Geek Iconic MyPhoneStone

So is this MyPhoneStone on steroids? Ouch, sore subject these days.  Coincidentally, the first of these pieces go to a bicyclist friend of mine from Texas.  No, not who you’re thinking of.  This Guy is also a motorcyclist and techy UX design geek,  AND one of my Kickstarter supporters.  Remember Kickstarter?  Yes, I am still diligently fulfilling my promises and most of them are met. And here’s one more.  And this one is cool!

I like it when I get excited about something I’ve created.  Trust me; it doesn’t always happen on the first try.  Much sweat and bruises and burns and ideas tried and tweaked and tried again until it gets to the cool.  I’ve got an abrasion from the wire brush wheel to prove it!

Making things that have function almost makes this into work.  But rest assured, though these are functional, they are ART first.  And that is what makes this fun.  Art + geeky tech stuff has to be fun!  Isn’t that one of the laws of thermodynamics?

Practical minded thrifty people – If you just want a thing to set your phone on, I’m sure Radio Shack has something just right for you. And be sure to show your card for your free battery.  Hmmm, do they still do that?  BestBuy has a whole freaking aisle or two of plastic gizmos and stands for your smartphone.  And you can borrow my Reward Zone card!  This is not that.

What this is? Remember when you went to see the Eiffel Tower or the empire State Building, or Statue of Liberty, or some other big thing?  Anyway, remember as you were leaving, you forked over a twenty for some plastic or tinny molded mini-me of the thing to commemorate your visit?   This is more like that.  To those who attended BIG(D)ESIGN either of the past two years and saw MyPhoneHenge or MyFavoriteMachine up close in person, owning a MyPhoneStone is like the mini-Eiffel tower experience except for one very important difference.  We are pretty certain that cute little tower you brought home from France was not actually made by Mr. Eiffel himself. Get it?

Every one of these MyPhoneStones is unique art, signed by the artist, numbered, and photo-documented.  No two are identical (How boring would that be?) The supply is limited to until I get too caught up doing other kinds of art to spend time on these.  And know that I have LOTS of other even more fantastic ideas in mind!  So here’s a tip – don’t count on there being an endless supply of original MyPhoneStones.

In case you still don’t quite get it (I’m sure you do, I just want an excuse to talk more about it) the motif blends the tall monolithic image of the large scale art with the icons that were contain in each one. Remember those icons made from real world objects that were intended to make fun of the metaphorical iconography of virtual devices? Its “physical virtual, low tech rendering of high tech subject matter, ironic, iconic art“.  I know, it seems I am having way too much fun with this!

Imagine making your own little arrangement of MyPhoneHenge using real phones!  They also work great for the classic iPod and totally killer for showing off your business cards!   And please please whatever you do, have fun!

- roger

A Steve Urkel moment on Mars?

Well, it seems this week, everyone’s “favorite machine’ is a little robotic off-roadster called Curiosity. Take a look at what he sees from his little vantage point on the red planet. Yes, I am personifying this little creature. I can’t help it. Anything that travels that far to send photos to the folks back home deserves our love and affection. It is without a doubt in the Favorite Machine Hall of Fame next to Lunar Rover and Robbie the Robot.

Link to Panoramic 360` pan

Pretty spectacular. We didn’t have images anything close to this with the moon landings and there was a photographer on site to shoot it. As you pan around ponder the tracks resembling some kind of crop circle style drawing in the sand to space men (Us?) that I wonder, will it ever erode away?, and I fancy Curiosity, upon seeing it (slightly personified) has a Steve Urkle moment. “Did I do that?”

Is this personification?  Anthropomorphism?  Or is it really Steve Urkel on Mars?

- roger

Steve Urkel in Wikipedia

Built-in Contradictions

Show me a place where minimalism is most prized; be assured that undue complexity is nearby. And vice versa. People seek minimalism as a refuge from undue complexity. That is understood. That the opposite is also true gets missed. The dynamic tension between minimalism and complexity, modernism and postmodernism, is explained in the maraschino cherry, having flavor and color removed only to have other flavor and color added back.

