Techno-Impressionist
Art This site's title sparks instant imagery of a neon-radiant-fiberoptik-glow
traversing cyberspace with all the brilliance of modern art, classical painting
and digital hipness. Perhaps what we have here is a movement of lofty ideals
in search of a utopian something or other. Riding a minimalist wave - far
from the impressionism of Monet with which the masses may be more familiar
- Techno Impressionists break, make and reinvent the rules. They are a group
of conceptual artists who weave through the realms of computer-age tools,
traditional mediums, and experimental routes to disseminate information
and imagery. The Web site echoes this concept with an appropriate blend
of cutting-edge HTML tricks and standard, easy-to-understand layouts. The
creators make certain we're aware they are not "computer artists"but, instead, artists who use computer tools. Make no mistake. The site
includes all the requisite Web page devices. You've got your styly this,
your styly that - bells, whistles, everything. Links. FAQ. History. And
quite a bit of humor emerges after an initial glance. Many of the quotes
in the Quote section are satirical, and the Tidbits area takes stabs at
some tongue-in-cheek humor - sometimes successful, sometimes a bit too tongue-in-cheek.
The overall tone is exemplified by the following message posted in the Reviews
section: "As for your critics - *Bad*, *Cheesy*, and the phrase *Cheap
computer tricks* are phrases that we at MOBA do not like to see bandied
about carelessly. As a director of the leading institution in the nation
dedicated to bad art, I can assure you that your work is none of the above
and we resent the author's recklessness." - Jerry Reilly, Museum of
Bad Art (MOBA), officially declaring this work to be "not bad."Incidentally, all reviews art written by the artists themselves - artists
that go by names like Vincent van Gui and Andrew Lloyd Webmaster. More than
100 images span 25 galleries, and the site is updated at least a few time
each week with still more images. There is minimal text. Sometimes this
is frustrating. It might be nice to know a bit more - anything more - about
the artists. But I'm assuming that the lack of information just falls in
line with the overall theme. Maybe. Either way, the art is wonderful, the
site is smooth and well-organized, and, overall, it's a fantastic look at
the art world through the periscope of HTML.
A
Asian
Arts Before Monet and Picasso picked up paint brushes, art existed
as a sacred form of expression. In the Asian Arts site, visitors learn how
sculpture played a central religious role in Indian civilization. Much of
the Asian art pays tribute to ancient deities such as the Vajrayana statue,
which represents the five cosmic elements dominating the world: form, sensation,
name, adaptation and consciousness. After gazing at the imagery, peruse
extensive articles on the Giant Thangkas of Tsurphu Monastery, the Tsa-Tsa
Votive Tablets of Tibet, a Taglung Lama, and more. -BJB
A
Dayglo's Animation
Flying sharks and neon pirates steer this Dayglo ship. You at home can download
MPEG movie treasures of Mayan temples, robotic ferns, swimming schools of
brickfish, and the superhero antics of Fifty P Man. Dayglo also offers a
booty of free animation software and demos, and more links to amusing and
weird sites that you can shake an MPEG leg at. The site should help beginning
animators get a jump on their own creations instead of walking the plank
alone. This, matey, is one ship everyone should sail.-BJB
B+
Designlink
Here's your "Online Resource for Creative Professionals." It's
well-designed and keenly organized, and offers to build networks among the
denizens of the design industry, manufacturers, and other Internet resources.
Complete with a portfolio display area, job bulletin board and a yellow
pages directory, Designlink is definitely a good starting point for illustrators,
photographers, interior designers and anyone else peering over creative
visual edges.-SK
A
DesignOnline
Artistically speaking, this is one of the most competent looking resource
sites on the net. And as far as content goes, it's the cat's meow. Design
Online is home to pages and pages of design-related everything: news, professional
and non-profit organization info, discussion areas, files, fonts and links
galore to keep designers, architects and artists connected both within the
wired world, and outside the digital crusade. Many gold stars for this impressive
accomplishment.-SK
A+
Graphite
and Phosphor Graphite and Phosphor carries itself with an aura
of mystery and discovery. Packaged with beautiful images and thoughtful
layouts, this site pays homage to its creator's architectural and design
passion, wonderfully displaying past and current projects. While some pages
require a bit of patience (the site is almost exclusively composed of heavy
images), the material at the end of the modem pull is well worth the wait.-KV
A
Idea Exchange
The Idea Exchange makes corporate art look cool. The site, sponsored by
the Warren paper company, goes the extra mile by providing links to illustrators,
finishers, photographers, pre-press houses, printers, professional associations,
and more. In the Printer's Forum, desktop publishers can access information
on flexography, thermal transfer, paper stock, sheet-fed offset, and other
high-tech publishing issues. Fanzine editors and glossy magazine publishers
alike will agree this is one of the brightest ideas on the Web.-BJB
A+
Internet Art
Emporium The Art Emporium may not be magnetically captivating
- could anything sporting the name "emporium" be captivating?
