PTMoMNBM
Outline a project you would like to make.
What will it be? (Three sentences max)
Why do you want to make it? (Three sentences max)
Describe how it would be made: describe the stages needed to make it (Four sentences max)
Proposals:
Tesse's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Rodolfo's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Yana's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Aratrika's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Chan's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Luca's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Jingfeng's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Tessa's proposal for a project that may or may note be made
Do's proposal for a project that may or not be made
Riccardo's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Tom's proposal for a project that may or may not be made
Methods lens-based#Session Six
Transcluded pages:
Original:
This proposal is for a project that delves into nature’s instances of cyclical time, complicated by the (my) human reflex to make this linear or progressive (productive). It will most likely take the shape of a mid-length documentary, or otherwise a multi-channel installation.
I want to explore this to reconceptualise the experience of time and to see how our lives and minds are often structured according to a temporality that deviates from nature’s flux. It is an exercise for both the viewer and myself to allow things to come and go without feeling the need to hold on. To not feel like we are standing still when we aren’t actively going forward.
I will search for instances that visualise nature’s cyclical time, such as the leaves changing colour, the trees shedding, the waves coming and going, the moon changing phases. I will perform (and film) scenes that express the need to hold on to things, such as tying fallen leaves back to the trees, tracing the lines of the waves on the sand. These scenes will perhaps be combined with a more textual/vocal/anecdotal/theoretical exploration of time, such as scientific perspectives, biological expressions, or a clockmaker describing how watches work. These different elements will be presented either next to each other as a body of research, or will be combined on one screen in a form that allows the viewer to reflect on, but also feel how the time is passing.
Rodolfo's questions:
What do I mean with cyclical time? (although this becomes clearer after)
What would the multi-channel installation be made of/look like?
What do these performances look like?
Why the scientific perspectives? How relevant is that?
Last sentence is maybe more what than how
Revised version:
This proposal is for a project that delves into nature’s instances of time being cyclical, complicated by the (my) human reflex to make this time linear or progressive (productive). It will most likely take the shape of a mid-length documentary, or otherwise a multi-channel installation with the different scenes shown on separate screens.
I want to explore this to reconceptualise the experience of time and to see how our lives and minds are often structured according to a temporality that deviates from nature’s flux. It is an exercise for both the viewer and myself to allow things to come and go without feeling the need to hold on. To not feel like we are standing still when we aren’t actively going forward.
I will search for (and capture in image and sound) instances that visualise nature’s cyclical time, such as the leaves changing colour, the trees shedding, the waves coming and going, the moon changing phases. I will then perform (and film) scenes in those environments that express the need to hold on to things, such as tying fallen leaves back to the trees, tracing the lines of the waves on the sand. These scenes will perhaps be combined with a more textual/vocal/anecdotal/theoretical exploration of time, such as expressions of biological cycles, or a clockmaker describing how watches work. As a next step in the sound, these informational parts would be combined with atmospheric soundscapes (and perhaps even musique concrète) made from the sounds recorded in nature. The last step would be to decide whether these elements I have collected will be presented next to each other as a body of research, or whether I will edit them together on one screen in a form that allows the viewer to reflect on, but also feel how the time is passing.
Rapid prototypes related to this proposal:
1. Draw as many circles as you can on one paper without having the lines touch.
2. Make/find three videos of the same measured time but with a different experienced time.
Original
Your Presence Was Cancelled is an ongoing project that I would like to show at the EYE Research Labs next February. The project consists of creating a moving image, based on a still photograph - a kind of selfie I took last May on the train - and drawing a narrative around it.
I want to make it because, first of all, I think it will help me understand and process what happened at that moment, or rather, that day. It also seems to me to be a good opportunity to work with archive material and create a narrative that is honest and, at the same time, exciting and surprising about it. Finally, it seems like a great opportunity to get out of my comfort zone (which mostly involves creating still images), and generate something new from an artistic/technical point of view, in which I work with moving images and sound.