In the Article Where Microsoft Has ‘More Taste’ Than Apple the author is critical of Apple’s Skeuomorphic designs where UI designs go clearly overboard in appearing to mimic the appearance of real world things. I agree this can come off as cheesy. I have referred to it before as ‘brick patterned wallpaper”. Yet people love it. Why? I am not defending it, only explaining it.

People are sometimes confused by the apparent contradictions in my tech-expressionist art. It has been called a crude representation of the real thing, worse in every way. I say they are starting to get it.

Questions: Is it a celebration or a parody of technology design. The answer is both. The contradiction is a major part of the art. If you don’t get that then, you are trapped in your own mental box of either or. Worship of something often brings with it a backlash of irreverence of some kind. A great drama needs some comic relief if we are to stand it. Otherwise, it risks becoming tis own parody, ala Leslie Nielsen deadpan seriousness.

Built-in Contradictions, ironic twist, and some light-hearted self- parody are a safety net of sorts against the hazards of taking oneself too seriously.

That Apple sets up an intolerably slick and pious motif, then clashes against it with cheesy overblown superfluously visual metaphors is not a surprise to me.  To not do so is to invite an onslaught of parody railing against the pious self-importance image. This occurs quite a lot already. Cheesy, campy, or clever, it is at least an attempt to achieve some balance in what would otherwise be hollow ivory tower snob design. Proof is in the fact that it seems to work for them.  Like I said, I’m not defending, just explaining. I’m jus’ sayin’

- roger

My Fav Machine Pinterest Board

Since creating art “MyFavoriteMachine” celebrating the endearing nnature of design, I have had the desire to collect images of objects / machines that exemplify that theme.  This collection could then become an intersting study on its own of the characteristices that seem to be common among endearing obects.

Nice idea, but a little time-consuming and tedious. Then Voila! Pinterst comes along!  It is the perfect medium made exactly for creating such collections.

Please visit my Pinterst board My Fav Machine Colection, browse through these images and see what you think.  Have fun.

Tools, toys, objects, that win our affection through great design or by serving an important need.  Sometimes, we just like them and we don’t know why. These are our “Favorite Machines”.

This is becoming an intersting study of what makes an object or machine endearing.  Robots and human-like androids are an obvious inclusion in this collection, personified objects a close second.  But what about the less overt?  And why are certain objects personified in steriotypical ways?  What are the intrinsic properties of an object that lead us to certain feelings that generate thos steriotypes?  What patterns do you see?

http://pinterest.com/belveal/my-fav-machine-colection/

- roger

MFM @ Tech Wildcatters

My Favorite Machine made the short trek from the Aloft to Tech Wildcatters today.  Returning back to this favorite venue, it attracted a lot of attention even before I could get it set up.  And this was just the small weekend crowd.  I’m anxious for it to be seen during one of the many techy gatherings at TWC. What a perfect place to display this tech-expressionist-pop art!.  :-)

- roger

oh yeah.  Here are some photos of MFM in the TWC space.


MyPhoneHenge at BIG(D)ESIGN

Thank you to BIG(D)ESIGN 2012 for once again being a marvelous host to my art.  What a great crowd and venue for my brand of “Tech-Expressionist” Sculpture.  And thank you to all my Kickstarter supporters.  Bless You!!  It certainly eases the pain of birthing such a large hulk of metallic media innovation.

Following Big D, this work is going to the Gravity Centre Dallas to adorn the space of creatives. Now, I’ll be looking for others who would like something like this or MyFavoriteMachine to inhabit their offices.  Its an awesome conversation-starter, especially if your business is design-related, really especially if it is about mobile design!

- roger

More photos below. You can also see these as a Slideshow on Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/belveal/sets/72157629935295106/show/

 

Tune in, Get Creative, and Share

The Texas Sculpture Association show at the Aloft Hotel Dallas is underway.  The artists’ reception was yesterday evening. Great time had by all.  It was fun meeting people and looking at a wide spectrum of styles.  I am proud to be displaying my work alongside these other artists’ work.

