You Know I Love You



You Know I Love You from Alex Jacque on Vimeo.

Something I’m working on, an early version. Made in Processing.

Photoshop can do some pretty useful things most people don’t know about.

This is IP

This is IP

Senior year for the University of Michigan Art & Design students means one hell of a long project. A year-long (really only 7-8 months) project that is supposed to be more or less the culmination of the 4 years students spend at the university. Myself, this is my 5th year in college, but only my third at the University of Michigan. The current curriculum is that of a very conceptual nature; “thinking outside the box” type stuff. This can be beneficial, but all the conceptual stuff comes at the expense of very little technical, skill focused classes. Unfortunate, but a reality. Those that care make do and learn what they need to know outside of class.

The year-long project I mentioned above is for our IP class, that’s Integrative Project for the unknowing. My initial ideas for my project were based off my main interests: continue developing my analog photoblog, do some infographics work, do something using code, furniture design, packaging, or something with computer generated designs.

I’ve spent my time here working in all variety of mediums; wood, plastic, ink, paint, steel, bronze, pixels, code, etcetera, etcetera, and now my final year is in it’s beginning stages. I was pretty set on continuing with my photoblog before the year began, but once things got underway I started to think about all the things I won’t have access to after graduation, mainly the printmaking studio and the sculpture/metals studio. I had to make a decision. I could either do something that I can do anytime or something that I have limited access to; easy choice.

With that said, my project can basically be summed up as a combination of new media processes and traditional, fine art finishings. What I’m envisioning as my final project is a series of prints, and a few bronze sculptures. The prints will be data visualizations from any sort of data set, a few from music, perhaps some sort of census data or what have you. The data will be processed with code that I write, in programs like Processing or Flash, then finalized as a digital illustration which I will take to a 4-axis mill to cut into some wood blocks, and finally I’ll use those blocks to pull some woodblock prints. I might also do some intaglio printmaking and screenprinting, but we’ll see about that. The bronze sculpture will be based on waveform from some sort of audio source. I plan on making two sculptures, one utilizing a laser cutter and the other using rapid-prototyping.

The final result of the project will be taking new media art which is generally considered “throw away” art, that is to say, it isn’t exactly desired or collectable as you see with the traditional mediums in the fine arts world, and then transforming it into something desirable. Basically taking digital art and giving it more “credibility” by transforming it into “fine art.” With this project I hope to further my knowledge of programming, data visualization, and the boundary between digital art and fine art.

Now is the time to let my inner geek shine through into this world paint, pencils, pigments, and metals.

Pretty Much Entirely True

“Here’s the deal: 15-year-old boys with no money pirate software. The harder you make it to crack the software, the more elite they’ll feel when they do it, so the harder they’ll work to publicize their feat.

But, and let me stress this point, IF YOUR BUSINESS MODEL IS TO SELL SOFTWARE TO 15-YEAR-OLD BOYS, YOU ARE SCREWED ALREADY.”

- Wil Shipley – Omni Group Co-Founder, Delicious Library Creator

Content Aware Scaling

Content Aware Scaling

A little over a year ago I wrote about this cool new technology that was basically a smart, content-aware method for scaling images. Today, this technology has found it’s way into Adobe’s new release of Photoshop in CS4 and it’s cool as all hell.

I’m really looking to getting my hands on a copy of CS4. Also, I predict that we’ll see this feature overused pretty heavily early-on.

Great article dissecting Mad Men and their use of typography.

Found Slides

Found Slides 1

My grandfather passed away a few years back, and my grandmother almost exactly a year before him. Without saying much about their passing, I would like to write about some of the things that they left behind. I should preface this post with the fact that over the years I’ve spent at college and the last one or two of high school I developed a strong interest in film photography.

Anyway, many of the things I saved from their house were related to photography in some fashion or another. I got a few rolls of really old film, a roll of shot yet undeveloped Kodachrome, some 16mm film, an old Argoflex camera + attachable flashbulb flash, a Kodak Photo CD camera, and a pile of old slides.

Found Slides 2

The pictures, for the most part, date back to my mother’s childhood, and were taken all over the world as my grandpa traveled extensively due to his job. Slowly over the last few years I’ve been scanning these slides, doing some basic touching up, color correcting, and archiving them. I have a cartridge or two to scan still, and I really haven’t shown them to anyone yet. I want to do something with them after I finish scanning them, but I’m not sure what. Maybe something online, but maybe something printed. I don’t know.

Greent

Snow Flower
Misty Morning
Winding Down
Iris
Morning Mist on North Dome
Through the Mist