There are, from the outset, three components of the project that I have to work on: the image, the text and the sound - the last two of which may, or may not, be linked to each other. In relation to the image, it seems important to me to start dismantling the photograph and create a notion of movement from it, through an editing process. I want it to be possible to browse/navigate through the image, as if it’s moving, like a train. With regards to the text, it seems important to me to understand what type of narrative I want to create and, above all, how I want to tell the story of this picture, whether I want it to be something merely descriptive, more personal or maybe both. And how do I want to communicate what I'm saying: whether through text or a voice over, which may or may not be mine. And this is strictly related to the issue of sound, because if there is a voice over, it seems important to me to understand whether I want to add other types of sound to the piece, be it music or sounds related to the space seen in the picture. It seems essential to me to bring together, throughout the entire process, all the components and understand how they work together, so that there is coherence between each and every part.
Tesse's questions
Your Presence Was Cancelled is an ongoing project that I would like to show at the EYE Research Labs next February. The project consists of creating a moving image, based on a still photograph - a kind of selfie I took last May on the train - and drawing a narrative around it. I want to make it because, first of all, I think it will help me understand and process what happened at that moment, or rather, that day. It also seems to me to be a good opportunity to work with archive material and create a narrative that is honest and, at the same time, exciting and surprising about it. Finally, it seems like a great opportunity to get out of my comfort zone (which mostly involves creating still images), and generate something new from an artistic/technical point of view, in which I work with moving images and sound. There are, from the outset, three components of the project that I have to work on: the image, the text and the sound - the last two of which may, or may not, be linked to each other. In relation to the image, it seems important to me to start dismantling the photograph and create a notion of movement from it, through an editing process. I want it to be possible to browse/navigate through the image, as if it’s moving, like a train. With regards to the text, it seems important to me to understand what type of narrative I want to create and, above all, how I want to tell the story of this picture, whether I want it to be something merely descriptive, more personal or maybe both. And how do I want to communicate what I'm saying: whether through text or a voice over, which may or may not be mine. And this is strictly related to the issue of sound, because if there is a voice over, it seems important to me to understand whether I want to add other types of sound to the piece, be it music or sounds related to the space seen in the picture. It seems essential to me to bring together, throughout the entire process, all the components and understand how they work together, so that there is coherence between each and every part.
Second Text
Your Presence Was Cancelled is an ongoing project that I would like to show at the EYE Research Labs next February. The project consists of creating a moving image, based on a still one - a selfie that I took last May on the train - and building a narrative around it.
I want to make it because, first of all, I think it will help me understand and process what happened at that moment, or rather, that day. I see it, as well, as a good chance to work with archive material and create a narrative around it. Finally, it seems like a great opportunity to get out of my comfort zone (which mostly involves creating still images), and generate something new from an artistic/technical point of view, in which I work with moving images and sound.
There are, from the outset, three components of the project that I have to work on: the image, the text and the sound - the last two of which may, or may not, be linked to each other. I have to start to dismantle the photograph and create a notion of movement from it, through zooming in/out and browse on the image. With regards to the text, I need to understand what type of narrative I want to create and, above all, how I want to tell the story of this picture, if I want it to be something merely descriptive, more personal or maybe both. And how do I want to communicate what I'm saying: whether through text or a voice over - which may or may not be mine. This choice is strictly related to the issue of sound, because if there is a voice over, I would need to realize if I want to add other types of sound to the piece, be it music or sounds related to the space seen in the picture. In order for the piece to have a harmonious and coherent appearance in the end, it seems essential to me to work, simultaneously, with each and every component of the project throughout the process.
Rapid prototypes
1. In the image you can see my reflection and, in another plane, the reflection of another person in the carriage. Simulate a dialogue with that person through improv.
