For this post, I wanted to explain the inspiration from two sources that drove my last image. The first I have referenced before, The Order of Time by Carlo Rovelli, and the second is the Netflix documentary film Take Your Pills. The film explores the increased need and distribution of Adderall and other prescription drugs that were developed to treat people with ADHD. While treatment is the primary use, its over prescription has led to wide use of the drug for other purposes. Legal controversy over athletes using this drug, as well as a more hidden controversy between employees and students, have led to many ethical discussions of its use. Furthermore, while there are people who truly need the drug, the quickly decreasing attention span of the common public has greatly blurred the lines between when someone needs treatment or not. What I wanted to look at from this documentary was the fact that so many employees and students are finding illegal means of getting this drug beca...
For this week, since I am using art from another culture and another time to compare my own work, I wanted to look at what is shared about art across time and space, and in turn what has changed. Overall, this research clearly shows that images and art are something universal, and have many universal elements to them. While the style of the images and the actual content (eg. Carts vs. Cars) may change, they are still examining the same idea or overall theme as they were from the first cave drawings. This is an interesting idea that ties all humans across time and space together in a very interesting way. Looking at art in the holistic form really shows the deep and fascinating connections of the human mind and challenges the individualistic modern themes in U.S. culture today. In a way, it proves that art can transcend differences in things such as ideas, belief, technology, and essentially tie back to the core of the subject: humans as a whole and how they see the world, in a way...