Some Observations:

  • Out of 90+ works in the show, there was only one that had anything directly to do with technology in subject matter or substance;  MyFavoriteMachine
  • Multiple people commented to me, not just that they liked MFM, but that they enjoyed watching other people engaging with it. Hmmm.
  • There were a few people who expressed absolute ecstatic excitement over MFM.  They happened to be the youngest people in the place.  They were Twenty-ish while most of the art crowd appeared to be in the age bracket of between fifty and a hundred years old.  Whadja say, sonny?
  • One young man told me he came to the show just to see MFM.  Thanks Justin.  It was great meeting you.  More important than my being flattered, it tells me something about the appeal of this art motif that I have invented.  Maybe anyone could have guessed it, but I like the way the evidence is stacking up.

Conclusions:

  • All Young people get it.
  • Some older Tech savvy people get it.
  • People who are basically outside the box thinkers get it.

This is consistent with the response I have gotten so far already as it has appeared in various locations.

Who I don’t expect to get it:

  • People who are not current with technology, not that you must know how to operate it, but this art is about technology from an up-close personal and social/cultural point of view.   Art connecting to an expereince that they do not share would naturally be a like a dance to music they cannot hear.
  • Some Art establishment people. The reason is interesting and I am still figuring it out.  Ironically, while we think of artists as outside the box thinkers, the fact is they have their own boxes.   There are plenty of rules and conventions that must be adhered to in order to fit into the art world as we know it today.  MFM violates some of those rules.  I may elaborate on that later, but for now I’ll compare it to a Seattle grunge band playing at a swing / big band recital.  That Art world is about to change and MFM will help change it.  I clearly recall a similar thing happening in the tech world when the world wide web happened.  There were plenty of reasonably smart tech people that said it was “just a fad” and would quickly fade. I being a youthful analyst at the time got extremely excited as I brainstormed endless things that the web could be used to do. One of my collegues who I choose not to embarrass told me, “Roger, to a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail”.  Well, today, virtually everything is a nail.  In fact, there are far more nails in the world than ever I could have imagined.

What to do with this?  My experiment:

  • Where to go from here seems very clear.  In the words of my twenty-ish daughter, “Play to the young crowd”.
  • So, I will be looking for opportunities to display works from the MyFavoriteMachine series on college campuses and other locations where young people gather, any place where creativity is fostered.  Art and or technology departments of course would be targets, but also cultural anthropology, sociology, and really anywhere the cross-over between sciences and humanities is contempleted. If you have suggestions and contacts for such places that would be interested in hosting MFM, please let me know.  They can contact me at contact@belveal.com

“Timothy Leary is Dead” indeed and his legacy is a negative one.  Still, I’d like to latch on to the idea that he had of encouraging young people to expand their thinking, but take it in a positive direction.  I’ll reuse the first step, ‘tune In”  which now refers (not reefers)  to the technology culture and add my own second and third steps.

Tune in, Get Creative, and Share something good with others.

- roger

A great tune with a little time and age introspection built in by the Moody Blues

TSA Art Show, ALoft Hotel Dallas

Spent much of the day installing MyFavoriteMachine and Javelin Man in the lobby of the ALoft Hotel, Dallas. These are part of the Texas Sculpture Association show running through Jun 9.  You are all invited!  Opening reception for the artists is May 18.

What a great space for an art show!  The ALoft staff is awesome.  They seemed particularly excited about having my art there and they gave MFM an ideal location in the main corridor between main desk and the elevators. It is fun to see people walking by and enjoying the art. Some stop to point out details and smile, touch the metal, or pull out their own smart phone and take photos.

- roger

“Support the Art, See the Art”

Support the Art, See the Art!   $150 Pledge gets your ticket into BIG(D)ESIGN and a MyPhoneStone and a T-Shirt!  Limited to 30.  That’s 1 BIG(D)ESIGN Ticket + a MyPhoneStone + T-Shirt! A $300 value for $150! Amazing! Won’t last long!

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/belveal/myphonehenge/posts

2012 TSA Art Show at Aloft Dallas

Yes. It’s true!  My Favorite Machine and Javelin Man are both to be featured in the Texas Sculpture Association’s 2012 Show at the Aloft Hotel, downtown Dallas. Come on down and see these and many other awesome sculpture pieces by Texas artists.

Artist reception is May 18, which you may or may not know happens to be the anniversary of the great Mt. St. Helens eruption!   I’ll see see you there!

- roger