Thursday, February 24, 2011

American Craft Council Show: Myung Urso

I'm estaticcc to be working the ACC on Friday and Sunday with Myung Urso! (Thanks to my friend, Kelsey, who is working there right now!) Her "assistant" cancelled last minute so I luckily get to fill in :) Yay!

I took a look at her work -- her recent work consists mostly of one of a kind jewelry pieces made of metal and other mediums and fibers incorporated... her "imagination transforms itself from memories and personal stories." I was just discussing today during my critique for my neck piece that I'm interested in incorporating fiber into my design (perhaps wool?)which is also based off of a memory and person story. I'm sure I could gain a lot of inspiration, tips, and trips from Myung! ACC and NYC in one weekend?! It's going to be a good one :) P.S. I found out we're going to Droog (in addition to MOMA and the Museum of Art and Design), I can't wait!

Some of Myung's work and info from her website :






I'm in love.

Biography

Myung Urso was born in South Korea. Her studies include a BA degree in Biology, an
MFA degree in fiber arts from Hongik University, Seoul, Korea in 1986 and an MA degree
for Museum & Gallery Management from the City University in London, England in 1995.

Professionally Myung Urso began her artistic career as a fiber artist, from 1988 to 1993 she worked as an editor and reporter at the Monthly Art & Craft magazine (Design-House Ltd.),Seoul Korea. Myung spent five years in London England where she studied Museum and Gallery Management at the City University and worked for the Visiting Arts division in British Council Headquarters in London. In 1997 she returned to South Korea where she began to work as a curator. In 1998 she opened ‘Hand and Mind’ contemporary craft gallery/store and a craft store located in Seoul, which operated through 2005.
As a curator and art director Myung Urso organized more than 50 contemporary crafts
exhibitions throughout South Korea and in the countries of France, the United Kingdom
and the United States. Myung has served as a juror for numerous crafts competitions and
as an advisor for the Korean Ministry of Culture & Tourism, the Korea National Museum
Foundation, and the Korea Craft Promotion Foundation, etc. In addition Myung Urso was
a lecturer at several universities such as Duksung Univ., Kookmin University and
Sookmyung Univ. within South Korea. Currently Myung works as an art jeweler creating unique one of kind fashion art forms.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Process of Healing



For my series of work to be exhibited in the Senior Show at the end of the semester, I'm creating a body of work that focuses on my own personal process of healing. Already, it has been therapeutic and advantageous for me, allowing me to express my emotions of how I feel inside (though many times extremely difficult and usually resulting in a mental break down afterward, but, still good). My brother passed away this past October, and unless someone has personally experienced this terrible tragedy, there is absolutely no way for someone to truly understand the unbearable pain, turmoil, and heartache that follows. I fight my own demons every single day, and although I am still able to be a fairly happy person and smile, and laugh, at least on the outside, my expression of what I am experiencing on the inside is limited. I don't talk about it or express these feelings to anyone, ever, and only release this pain when I'm alone... something I know is completely unhealthy and in no way helping my healing process, but is the only way I know how to handle it. So, through my work, I trying to express my stages of healing...from how I felt when it first happened, how I feel now, and how I hope to feel in the future. I'm expressing this through a medium scale neck piece and stained glass. It's definitely been difficult -- to have to stand in front of the class and tell what my pieces are about and why I am doing them, and especially hard to have to explain to new people critiquing my work, which exposes me and my situation... but, I have already grown from it. Just writing about it on my blog is absolutely not something I would have done a few weeks ago. I never talk about any of my personal life much for that matter. After both critiques, I've gone and cried, sometimes sobbed for hours, not because of the critique, but for having to barely talk about. But, honestly, I think it's good for me. Monday, I came into Casting and was in a foul mood, upset and angry at the world because of what happened (I don't always feel like this)... so after class, I took pre-cut metal I had ready to be textured for my neckpiece, took it into the back studio, and hammered for about 45 minutes, really hard, until my arm couldn't take anymore. Needless to say, I felt a lot better for the rest of the day, and I produced the best textures I had so far. Win-win situation. So, this project might not be the easiest for me to do, but it's good for me, and it's helping. :)