2. Write down all the questions that I have about the picture and the project itself.
What’s in the picture? What does the picture mean for me? What can the picture mean for others? Is the picture a selfie? What's a selfie? What was I looking at? Why did I cover my face? Was I trying to pose for the picture? Was I looking at myself on my phone screen? Was I listening to music? If yes, to which one? Can I get this information? What other sounds were there on the train? Could I (still) hear them? Were people talking? Was the seat comfortable? What did I have inside of my backpack? Can I recreate it? What do I actually remember? What did I have in my lap? Why did I decide to take this photo? How was I feeling? What happened before? What happened after? Where was I going? From where was I coming from? Where was the train? Was the train moving or standing still? How’s the configuration of the space where I am? What’s that space? Is the space pleasing? What are the colors of this space? Does it even matter? Do I want to show the real colors of the picture? Is it important? Or is it just an aesthetic/visual choice? Is it possible to separate me from space? Can I talk about space without talking about me? Which are the limits of my understanding of space? Who else was in the space? Who is this person? Who is this woman? Is she a ghost? What is she doing? Where is she from? How old is she? Does she have kids? What does she do? Does she work? Is she unemployed? Is she retired? Is she on a holiday? Is she married? Is she single? Is she divorced? Is she a widow? What’s her biggest dream? How does she feel now? Where is she going? What does she see from her seat? Did she notice me? What does she think about me? Could I be her son? Could I be her grandson? What would we talk about? Would we talk in Spanish? Would we have interests in common? Would I like her? Would she like me? Is it possible for us to share space again (somewhere in the future)? If so, where, how and when? Would I tell her about this project? Will she know about this project? Would she like it? Will someone like it? Will I like it? Is this worth it? What is this about? Is it about me? Is it about my grandmother? Is it about loss? Is it about memories? Is this about void? Is it all and nothing at the same time? Do I have any clue? Will I - at some point? What am I actually doing?
I want to create a step-by-step tutorial on how to make your own bomb. It will be intertwined with other material/interviews of people talking about explosions in Rotterdam.
I will use the tutorial as part of the exploration of the bigger topic of explosions in Rotterdam. This tutorial will position my research in a larger framework which is not strictly documentary, but has elements of magical realism/fiction in it. A lot of the explosions in Rotterdam are also done through using illegal fireworks, so I think this has a DIY element to it which suits the format of a tutorial. The idea of a tutorial for a bomb came from a book I sincerely love, called Still Life with Woodpecker, telling the love story between an outlaw who bombs corporations and an ecologist princess. Through bombs, pyramids, aliens, and other peculiar subjects, the book rediscovers all these as a means to accessing the Mystery. And perhaps, this is what draws me back to this text, as in my work, no matter the subject, I want to access the mystery or the strange and peculiar in some form or another.
To make this tutorial, I would start by finding a recipe - there are a few in Still Life with Woodpeckker which were taken from The Anarchist Cookbook. Then, I would need to decide on the aesthetic to film in - should it be a hand drawn animation or a Wes Anderson symmetry obsession? I would then need to get materials, possibly substitutes to the real ones. And finally - film the tutorial.
What will it be?
A film montage of visuals of me filmed by myself using different instagram filters. In these clips I am alone, doing everyday things, often looking into the camera. There is overlaying audio that creates a coherence and narrative.
Why do you want to make it?
I am interested in the ways we choose to depict ourselves, the joys of choosing and building our identities. I have been exploring self portraiture in this way for a while now and want to put the different clips together and see what I discover.
Describe how it would be made:
-Look through archives from 2019-now and download relevant and interesting clips
-Put them into a video editing timeline
-Play around with them in terms of order, duration, colour
-Make note of what kind of themes or narratives emerge, feel free to experiment with various iterations
-If it feels right work on a voice over or sound design to tie everything together
Extra steps:
-Imagine how it might play out as a video installation
-Play around with TouchDesigner
Rapid Prototype:
1. go to the studio
2. print out a picture
3. stretch your upper body
4. take a photo of your reflection
5. put it side by side with a still from an old self-video clip, on the computer or printed
6. write for 5 mins about how that feels
7. say "good job aratrika"
What will it be?
