Monday, October 21, 2013

Remix





In the fourth grade I took art from Mr. Watson. He showed us all kinds of famous paintings, most of which I thought were very cool. But one day she showed us a painting that changed it all for me.  It was made up of millions of tiny little dots that when combined made a picture of people in a park. The painting is A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat. I had never seen something so incredible. Learning that it took over two years to complete made it all that much more amazing to me. Ever since that day, it has been my favorite painting.

Later that same year, I sat down on a Saturday morning and turned on the T.V.  Ferris Bueller’s Day Off came on. I was blown away – definitely a life-changer. Additionally, I was shocked at the scene in the film where Ferris, Sloane, and Cameron go to the Art Institute of Chicago and they look at a lot of the paintings Mr. Watson had introduced me to, including A Sunday Afternoon. That to me, was a very incredible moment. And I didn’t even actually realize it at the time, but it would be a huge influence on my decision to pursue filmmaking as a career.

That realization came later when I had decided that I wanted to make films and I began researching the film’s director, John Hughes. He too, was a huge fan of that painting and put it in the film simply for his own pleasure. He said, “...I always thought this painting was sort of like making a movie. A pointillist style, which at very very close to it, you don't have any idea what you've made until you step back from it.”[1] I literally screamed when I heard him say that because I had once thought it.

I framed this photo so that the painting and the film were the only thing inside it – no outside objects. Except, of course, for me. But the way I lined it up it could appear that I’m a part of it. It’s all one. Either way, the point was to see the layers of creativity and inspirations. Seurat inspired Hughes, Hughes inspired me. What will I create and will that inspire someone to create something of their own? I derived this idea from out discussion of the Star Wars family tree. Another element to it is that it’s two works that I love occupying the same space, simultaneously inspiring me. It’s like the painting itself: there are millions of little pieces that make up the whole picture. For me, there are so many influences that have shaped who I am and who I want to be as an artist and this moment was monumental for me.

 

 

1.      Ferris Bueller's Day Off-(Commentary by John Hughes) (DVD). Paramount Pictures. 1999-10-19.


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