Sunday, September 12, 2010

Avant-Garden of Knowledge

Avant-Garde literally means Advanced Guard. It was a time of innovative and experimental new art forms, such as pop art or abstract expressionism, that took place from the 1860s all the way up to the 1960s.  These forms of art were very unorthodox and rather daring.

Bertolt Brecht
Augusto Boal
   One such art form was referred to as "Experimental Theatre."  This was the stage performance side of Avant-Garde.  But unlike traditional theatre, these plays usually involved the audience in some way, shape, or form. From bringing audience members up on stage to screaming directly in there faces, these "Experimental Theatre" pieces got the audience in on the action. Two major figures of said theatre, were play-writes Bertolt Brecht and Augusto Boal (pictured respectively to the left and right)  Both Brecht and Boal like to pose questions to the audience but wouldn't answer said questions. This got the audience thinking for themselves and interpreting the own endings.

A good example of Jackson Pollock's unique style.
  Another form of Avant-Garde is known as Abstract Expressionism.  The phrase "Abstract Expressionism" was first coined by a German newspaper in 1919 but really started in the USA in 1946 when Robert Coates, a renowned art critic, began to use the term. This was the first purely American Avant-Garde movement to reach worldwide acclaim and put New York in the middle of the western art world. One great artist went by the name of Jackson Pollock. Pollock developed his own style of painting that had never even been thought of before. His paintings consisted of splattered paint on a blank canvas (one such panting pictured to the right).  The layers upon layers of paint were sometimes inches thick.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

National Eating Disorder? Is There Such a Thing?

Childhood Obesity on a dangerous rise.
In today's day and age you hear a lot about our nation's health decline.  It seems that every day you see some news story about McDonald's or some man that died of diabetes related to his weight.  On the flip-side, half the celebrities we praise so much weigh about as much as the keyboard I'm typing on.  The nation's image has become one of a grossly over-weight population and alarmingly under-weight starlights. The term National Eating Disorder refers to Micheal Pollen's Omnivore's Dilemma.  An "Eating Disorder," according to (http://web4health.info/it/ed-dia-ed-def.htm), "is when a person eats, or refuses to eat, in order to satisfy a psychic need and not a physical need."  Unfortunately, I'm going to have to agree that our nation does indeed have a "National Eating Disorder." Everyday it becomes more clear that our country is heading downhill fast.  It is our duty to our children and our country to help our society as much as we can.  Eat healthier and stop supporting these mass produced places like McDonald's.


Until next time,
Preston Williams