L.A. Art History Lessons on Twitter, in Emoji Form

Categories: Art, Museums, Tech

gettyemoji copy.jpg
Getty's emoji art history on its Twitter feed
A somewhat conservative institution like the Getty Museum isn't alway known for its sense of humor. And Richard Meier's modernist castle on the hill can be intimidating. So it comes as a pleasant surprise to see the Getty jumping on one of the more amusing Internet memes to pop up in the last, oh, 72 hours.

According to art blog Hyperallergic, what started as a simple Tumblr post evolved into the Twitter hashtag #emojiarthistory. Using emoji, the simple picture characters that have exploded in popularity in text, instant messages and tweets, art nerds have been re-telling art history through Twitter.

burden.png
Chris Burden's Shoot in emoji

Take, for example, Chris Burden's infamous 1971 performance art piece, Shoot. Los Angeles-based Burden, who often explored the limits of physical endurance, was shot in his left arm by an assistant from a distance of five meters. Reduced to emoji icons, it's just a man and a gun. What it lacks in visceral impact, it makes up for in simplicity.

marclay.png
Christian Marclay's The Clock

LACMA's relatively recent acquisition, Christian Marclay's 24-hour real-time film montage The Clock, is also represented. Yet the succession of clocks is stymied by Twitter's character limit -- there are only 17 clocks, when 24 would feel more appropriate.

ruscha.png
Ed Ruscha's Standard Oil

And of course, perhaps L.A.'s most famous living artist, Ed Ruscha, has been re-interpreted via emoji. His iconic Standard Oil paintings and silkscreens elevated the banal to the divine. Fortunately, emoji icons include red gas station pumps that echo the ones in his work, even if the tweets are a bit more linear than the energetic diagonal thrust of the original source material.

The Getty also put its own spin on the meme. "We noticed most of these were modern and contemporary artists, so we wanted to take it up a notch and do Old Masters," says Maria Gilbert, senior editor and writer for collections and information access for the museum, who also runs its Twitter account. "It was something fun people were talking about, and it was a challenge."

Gilbert uses the basic emoji icons to make them as accessible to as many people as possible. "We wanted to show what we could do with the tools at hand," explains Gilbert. Jan Brueghel the Elder's portrait of Noah's Ark includes an almost encyclopedic rendering of all the emoji animals available, plus rain and waves. Still lifes like Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder's Flower Still Life fare especially well (see photo at the beginning of this post). Less lucky? Van Gogh's Irises, perhaps the most famous painting in the museum's collection. "There are no blue irises," says Gilbert.

Follow us on Twitter at @LAWeeklyArts and like us on Facebook.


My Voice Nation Help
1 comments
Robert Davies
Robert Davies

In the case of Chris Dorner, a mentally disturbed, captive, prisoner, that could have been easily subdued by gas that is absorbed through the skin. Or he could have even been waited out. It is clear that those that gave the order were ethically and morally wrong. Those that carried out those order’s made no attempt to question a obviously deadly order, made no appeal to higher ups to re think the need for a deadly and horrible experiment with our money. In fact, it was quite the opposite. The officers not only blindly carried out this order, to publicaly terrorize the population, but to burn a mentally ill, captive prisoner. They officers said with zeal, and then carried out an obviously immoral unethical order. The people of California have become just what the Nazi’s made of their population. The LAPD, the people of Orange and the rest of Southern California have become lost. They have lost their moral compass from years of brutality and greed to the point they can no longer be trusted to govern over themselves. The countless people I’ve met that have fled California under the same circumstances as Chris Dorner have been forgotten. But at least they are still alive. http://blogs.laweekly.com/informer/2013/02/christopher_dorner_anonymous_threats_lapd_san_bernardino_county_district_attorney_sheriff.php

Now Trending

From the Vault

 

Los Angeles Event Tickets
©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city