Making a Card Board game
- Five everyday electronic devices. ( phone, laptop, tablet, headset, smart watch etc,,)
- A card with five multi-outlet plugs.
- A mix of multiple chargers and cables.
The challenge is to see who can successfully charge all the devices first. The participant who accomplishes this task first will be declared the winner.
(+)
To create a more immersive gaming experience, it's important to draw inspiration from real-life situations, such as dealing with water damage or faulty cables.
These scenarios can add depth and challenge to the game, making it more engaging for players. Additionally, incorporating physical objects into gameplay, such as game counters or actual devices, can further enhance the connection between the virtual world and real-life experiences.
This approach not only adds interactivity but also bridges the gap between the gaming world and our everyday lives.
Why do you want to make it?
Creating a board game reminds us of daily life, as life itself can often feel like a battlefield. I have also experienced the frustration of not having my charger or struggling to find an outlet in certain situations. It makes me wonder about conducting a small psychological experiment to measure the level of dependence that humans have on their devices.
(+)
It is a proposal to take a moment to consider the profound influences on our lives at present. Everything tends to be interconnected and intertwined.
I would like to take a step towards visualizing our psychological states through the use of simple gestures and playful activities.
What will it be.
A audio visual manifesto that stands for a world where friendship is appreciated as a form of romance. This piece will feature two friends Tam and Bodien. They will talk about their friendship, their views on the status of friendships vs romantic relationships and fantasize how society would function and look like when friendship is appreciated as a form of romance. For the audio you will hear a voice-over of their conversation about these topics. The visual part will be images of them interacting with each other and doing
Notes: Is it possible to do it in another way, to see romantic relationships as some deep friendships, if we see friendship as a general strong connection? Maybe we can also discuss about the difference of them, to define friendship and romance.
In this work, the statement of voice-over must be important.
Why do you want to make it?
Starting a movement that fights for all forms of relationships. Showing the beauty and importance of intimacy between friends. To start the conversation on why we often put a romantic relationship above a friendship and what the border is between the two.
Notes: Yes the border is the definition we should discuss about.
Describe how it would be made.
The steps I will take to make this project will be doing research on relationship anarchy. Reading articles and have a conversation with Tam Duwel who implements this in their live. Film a day with Tam and their friend Bodien, to document their friendship. From the conversation with Tam I will choose some activities they can do so the camera can observe their interaction and connection. So it's more documentary style. Record audio of their conversation to use as the voice-over. Edit for 3-5 weeks. Maybe if necessary rerecord the audio and write a script before hand.
Notes: In my opinion if the video work could be more documented, it would be stronger for me, as a solid proof of a new form of relationship. If I felt about the fiction from the work, it might weaken the power.
What will it be?
Rotterdam Syndrome A collective of photos, all about Rotterdam and its suburban places. Using my past and new experience on photography to describe the feeling of living here. Not sure about any specific topic, or just general description. Why do you want to make it?
Why do you want to make it?
Photography is the most familiar media for me, I can use it to make some images about the object places. I may have some personal perspective about this place, there can be some chances to create new images.
How it would be made:
Stages:
1.To get familiar with this city, hang around, look for interesting landscapes. (Every spare days)
2.Find out if there is any certain topics, then decide whether to separate them into different projects.
3.Maybe I can try some new methods like analog, large format.
4.To see if I can edit the photos into an album. (Photobook design, editing)
Notes:
You can describe the style of the photo's you want to make. you can explain your personal motive on why you what to photograph Rotterdam. what is the feeling behind it? Wha do you want to get out of it or achieve with it? Do you want the viewer to get something specific out of it? How will you go about making the photobook? Mention more detailed stages.
Amendments
What will it be?
Rotterdam Syndrome
A collective of photos, all about Rotterdam and its suburban places. Using my past and new experience on photography to describe the feeling of living here. The style of shooting is not decided yet, I prefer to find it out during the process. Not sure about any specific topic, or just general description.
