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Joan is a famous digital artist that has had the pleasure of exhibiting her work internationally. Her artwork has been featured in renowned art galleries around the world including IBM Gallery in New York City, Museu de Arte Moderna in Rio de Janeiro, Les Cite des Arts et des Nouvelles Technologies de Montreal, Musee d’Art Modern de la Ville de Paris and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. She is a professor at the School of Art Institute in Chicago (Renee Diane Klaas, 2).
Joan’s work is incredible clearly showing the sharp contrast between digital and analogue life. The two images, the mother/daughter, and the Rites of Passage show tensions coming up as the digital representation connects with both the photographic and analog view. Both images are created using a video digitizer and then superimposed on a live video image. The final images are photographs from the computer monitor.
Joan Truckenbrod uses various phenomena in her work in trying to make an impression on the eye. Both of these works are envisioned into the natural world that at many times is invisible to the naked eye. She uses phenomena such as wind currents reshaping material in their path and electrical vibration with electrons theatrically playing. Her algorithmic images extended into color and transformative patterns (Renee Diane Klaas, 2) The invisible phenomena in motion are represented by patterns from sequential series and finally they are transferred on fabric by the used of xerography.
As a digital artist, Joan Truckenbrod’s work is truly a masterpiece. To start with the images are truly eye-catching and only then does an artist realize the energy and effort put into making the images a reality is just incredible. She is a pioneer in the digital arts being a professor in the Art and Technology Department at The School of Art Institute in Chicago. She is among the first artists to exhibit digital images in the 70s.
Art is a story and Joan can tell her stories and express what she sees in her world in a very creative manner. The use of various phenomena in the production of her digital images is just remarkable (Renee Diane Klaas, 2). Any artist viewing her work can realize that digital production goes beyond algorithmic images but the artist has to put in a lot of creativity in balancing the different phenomena so that the final product is remarkable.
Both her works show the deep inspiration of an artist expressing herself to the world. Works of art should not only be by impulse or the desire of an artist to be busy. Rather it should be an inspiration to both the artist and anyone that views the image of how the artist views their world. The way she can play around with colors and different contrasts to give a final product is encouraging to an artist not to be reserved when giving creating digital images (Renee Diane Klaas, 2).
CONCLUSION
Joan describes her work as beauty on the surface that is pitted by the turmoil underneath bubbling up serendipitously through the images’ thin surfaces. The other side of the mask is where this work originates just like looking through a car’s windshield on a dark rainy night. The outside world is automatically changed through the rain’s streaks on the windshield. Joan Truckenbrod is an inspiration to me and any other artist interested in the creation of digital images. Being the founder in the field, she has set remarkable standards and her pieces of work have been praised for long. She continues to change the face of digital imaging to date, her images being exhibited all over the world, every artist's dream.
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