Thanks for your patience during our recent outage at scalar.usc.edu. While Scalar content is loading normally now, saving is still slow, and Scalar's 'additional metadata' features have been disabled, which may interfere with features like timelines and maps that depend on metadata. This also means that saving a page or media item will remove its additional metadata. If this occurs, you can use the 'All versions' link at the bottom of the page to restore the earlier version. We are continuing to troubleshoot, and will provide further updates as needed. Note that this only affects Scalar projects at scalar.usc.edu, and not those hosted elsewhere.
Exhibiting Historical Art: Out of the Vault: Stories of People and ThingsMain MenuWorld MapClick pins to learn more about the object that originated thereTimelinePre-Columbian Gold Headband800 A.D. - 1500 A.D.Gold Eagle PendantsSepik River Headrest20th centuryStatue of Saint Barbara17th century France, polychromed wood, artist unknownCabinet door from the Imperial Palace of Beijing with Imperial DragonChen Youzhang, 1755Bronze LampHead of John the BaptistLauren Linquest, '19Ida Rubenstein, 1909 Sculpture by Jo DavidsonCassone ChestWater-Carrier Vase with Bamboo Pattern and BambooLenore Vanderkooi, 1996Lotus Flowers in a Wood VaseRevolutions Per Minute: The Art RecordOpening page
Themes
12016-04-04T10:49:27-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8d853220plain2016-04-17T13:31:03-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8dNuclear War In 1982, the nuclear freeze movement was at the height of its "importance" and its influence is noticsblely seen in tracks from Revolutions Per Minute. Chris Burden's "Atomic Alphabet" is a blatant attempt to capture the fear of nuclear war in auditory form. By using words like "(insert some good examples here)" and "(more examples)", the listener imagines images of desolate landscapes torn apart by war and apocalyptic futures. Even his off-putting method of shouting through his alphabet adds to the listener's sense of danger and fear. Conrad Atkinson's track is merely his pondering a regarding what he sees as an inevitable nuclear war, which will almost certainly be started by the United States. He leaves his listener with the final though that "insert quote about all world wars being fought in England" - forcing one to think about the international consequences of nuclear war as well.
-Conrad Atkinson, The Louis XIV Deterrent -Chris Burden, The Atomic Alphabet
The Economy Ronald Reagan entered office with big plans for the economy and tax cuts. His goal was to significantly lower taxes, forcing severe budget cuts in the government, but allowing people to spend more money on goods and services and thus boost the economy. Proposed in February of 1981, the Economic Tax Recovery Act was passed and signed into law that summer. That fall, however, the economy worsened and by 1982 the United States was experiencing its worse economic recession since the Great Depression. Though Reagan's tax cuts had not yet had time to be implemented (and would indeed prove to help the economy in just a few years), the American public quickly associated this new Act with the recession that hit just a few months after it was signed into law. Levine directly addresses these problems in his song, writing that "Inflation, money, and taxes are getting worse all the time" and "The system has failed us a left us." He thus expresses the grievances that many Reagan supporters felt, as they claimed they had been betrayed by their candidate.
Feminism Many of the artists explore issues related to feminism in their audio recording. Hannah Wilkes, in her song "Stand Up," tells women that "insert good quote here." In both her lithograph and picture on the artist listing, she is unabashedly nude - further emphasizing her argument for the empowerment of women. This is a common theme in many of Wilkes' works. Margaret Harrison uses audio in a different way to explore issues of women's rights. She reads the 'first lines' of books written by female artists from a variety of genres and time periods. By choosing books with lines such as "(something about men don't have to think about gender, but women do)," Harrison discusses the many issues women must face in an effort to gain equality. Ida Applebroog is yet another example of an artist exploring feminist issues in her work. By staging a recording of standard dinner party conversation, she not only makes the listener ponder the shallowness of such conversation, but also how women are only valued for their bodies ("quote about breasts") and not for their intellect, hence the women repeatedly asking "is that a fact?" so as to assert her ability to think critically instead of simply nodding along.
Space/Technology -Piotr Kowalski & William Burroughs, You Only Call the Old Doctor Once -Douglas Davis, How To Make Love a Sound -Todd Siler, Think Twice -Thomas Shannon, Smashing Beauty
Memoir/Memory Memories are, by definition, intangible but this doesn't stop people from trying to give them a concrete form. These artists are no exception, as they attempt to record memories in an audio format. The company SITE, Sculpture in the Environment, records people's opinions of one of their new buildings. Many of the people recorded would likely have forgotten the building and their opinions of it after a time, but by recording their comments they become memorialized both as a memory and as art. Eleanor Antin creates a strange twist on the capture of memory by recording herself pretending to be the character of Eleanora Antinova, an African American ballerina who performed with the Ballets Russe. Antin created this persona herself and had used it in works prior to this exhibit. Rather than capturing her own memories, Antin creates memories that fit this fictitious character.
-SITE, Comments on SITE -Jospeh Beuys, Excerpt from Cooper Union Dialogue -Eleanor Antin, Antinova Remembers -Helen Mayer Harrison/Newton Harrison, Extract from the Second Lagoon: A Memoriam to John Isaacs
Phonetics/Sound -Terry Fox, Internal Sound -David Symth, Typewriter in D -Jud Fine, Polynesian/Polyhedron -Edwin Schlossberg, Vibrations/Metaphors -Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, Russian Language Lesson -Vincenzo Agnetti, Pieces of Sound
This page has paths:
12016-04-14T13:05:17-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8dRevolutions Per Minute: The Art RecordRebekah Smith11Opening pagesplash2575992016-04-17T15:36:26-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8d
This page has tags:
1media/rpm_01.jpg2016-03-30T19:28:44-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8dWhat is this thing?Rebekah Smith46image_header2575992016-04-19T20:43:12-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8d
Contents of this tag:
1media/rpm_01.jpg2016-03-30T19:28:44-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8dWhat is this thing?45image_header2575992016-04-19T20:37:24-07:00Rebekah Smitha3009c8c4165f8704e2130afd68837d3725bee8d