Creative Collision Blog

Creative Collision Blog Cross-disciplinary Creativity

 


 

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Baggy


A few weeks ago I happened across the AUT fashion school exhibition thing. I've got to say I was pretty wowed by some of the pieces there, or at least I could see how their ideas could have the potential to rock this world (they haven't yet). Over the next while I hope to post a few pieces from this exhibition (I only hand-picked several).

As a fellow creative student, I know it is hard to judge any work without knowing the background ideology and the amount of time allowed for it. Some artists create something in 10 minutes flat, others spend their whole lives mulling over the same masterpiece. With university work, it is the quantity and quality achieved within one semester that is the awful bounding box and this limitation does take its toll on any piece of 'academic' work. All in the name of 'the creative learning process' (aka feed you to the sharks and letting you fend for yourself).

Someone show me something world shattering soon. Please.

Fly


In one week's time, I'll be flying out to China! I go there once every few years and it's weird to see how your own perception of the place changes as you travel back there. The first time I went back at the raw age of three, all I remember is an enormous cockroach of the usual overkill Chinese variety (traumatic). The second time, everything was new and fresh, including the disgusting air which reminded me of a back alley vent next to a rubbish bin in Auckland... except everywhere. Oh, and I stuffed myself full of shellfish. It was on my last trip back that I realised the lack of art in the streets and the hidden tendencies of the galleries.

In actual fact, it was really just because the city was so big, I happened to completely miss the whole street dedicated to artistic feats. Of course, traditional art strikes hard as you travel around. A matter of preference being the main drive of this phenomenon, what we might consider 'contemporary art' ins't very mainstream. In fact, the only place I saw a very decent sort of abstract art gallery was underground on this old historic moated island. I'm sure it's not as metaphorical as it seems, but in terms of artistic appreciation, I think the Chinese most value their traditional art which, in its own right, is an expression of the highest purity and richness.

The unfortunate thing about China (one of them anyhow) is the 'Great Firewall'. If I didn't have ways, I probably wouldn't even be able to use Blogger and Twitter (if you haven't, follow me @BobbShen, yes I am shamelessly self promoting but you won't regret it). I will try my hardest to overcome the wall and bring you the delights of the Shanghai Expo and so forth. And thus, my creative hunting for Creative Collision will soon arrive to China. Can not wait.

Arachne

Another piece of delightful street art. I swear 95% of passer-bys wouldn't notice this one.

SFX


As a friend who saw this said, 'a creative fusion of music, sound effects and video games.' Which goes to show we have to have a little light hearted fun with our creative practice once in a while.

Sanctuary

This is from an exhibition I was at last night, made my a good friend of mine. It is a fully crocheted masterpiece that allows people to go inside, encountering a sanctuary. Apparently it took 7km of string to make. A steel frame holds it from imploding and the outside pattern is a stainless steel mesh that lends the knitted structure much privacy.