User:Trashpuppy/Evidently, Chickentown!: Difference between revisions
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<span style="font-family; courier new, courier; monospace; color:rgb(184,0,0); font-size:100%;">EVIDENTLY, CHICKEN TOWN!<span style="font-family; courier, new courier; monospace; color: black; font-size:100%"> is a short film based on a poem I wrote <I>Dinner time</I>. Focus of the project is on the adaptation from language, poetry specifically, to moving image. Poetry by nature is a collage of imagery (analogies, metaphors and hyperboles). To get the same story across through a different medium you change the way it is "told" by virtue of a different vocabulary. What seems natural in written and spoken language becomes rather theatrical and camp in visual imagery. This element of conflation and contrast is something I wanted to retain as opposed to solve / avoid. <br><br><br><br> | <span style="font-family; courier new, courier; monospace; color:rgb(184,0,0); font-size:100%;">EVIDENTLY, CHICKEN TOWN!<span style="font-family; courier, new courier; monospace; color: black; font-size:100%"> is a short film based on a poem I wrote <I>Dinner time</I>. Focus of the project is on the adaptation from language, poetry specifically, to moving image. Poetry by nature is a collage of imagery (analogies, metaphors and hyperboles). To get the same story across through a different medium you change the way it is "told" by virtue of a different vocabulary. What seems natural in written and spoken language becomes rather theatrical and camp in visual imagery. This element of conflation and contrast is something I wanted to retain as opposed to solve / avoid. Additionally, there's also something about materiality that feels political almost in an age of such invisible editing processes <br><br><br><br> | ||
<gallery mode="packed" widths=290px ; heights=210px> | <gallery mode="packed" widths=290px ; heights=210px> |
Revision as of 16:23, 23 March 2021
EVIDENTLY, CHICKEN TOWN! is a short film based on a poem I wrote Dinner time. Focus of the project is on the adaptation from language, poetry specifically, to moving image. Poetry by nature is a collage of imagery (analogies, metaphors and hyperboles). To get the same story across through a different medium you change the way it is "told" by virtue of a different vocabulary. What seems natural in written and spoken language becomes rather theatrical and camp in visual imagery. This element of conflation and contrast is something I wanted to retain as opposed to solve / avoid. Additionally, there's also something about materiality that feels political almost in an age of such invisible editing processes