mammalian supporter, but thanks to her three nominations, MDR won the Toronto Arts Foundation’s Arts for Youth Award in 2009, a $15,000 cash prize!

The 2008 winner of the inaugural Timothy Comeau Award was Timothy Comeau. Timothy is a writer and cultural worker who has a couple of blogs including (curation.ca). He has been a constant supporter of the company, writing about our work, showing up to our events, goofing around and generating the kind of vibe that is essential to us. A Mammalian event without Timothy is a Mammalian event that’s happening on another continent.

Who will it be this year?!!

Hope to see you Friday!

MAMMALIAN DIVING REFLEX
Centre for Social Innovation