The Limejuice Mystery: Difference between revisions
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|Description= | |Description=THE LIMEJUICE MYSTERY is a work in progress which concerns the aging and decay of a roll of nitrate film. After almost 80 years the film cannot function, because of its first stage in decay. It shows the research space where I investigates the unknown nitrate film, the struggle with the material, and its danger from 1940 until today. I gather different elements together that display how I work and engage with the material: the nitrate film that I found second hand; a vitrine with all the research material including Polaroids that I shot throughout the process (they represent a unique moment which I have limited control over); a documentation of the decay of the film; a documentation of the content of the nitrate film The Limejuice Mystery, a parody of a Sherlock Holmes story made in 1930)1; printed decay fragments on Plexiglas that form a landscape. | ||
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Revision as of 12:47, 7 June 2016
The Limejuice Mystery | |
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Creator | Solange Frankort |
Year | 2016 |
Bio | Solange Frankort [NL], Rotterdam based artist, investigate and works within an array of everyday subjects within digital-pop-culture as reference, such as; computer symbols, digital devices, Internet, networks, archives. She uses digital or/and analogue objects to reflect on relationships between humans and the systems they create. Frankort’s work employs a peculiar blend of a little humour and visual aesthetics combine with conceptualism. Creating an unexpected perspective to these subjects, to get a different perception of them, she creates a social dialogue about media and the digital age. |
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Website | http://solangefrankort.nl/ |
THE LIMEJUICE MYSTERY is a work in progress which concerns the aging and decay of a roll of nitrate film. After almost 80 years the film cannot function, because of its first stage in decay. It shows the research space where I investigates the unknown nitrate film, the struggle with the material, and its danger from 1940 until today. I gather different elements together that display how I work and engage with the material: the nitrate film that I found second hand; a vitrine with all the research material including Polaroids that I shot throughout the process (they represent a unique moment which I have limited control over); a documentation of the decay of the film; a documentation of the content of the nitrate film The Limejuice Mystery, a parody of a Sherlock Holmes story made in 1930)1; printed decay fragments on Plexiglas that form a landscape.