Why do you want to make it?
I may have some personal perspective about this place, because I don’t have much experience living abroad, Rotterdam is the first foreign city I will live for a long time, I want to find some connection between it and myself, through my eyes and paces. Then maybe I can know myself and the city better, and the most important part, similar with my previous works, is to look at the gap of modernity here, and to express my perception about it through images.
How it would be made:
Stages:
1.To get familiar with this city, hang around, look for interesting landscapes and communities. (Every spare days)
2.Find out if there is any certain topics I interested in, then decide whether to separate them into different projects.
3.Maybe I can try some new methods like analog, large format during the process.
4.See if I can edit the photos into an album, but the outcome depends on the process of shooting. (Photobook design, editing)
Questions:
What is the connection between me and the world? Why do I interested in realistic landscapes, like old streets, buildings, villages? Why do I always relate with my parents? Do I have more sense on painful experience? What is my voice on Chinese politics? I have experienced a lot of discussions but now seems have nothing to say. Am I a tourist in Europe? What makes a person "tourist"? Is there deeper theory related to my work method? (Like "At the Edges of Sleep") What is the difference between me and other Asian creators? Can I invent some new visual methodologies? Or some combinations with sound? What does it mean to me to move to another country? What does it mean to stay home?
In my new work, I want to explore if there is a way to visualize my feeling about leaving home and living in Europe.
What is home? We often talk about “leaving home”, seems it’s a new chapter of life, or a very big change. But what does it mean to be “staying home”? Home is somewhere we eat, pee, sleep everyday, that means we are very familiar with it, and having a sense of secure in it. But what’s more? Is home the meals, smell of pillows, or the scratches on walls? If so, can we repeat or recall them by some means? Or, can we build a new home through them? Then, a new home can be signals from relatives, or just their projections by sounds, objectives, shadows, etc. Then home is not some certain room, it can be transferred into some connections between the whole family.
Dream is also a way for people to connect with their important ones, at least from a single direction. There is also a connection between dream and cinema: you dive into a dark space to watch some images. It’s a interesting aspect on sleep and dream, refers to At the Edges of Sleep.
The living experience in a new place means you need to do many new things, like living totally alone, cooking everyday, building your own circle, finding a job in restaurant. There are things to explore/visualize during the process, although I have not figured them out. And specifically there may be some objectives and stories to document with.
For my EYE project, I’m trying to combine modern real life with my abstract figure through some concrete phone call scene and dreamlike walking ghosts on the streets. There will be dialogue or monologue, with some daily talking through the phone. But I don’t want them to be real daily, I hope there will be metaphors hid behind. As an outcome, the short film will not become a narrativized story, but a little bit abstract with some atmosphere.
Wednesday, November.22
A project that may or may not be made
What will it be?
an installation based on the video I’ve been working on for the EYE: in the video there are six iterations of an object (paper, cloth) falling down the stairs (cgi). each iteration lasts for about 30 seconds. the camera follows this falling object into a white void - after which the camera pulls back to reveal that the ‘void’ is a screen in another ‘void’. the camera turns to the right where we see the same setting where we started (the room with the staircase). the camera moves forward to go back to its start position and the next iteration begins.
Why do you want to make it?
- my work consists of installations where a spectator would move through, this physical aspect being essential in the relation to the cgi based videos - a question that keeps coming back throughout working on the EYE project: how to translate this notion to the cinema context? (single screen, and the body remaining seated - not alone)
- to propose the opposite question that’s relevant to the project that may or may not be made: how to translate the cinematic context back to the spatial context? (multiple screens, the body free to move around in the space - and in more solitude).
- has the concept of the video changed since it has gone through multiple stages of translation?
- is there a preferred version?
- how will each alteration influence the physical space of the installation? (for example: in one iteration a plant is added to the scene, will the plant be present in the physical space?)