A Practical Guide to Branding

For Senior Project, I was told to research what branding is and how people do it... here's a good article I found about branding! What's my personality and how will I brand? I'm figuring it out :)

Define your brand identity—your product's "personality"—before you spend a dime on advertising or marketing.
by Karen E. Klein

Talk to entrepreneurs about their marketing and communications efforts, and they'll often use the words "branding," "marketing," and "advertising" interchangeably. That reflects the pervasive confusion about the terms, says Gail Guge, managing partner of Wilkin Guge Marketing in Ontario, Calif.. "About 15 years ago, 'branding' became a buzzword in the business vernacular, and people still get the words mixed up all the time," she says.

That confusion is unfortunate, because understanding the concepts and how they mesh is vital to every company's bottom line. Studies show companies that market their products or services without first establishing their brand identities are not likely to achieve return on investment. "If you're spending money to advertise and market without being connected to a brand position, you might as well pile the money up and burn it," Guge says.

Rob Frankel, a branding expert and author in Los Angeles, calls branding the most misunderstood concept in all of marketing, even among professionals. Branding, he says, "is not advertising and it's not marketing or PR. Branding happens before all of those: First you create the brand, then you raise awareness of it."
Your Brand is Your Personality

And while many people think successful branding is only about awareness, it's not, Frankel adds. "Everyone knows about cancer but how many people actually want it? Branding is about getting your prospects to perceive you as the only solution to their problem. Once you're perceived as 'the only,' there's no place else to shop. Which means your customers gladly pay a premium for your brand."

Your product or service is not your company's brand and neither is your logo or your business card. Your brand is the genuine "personality" of your company. "It's what your customers think of you and say about you when they've left your company," says Rodger Roeser, president of Cincinnati-based Eisen Management Group, a public-relations and brand-development firm.

Your brand is what your company stands for and what it is known for. "Look at yourself in the mirror and ask yourself what you stand for. Go around the room with your leadership and ask them what the company stands for. Settle on one or two brand pillars and build your brand around them. If you can't define your brand, your customers won't be able to, either. And the risk is that someone else will define it for you—probably your competitors," Roeser says.
The Promise You Make to the World

Steve Cecil, a copywriter and verbal-branding expert with Where Words in San Carlos, Calif., says a brand is a promise and branding is the act of devising the promise your company makes to the world. Marketing, he says, "is the strategy that differentiates your brand promise from all the other brand promises in that increasingly crowded house called "your category."

Think of marketing like a toolbox containing branding, advertising, direct mail, market research, public relations, and other tools. "Marketing represents the combination of methods organizations use to persuade their target audience toward some specified behavior such as sales," says Stephen Rapier, of Glendale (Calif.)-based The Artime Group.

Advertising, Rapier says, can take many forms: print, as in newspaper and magazine ads; outdoor, such as billboards; online Web banners; and broadcast advertising on radio and TV. "Typically, the goal of advertising is to grab attention, create positive perceptions, and prompt response while conveying information consumers will find relevant to their needs," he notes.
Your Brand Is a Lifestyle

A successful marketing strategy uses all—or most—of the tools in the box depending on the job at hand, Cecil says. "Crafting a winning marketing strategy is challenging enough even when you have articulated your brand promise and is probably impossible if you haven't."

If you have not specified your company's brand, don't spend another dime on marketing until you do. While everyone's familiar with megabrands such as Apple (AAPL), Nike (NKE), and Virgin, small companies can also develop potent brands and market them successfully, says Steve Manning, managing director at Igor, a branding and naming firm based in San Francisco.

"A brand creates an image in the mind of the consumer. It says something is different at your firm, something worth more than business as usual. If your firm is a commodity, your customers will choose you solely on the basis of price or getting something for free. If you've got a brand, you're selling a lifestyle and you can sell anything you want," Manning says.

Sunday, February 20, 2011