Sunday, 16 January 2011

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Chris Ofili


I really enjoyed Chris Ofili's exhibition. I love the way he used the stereotyped images of black culture and used them to his advantage to create great contemporary works of art. In his work I found traditional ways of painting put in a contemporary context. I was moved by these paintings full of colour and very dynamic. I think my favourite painting was afrodizzia. The colours are stunning. When I was looking at it I could feel his love of music and a lot of humour. It makes me think of some kind of hallucination someone would have while on drugs where faces with afros would appear. The ambiance of the upper room was nice. I liked the way the paintings where lit and how their reflection appeared on the wooden floor. I found the series of monos interesting. They all gave out different feelings just by the change of colour used. He used strong colours but managed to give transparence and delicateness to the paintings.

EFF

WFTO (world fair trade organization)
Wfto is composed with more than 400 organisations. In the past years their sale have been growing at a 35% rate. The members are in 70 countries across Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, North America and the Pacific Rim. They all believe that trade should improve the lives of marginalized people without harming the planet.
By linking and promoting sustainable fair trade organisations, the wfto improves the well being of disadvantaged producers and their communities. This can be done through campaigning, policy, marketing and monitoring.
Their goal is to: Develop market for Fair Trade, Build trust in Fair trade, Speak out for fair trade.


Fairtrade Certified Cotton
For some of the world's poorest countries cotton is what their economies depend on. Cotton is important at both local and national levels. Fair-trade cotton brings social and environmental benefits to farmers involved in its cultivation. The social and economic benefits are that it increased income by guaranteeing farmers a better price for their cotton, the communities are developed by including a premium that is set aside to invest in social and environmental projects that ensure that the communities have the ability to fund long term improvement. The environmental benefits are that there is responsible farming. The farmers are committed to reduce chemical use and protecting the environment. The impact is reduced by reducing and replacing conventional pesticides and fertilisers with natural alternatives. Fair-trade standards prohibit the use of genetically modified cotton seeds.

Made-By
There mission is to improve environmental and social conditions in the fashion industry.
They were founded in 2004 in the Netherlands and launched in Germany in 2008 and UK in 2009. They work with brands to improve sustainability across their supply chains from raw materials to finished products. They want to help address a wide range of issues including child labour, unsafe working conditions, pesticides in cotton farming and water usage in dyeing houses. They use respected international standards to measure the progress of brands and are then demonstrated through made-by's scorecard system. These scorecards are shared with brands and are published online.

Horniman Museum

When I went to the Horniman Museum I spent most of my time in the beautiful garden and in the African worlds part. I particularly liked the details in the masks. The art room Benin had lovely colours and stylised geometric shapes patterns and faces. The exhibition on china's symbols in silk was stunning. There was so much detail in the embroidery on the garments and the delicacy of the shoes.

Yves St Laurent by Warhol

Ysl's Pop art dress
YSL's Picasso dress
Exhibition "Dialogues avec l'art" Petit Palais, Paris