Describe the stages needed to make it
STAGE ONE
make video. observe video. observe video in screening, make notes.
STAGE TWO
depends on the notes made in first stage.
What will it be?
‘Trapped in a Slide’ will be a poetic film where I show people freezing in time while they look at a lost memory through a dia viewer.
edit: Also describe intent of the work.
Why do you want to make it?
I myself, being in my mid-twenties, feel a constant restlessness. And this constant restlessness has a lot to do with time. We’re living our days, weeks and years without a notion of time. Things start to feel as ‘granted’.
When I found all these dia’s in certain ‘second hand’ shops I was amazed but also confused, amazed because I loved it, and even though there were way too many, I wanted to look at every single one of them. And while looking at them the conusing came up; ‘’why are all these pictures of all these people here in this shop?’’ They were also super various, there were images of people just being oneselves in daily life. Sitting on a couch, drinking tea, cooking, some were dancing in their living room. But also there were images of people having their holiday or being on a trip or something. But the ‘event’ that was happening did not affect my amazement that much. The feeling that I really ‘knew’ these people, or actually felt like I’ve been there was what amazed me. I couldn’t stop staring at these images, and this made me dwell in time for the first time in a very long time. And this dwelling in time, I want other people to experience too, so that’s why I want to make this film where people freeze in time while they look at a ‘lost’ memory through a dia viewer.
edit: Explain the way in which a photo preserves a moment (freezing time) and the way in which nostalgia might play a role. There seems to also be a sort of voyeuristic notion here - why do we care so much about the memories of other people? Why do we also become curiously paralysed when accessing these 'private' moments of strangers lives?
Describe how it would be made: describe the stages needed to make it
First of all I need to collect dia slides that inspire me and that are interesting to recreate cinematically. As follows I’ll have to find suitable locations and actors. Because I want to not only ‘recreate’ the image but also the feeling that ‘looking at a dia through this viewer’ gives, I’ll have to really think about positioning my characters + lights in combination with my camera movement. I’ll move through the image as some kind of ghost that ‘investigates’ the frozen moment.
After I record my scenes, I’ll have to look in the edit if I need more or different shots. Because there’s no ‘logical’ narration this might happen. This means I’ll have to start early and make sure there will be enough time to shoot extra footage.
In the postproduction I’ll look for sounds/music that will enhance my images.
As follows I’ll edit my film in a way that the narration fits my message. If needed I’ll also use voice-over to support.
edit: I like the mention of moving like a ghost through the work. You could explain how you use creative choices to help the audience navigate this concept of 'frozen time'. That it is almost a cycle of voyeurism we are experiencing here - a frame within a frame, within a frame, within a frame..... NICE
____________________________
Edited version with Tom's notes.
What will it be?
‘Trapped in a Slide’ will be a poetic film where I show people freezing in time while they look at a lost memory through a dia viewer. By showing a series where the camera floats almost hypnotising through these voyeuristic happenings I want to create a perception of time.
Why do you want to make it?
I myself, being in my mid-twenties, feel a constant restlessness. And this constant restlessness has a lot to do with time. We’re living our days, weeks and years without a notion of time. Things start to feel as ‘granted’.
When I found all these dia’s in certain ‘second hand’ shops I was amazed but also confused, amazed because I loved it, and even though there were way too many, I wanted to look at every single one of them. And while looking at them the conusing came up; ‘’why are all these pictures of all these people here in this shop?’’ They were also super various, there were images of people just being oneselves in daily life. Sitting on a couch, drinking tea, cooking, some were dancing in their living room. But also there were images of people having their holiday or being on a trip or something. But the ‘event’ that was happening did not affect my amazement that much. The feeling that I really ‘knew’ these people, or actually felt like I’ve been there was what amazed me. I couldn’t stop staring at these images, and this made me dwell in time for the first time in a very long time. This sense of amazement is almost a voyeuristic notion, because why do we care so much about the memories of other people? Why do we also become curiously paralysed when accessing these 'private' moments of strangers lives? This dwelling in time, I want other people to experience too, so that’s why I want to make this film where people freeze in time while they look at a ‘lost’ memory through a dia viewer.