- but it certainly has its art-added value. The site features works from
esteemed and not-yet-esteemed artists worldwide, with hopes that Web surfers
may want to spend some money. Pricing and ordering information is well-displayed;
however, the site's proprietors have yet to initiate any support of online
transactions (though you could place, not *pay* for, an order via e-mail).
The Emporium also includes the ubiquitous link list of other art-related
resources. It is indeed well organized and useful.-LS
B
Kiernan's Wavefront
Homepage While some net kids dabble in animation, others become
MPEG movie geniuses. Wavefront separates the greatness from the gunk with
a collection of Kiernan Holland's own MPEG creations. Download and watch
short animations of cyber insects, hand shadows, rolling walrus heads, and
blazing infernos. And, after viewing these curiosities, check out the Resumes
Of Wavefront Experts At UNM section; prospective employers are encouraged
to give jobs to Kiernan's classmates. The next George Lucas or David Lynch
could be an MPEG hack in disguise. -BJB
B
may you live in interesting
times The momentum of this site swings far and wide with energy,
creativity and an overwhelmingly large collection of images, artwork, and
ideas. AdaWeb fills its server with digital exhibitions, examples of creative
HTML design, and flurries of abstract concepts. At first, you'll need to
trust your intuition to click with reckless abandon (few options are clearly
indicated, though many are presented). But, as you find yourself pouring
through the site, it becomes apparent that this sort of random access works
well with all the presentations, and adds to its enjoyment factor. Stunning
creativity.-SK
A
New
Mexico Album Chili pepper vistas and orange sunsets saturate
Philip Greenspun's online photo essay about New Mexico. This unique take
on the Land of Enchantment explores the housing crunch, satellite dish invasions,
and native people hiding from Sante Fe yuppies. The site is only one page
long with a few scattered sentences and a total of 17 photos. Created by
the same guy who brought us the popular travel Web diary Travels With Samantha,
this photo journal falls short, and needs more personality to justify its
download time.-BJB
C+
Picture
Project Gallery Beautiful and immensely moving, this site serves
as a photo documentary of the horrors and suffering that has consumed the
scope of all life in Bosnia. The archive contains dozens of astonishing,
gut-wrenching and heart-warming photographs with simple (and painfully confrontational)
commentary, laced along margins as captions to photos. It's an outstanding
Web site to visit, especially on days of deep melancholia. Guaranteed to
instigate introspection.-SK
A
Post Industrial
Potrero Hill Examine the atmosphere within an artists' live-work
space collective on San Francisco's Potrero Hill. Drown yourself in wonderful
architectural drawings, or research the history of the group members as
they fought to keep their previous space, a renovated hotel on Geary Street
that was home to many artistic legends: Janis Joplin, Wes Wilton and Terry
Fox. This site is well-designed and presented, although, when I wrote this
review, the weekly newsletter was a few months behind.-SK
B+
Scultura
Arts Forum
At Scultura, everything has a price. This online gallery is more like a
shopping mart, encouraging visitors to buy art, pay for a membership, and
browse classifieds. After swimming through the dollar signs, visitors can
enjoy a broad spectrum of art from abstract oil paintings to Crayola portraits
drawn on brown paper bags. The Global Arts links page is scarce - perhaps
because this online gallery charges $199 to link your site to Scultura.
If Scultura focused more on tuning in to, instead of cashing in on, the
Internet artist community, this site would be worth its price in pixels.-BJB
C+
Survival
Research Laboratories
A blazing background supports the content of Survival Research Lab's post-apocalyptic-demolition-style-techno-art
extravaganza. A mouthful of rusty nails and battling robotic droids are
sure to captivate the fascination of at least a few sadistic net surfers.
And the pages devoted to Burning Man - a giant wooden sculpture that is
annually erected and torched in a Nevada desert - are exceptionally inspiring.
Survival Research Labs lives on the fringe of an over-exploited bleeding
edge, and its web site will back this up. Outstanding.-SK
A
Zero Tolerance
Zero Tolerance is a hodgepodge of creative efforts spanning digital media,
photography, and philosophical goo - all rolled into a cool-looking but
kind of messy package. It's hard to nail down the site's intentions, other
than it's a place to store ideas, however chaotically. Perhaps no other
point is required. The images are sometimes spectacular and sometimes lacking,
but overall, the site is entertaining, thoughtful and worth visits from
curious types.-SK
B+