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Whilst at the ‘Masculinities’ Exhibition at the Barbican (Featured in early 2020) I came across the work of Hal Fischer, or more specifically the collection of work titled ‘Gay Semiotics’. The collection features a set of photographs taken by Fischer in the Castro and Haight-Ashbury districts of San Francisco (known for being popular with the gay community). The photographs recall the ‘‘ ‘Signalling Devices’ and visual iconography’’ used by many at the time in the Gay Community. The ‘Castro Clones’ as they became nicknamed duplicated the look and aesthetics of different stereotypes, hence the reference to clones. Fischer has supplied a satirical commentary with the photos, through the addition of labels to highlight the main aspects of each ‘look’, for what is duplicated and adopted by the clones. In an interview with ‘Another Man Magazine he told the interviewer that his work as a product of the trends of the time, and wouldn’t work in todays fast moving world. Fisc...
In the process of developing this piece I discovered Audrey Jones’ Tinder Diaries, in which she similarly collected many chat conversations she had had on the app Tinder, and used them to create cartoons, which satire the way that men communicated through the online dating medium. The ‘Tinder Diaries’ consist of a series of small single-image cartoons, in a style heavily inspired by the political cartoons found in many newspapers or online. They feature a simplistic usage of colour and line, with minimal shading. The cartoons usually consist of two figures, always with a rendition of the profile picture of the other user, (Bottom left in example no.1, Above) and another figure to represent Jones. The Figure that represents Jones’s side of the conversation is often heavily exaggerated, and devoid of gender, instead favouring to depict an almost inhuman creature. This inhumanity could be self expression of how distant the version of ourselves we portray online is from ‘the real vers...
One of the resources that the college uses to distribute content to us is the Estream, on which are a series of videos for us to learn from. On the Estream, and sent via a link on the Teams By David, was a link to a four part documentary called The Secret Of Drawing. I watched them, and recorded my notes. Overall, it was very interestig, but it was also four hours of my life I'm not getting back.
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