Describe how it would be made: describe the stages needed to make it
First of all I need to collect dia slides that inspire me and that are interesting to recreate cinematically. As follows I’ll have to find suitable locations and actors. Because I want to not only ‘recreate’ the image but also the feeling that ‘looking at a dia through this viewer’ gives, I’ll have to really think about positioning my characters + lights in combination with my camera movement. I’ll move through the image as some kind of ghost that ‘investigates’ the frozen moment.
After I record my scenes, I’ll have to look in the edit if I need more or different shots. Because there’s no ‘logical’ narration this might happen. This means I’ll have to start early and make sure there will be enough time to shoot extra footage.
In the postproduction I’ll look for sounds/music that will enhance my images.
As follows I’ll edit my film in a way that the narration fits my message. If needed I’ll also use voice-over to support.
edit: I like the mention of moving like a ghost through the work. You could explain how you use creative choices to help the audience navigate this concept of 'frozen time'. That it is almost a cycle of voyeurism we are experiencing here - a frame within a frame, within a frame, within a frame..... NICE
Rapid prototypes:
1) go for a walk and find something that makes you dwell in time and make a picture.
2) go for a walk and make a picture of something that gives you a voyeuristic feeling.
What it will be.
‘My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold The Rainbow’* is a short animation film about the process of becoming a bird. To create a space of attentive listening the movie set a meditative tone, addressing the audience in the steps to follow, and culminates in a visual interpretation of the achievement.
Why do you want to make it.
Birds, whose colour shades have been subjected to extensive taxonomic classification systems, host these archival attempts on their feathers. Becoming a bird, instead of studying a bird, we have a body which differs in the way it relates with and perceive the surrounding, compared to our human one. The artist reflects on the need of developing new ways of sensing, other than naming, to be receptive toward phenomenas otherwise hidden to our awareness.
Rhythms in Rotterdam
What: An immersive installation and environmental study of the city of Rotterdam. The work is composed by a series of video portraits (moving photographs) arranged around a room, exploring the intersection of photography, motion and personal exploration. The experience is also further enhanced by sound and lighting, aiming to offer audiences a multi-sensory experience of Rotterdam’s environment.
Why:
Having recently moved to Rotterdam, the creation of this work would allow me a process to become intimate with my newfound home. It represents a personal and intentional act to more deeply engage with the city, capturing its spirit and unraveling its stories.
How:
The work will be be filmed over an extended period of time and evolve organically as I explore the environment and collate footage. I will travel across the city with my camera to a variety of environments, not only documenting physical spaces but also the people who inhabit them. The intention is to creative a visual narrative which reflects my personal exploration, as well as a snapshot of Rotterdam’s dynamic energy.
Notes BY DO
I think it's a really interesting idea to capture your own journey of becoming a 'ROTTERDAMMER' while you're also discovering the city. The form of 'how' this film will look and feel isn't very clear for me yet, but I don't know if that's your intention, or if you simply don't know it yet. In the 'what' it feels like a photo series but in the how it feels more like a documentary maybe it's cool to combine? :D.
Documentary I say because you're talking about the people who inhabit with the physical spaces, not that that necessarily needs to be a documentary, but in feels a bit like it is going to be.
soooooo yeaaahhhhhh i like it a lot bruhhh but I wanna know MORE <3__<3
Edited -
The final format of the work will be similar to a photo series, but using video. Screens will be set up in 'frames', and the shots will be composed akin to photographs, but will also include movement. The style could be seen as a documentary, as I will be trying to capture impressions of life as I travel around the city.
Rapid Prototypes -
Go to an environment in Rotterdam you haven’t been before and take a video. File:Environment .mp4
In this same environment, find a person, take a video portrait of them. File:Worker.mp4