[Artbeyondsightmuseums] artist, science models, ceramist, exhibition, blog
Lisa Yayla
fnugg at online.no
Mon Jul 25 09:04:32 UTC 2011
Hi,
Links and excerpts to articles.
Regards,
Lisa
She started coping with the eye disease 15 years ago and is now totally
blind in her left eye and objects are fuzzy through her right eye.
"I don't really remember what it's like to see," Cross said. "I knew I'd
be old. I knew I'd be wrinkled. But, I didn't know I'd be blind," she said.
She is happy, however, with her good fortune in life and noted that
she's doing just fine.
Macular degeneration hasn't stunted her love of daisies, remembering
pansies hardly ever die and that red geraniums blend well with the
perennial palette that fills her gardens.
Her green lawns are infused with bundles of yellows and reds each spring
as she carefully places flowers on different patches of the property,
perfecting her art to a tee.
http://www.westyellowstonenews.com/news/article_4290347e-b646-11e0-8f4e-001cc4c002e0.html
6 interactive directories for Leroy Merlin with tactile map and wayfinding
http://www.eng.viadirect.com/2011/07/l%C3%AEle-des-medias-has-equiped-at-the-end-of-june-it-first-retail-store-leroy-merlin-main-do-it-yourself-stores-in-europe-l.html
HYDERABAD: A small collection of tubes, wires and beads are tucked away
in a corner as 80-year-old Egbert Dawson walks among the life-sized
models of various biological systems he has created over 11 years.
"I preserve whatever I can find. You never know what might come in
handy," says the biology teacher. These relief models are specially
designed to aid biology education for visually impaired students.
"Initially, it was very difficult to teach the concepts related to
different biological systems like the circulatory system in animals or
the various parts of a flower. Though these topics are discussed in a
text book, it is difficult to explain them to a student who cannot see.
Hence, I started making these models for explaining things better," said
Dawson.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/giving-model-lessons-to-visually-impaired/169329-60-121.html
West Drayton man took up sculpture after going blind
ARTIST Colin Hoppe has not always been a successful sculptor -- he only
discovered his talents after losing his sight.
"I've seen more now that I'm blind then I could when I could see," he
told the Gazette when asked what impact his artistic gift has had on his
life.
Colin, 52, suffers from retinitis pigmentosa-- an hereditary disease
that sees the eyesight degenerate throughout the sufferers lifetime.
Two of his brothers are registered blind and another is short-sighted.
His sister carries the gene and could pass it on to her children.
Colin, of Lavender Rise, West Drayton, used to be a chef, before his
eyesight declined forcing him to stop work in 1994.
He embarked on an adult education course in pottery as part of his
rehabilitation, later taking classes at Harlington Community School in
Hayes.
He made his first piece of pottery during the course and went on to
unleash a passion for sculpting.
One of his teachers recommended a group called Blind Art and it was
through them that Colin took part in his first exhibition and sold his
first piece of work.
http://www.uxbridgegazette.co.uk/west-london-news/local-uxbridge-news/2011/07/21/west-drayton-man-took-up-sculpture-after-going-blind-113046-29097457/
BlindArt Collection @ Royal National College for the Blind
The opening of the BlindArt Collection at the Royal National College for
the Blind, Hereford
The BlindArt Permanent Collection showcases exceptional work by artists,
both visually impaired and sighted, and encourages a re-evaluation of
what constitutes visual art. BlindArt Permanent Collection breaks
through traditional hierarchies & barriers in the arts by actively
encouraging all works to be experienced through touch. The Collection
challenges the notion that sight is essential for creating and enjoying
exceptional art. The BlindArt Permanent Collection is the worlds first
permanent showcase of visual art accessible to visually impaired people,
and includes paintings, sculpture, installations and other works of art.
Each work in the Collection is made accessible through a range of access
materials: large print & Braille labels, audio-descriptive guides,
tactile images, large print & Braille catalogues, etc BlindArt will use
the Collection to promote Inclusive Exhibition Design to museums,
galleries and art schools. Since July 2009 BlindArt Permanent Collection
has been permanently housed at the Royal National College for the Blind
(RNC) in Hereford. RNC is a key player in national and international
innovations in the teaching and training of people with sight loss, and
is a leading resource centre for professionals working in the field.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8vA2fabxWw&feature=related
Jorge Restrepo art for the blind Managua
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6P9JKOHSjo&feature=related
sent before, but thought to send again
'What Seeing is Really About'
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmIvik74ZE&feature=related
Reflections: Art in Italy, Art in San Diego
blog
A sculptor goes through "an exhausting labour with hammer and chisel, is
covered with dust and sweat so that he looks like a baker and not like
an artist, whereas 'the painter sits in great comfort before his work,
well dressed, and wields his light brush loaded with lovely colours. He
can be dressed as well as he pleases, and his house can be clean and
filled with beautiful paintings. He often works to the accompaniment of
music, or listening to the reading of many fine works. All this can be
heard without being drowned with the sounds of hammering or other
uproar.'" Anthony Blunt, The Social Position of the Artist.*
<http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/ARTH/arth200/artist/blunt_soc_pos_artist.htm>*
Leonardo was fending off attacks from sculptors - like Nicolo Tribolo.
Tribolo's response
<http://www.students.sbc.edu/vermilya08/Bernini/Poetics%20of%20Bernini%27s%20Apollo%20and%20Dpahne.htm>
to a survey conducted by Benedetto Varchi in 1546 that considered which
medium was the more noble - sculpture or painting. Tribolo argued that a
blind man could decipher the reality of a sculpted work, but a painting
would be merely a flat surface.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/weblogs/joe-nalven/2011/jul/19/reflections-art-in-italy-art-in-san-diego/
I am a Color blind artist and need help.?
I am an digital artist and I am color blind (red-green I think)
-- and--
I need a program of some sort that can extract colors from pictures and
tell me what color it is.IN WORDS
(If it exist at all) I cannot find one anywhere plus Photoshop's dropper
doesn't help.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20110718225737AA1iYmE
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