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| In this text I am focusing on describing the project that I am currently working on, as well as referencing and annotating various essays that I am reading at the moment, relating to my practice - incorporating these two components into one text.
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| I am working on a short video project about post-industrial spaces - visually documenting the urban decay in older industrial buildings and their surroundings close to the city in the Port of Rotterdam. As it will be a visual piece, it is the aesthetics of these places that I am the most interested in, the main elements of interest being the shape, texture, color, type of material, symmetry, simplicity, complexity and so on. The different color variations and decay forms that some buildings possess never cease to amaze me. The buildings and their walls - suffering from urban decay - can evoke moods such as melancholia and nostalgia in the viewers, and even more so when adding a realistic soundtrack to accompany the visuals. I have been out weekly scouting for locations and shooting in various places around the docks area. Fast-changing, different weather conditions and variations in light can prevent capturing subjects in their best form. After all, visual continuity is essential in a work that shows new images one after another. My focus for the content has evolved from shooting exterior building walls in a quite minimalistic way to a more abstract, fragmented view of close-ups and medium shots of subjects in the surroundings, keeping it in the context of the theme. <b>nice detailed summary of your working process.</b> During our small group critiques Liz recommended me to look at the work from the following photographers: Minor White, Aaron Siskind and Bernd and Hilla Becher, as they all shot in industrial locations as part of their work and it is indeed interesting to see what different people decide to capture and focus their attention on in an industrial setting. <b>Have these photographers influenced what you're doing now? Can you say how?</b>
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| Dudley Andrew begins his quest to find out and define what cinema is and could be in the future by investigating whether a camera is at all essential in the world of filmmaking and lens-based images. In his point of view, throughout the classical ”studio system, the strongest alternative ideas of cinema, aside from animation, survived in nonnarrative modes: the documentary, the avant-garde, the short subject, as well as in the educational, industrial, and amateur film. All these modes, and the expansive ideas concerning cinema's uses and powers that they put in play, force a comprehensive view of the medium, as they stake out territory we can plot in concentric circles at varying distances from the bull's-eye of the feature.” (Andrew, 2010, p.xvi) He mentions the early techniques used by Emile Reynaud, Man Ray and Stan Brakhage that bypassed the camera and goes on to compare the early stages of making moving images to the ultramodern way of making them now - by compositing, not composing. Still, according to him the ”magic still exists - this is what draws millions to the theater - but its source is no longer on the set and in the moment when the camera registered something unrepeatable. The magic has migrated to the computer, where soundtracks are additive concoctions of scores of tracks, and pictures are composited, not composed.” (Andrew, 2010, p.6) Also, in his view, films ”have a mission quite other than lying or agitating: they aim to discover, to encounter, to confront, and to reveal. If anything is endangered by the newly digitalized audiovisual culture, it is a taste for the encounters such voyages of discovery can bring about. Apparently, many today feel that the world and the humans who inhabit it have been sufficiently discovered, that no new revelations await, at least not in a medium dominated by entertainment and advertising.” (Andrew, 2010, p.xviii) Indeed, but it does not prevent us from researching and repeating the past in interesting ways from our own perspective. He argues that with the rise of the digital technology, moving images can be manipulated at will, which of course is quite true, and interestingly mentions Sean Cubitt declaring all cinema to be a version of animation and not the other way around. Especially the documentary genre has been highly affected by the rise of new technology, leading the public to question the reliability, authenticity and the future of the genre in a digital form. <b>this is a good discussion of Andrew's views and their practical implications for filmmakers working today.</b>
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| At the moment I am editing the project. I have gathered all the fixed shots together that I want to use in the final video and placed them on the sequence timeline. The color correction is taking place and I am working on the sound track. I am interested in creating a quite monochromatic look as it lets me eliminate and get rid of various unnecessary colors in the individual video clips. But I am still leaving in at least shades of one or more colors in the final work as I feel that a plain black and white look for the video would not provide as satisfying outcome as a slightly more colorful look. In terms of authenticity, decay can bring up quite interesting color variations on different textures. ”It is all too apparent that the editing of a series of fixed shots establishes a feeling of continuity but is unable, unlike moving shots, to create the sensation of the continuous, since this sensation is reconstructed intellectually and not perceived as such – which means that reality appears as though it were an idea or a memory; or, to put it another way, it appears restructured. Whence the impression of a ready-made reality, a kind of presentification rather than a present taking place and therefore of a world transcending the immediate experience. On the other hand, the moving camera provides, as we shall see further on, the feeling of a present in action, giving us the feeling that we might be able to have an effect on the world or, at least, play a part in altering its potentiality. Of course, continuity in film cannot be created in the audience's mind except by direct appeal to its memory faculty (without which it would not be possible for it to have any perception whatever – not even of the simplest movement). We know that vision in the cinema (moving pictures) can be explained only by the persistence of images on the retina or, more exactly, the persistence of visual impressions on the cortex of the brain, a kind of short circuit (called the phi phenomenon) involving our immediate memory.” (Mitry, 2000, p.162-163) <b>I like how you've returned to speaking about your own work, and interweaving it with quotes from other ppl. Can you say a bit more about how these writers (Andrews, Mitry, Pomerance) are influencing what you're doing?</b>
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| For the sound track I am using various industrial and ambient audio recordings/sound effects and experimental, distantly melodic music to build up the mood and atmosphere aurally as a companion to the visuals. ”Not only does sound overlapping effect a fluidity in transition through space or time, it yields a sense of propulsion that accentuates the rhythm of cinema. Overlap became especially important in North American cinema after filmmakers and editors had been influenced, by the jump cutting of the French New Wave in the 1950s, to reduce their dependency on dissolves, which had a built-in visual smoothness. The sound overlap works in editing whether or not there is visual or narrative discontinuity between the images in a cut, simply by masking over the change from one shot to another. But when there is in fact a profound visual or narrative discontinuity, a sound overlap can effect a stunning visual metaphor, bridging seamlessly between two elements that might seem unconnectable otherwise.” (Pomerance, 2008, p.141)
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| Bibliography
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| Andrew, D. (2010) What Cinema Is? Bazin's Quest and its Charge UK, Wiley-Blackwell
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| Mitry, J. (2000) The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema USA, Indiana University Press
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| Pomerance, M. (2008) The Horse Who Drank the Sky: Film Experience Beyond Narrative and Theory USA, Rutgers University Press
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