Selected Courses on Digital Art-UOWM

21 Σεπτεμβρίου 2014

VIDEO HISTORY PROJECT

VIDEO HISTORY PROJECT

 Welcome to the Video History Project website. Please feel free to browse the site for articles and information pertaining to the history of video art. The pages on the Video History Project menu provide links to views of citations of writings on various topics. The bibliography includes all of the texts on the site (other than events and bios). Many citations in the bibliography will take you to pages that include the article’s full text, also found elsewhere on the site, many more, marked with the keyword bibliographic, are citation only. Enjoy.
original vhp site designed by Sherry Miller Hocking, Mona Jimenez, and Dave Jones
site redesign, programming and database translations by Matthew Schlanger
philco video clips provided by: Peer Bode, Connie Coleman and Alan Powell, Shalom Gorewitz, NNeng, and Matthew Schlanger

10 Απριλίου 2013

sound 33-sight-motion

Sight Sound Motion
Chapter 6 – The 2D Field: Area
Screen Space: fixed borders that defines the new aesthetic characteristics
• Aspect ratio: relationship of screen width to screen height
• Horizontal orientation
• Standard ratios
• Standard TV / computer screens adopted 4×3 ratio of early motion
pictures (1.33:1 ratio)
• Digital / HDTV – 16×9 (5.33×3 or 178:1)
• Standard wide screen of motion pictures (5.33×3 or 1.85:1)
• Panavision / Cinemascope has extremely wide aspect ratio – 7×3
(2.35:1)
• Wide-screen – format of most U.S. films
• Framing
• 4×3 frame (film standard was established as early as 1889)
• advantage is that the difference between screen width & height
does not emphasize one dimension over another
• works well with close-ups
• 16×9 frame
• have to pay more attention to the peripheral pictorial
elements/events
• Changing the Aspect Ratio
• Matching aspect ratio
• Letterboxing: wide screen letterbox is created by showing the whole
width & height of the original format, and masking the top and
bottom of the screen with black, white, or colored bands called
dead zones
• Pillarboxing: fitting a standard 4×3 image onto a 16×9 screen
(vertical pillar bars)
• Cutting, stretching, squeezing
• Secondary Frames
• Masking – blacking out both sides of the screen (ex. D.W. Griffith –
Intolerance)
• Multiple screens
• Moving camera
• Object size > context
• Knowledge of object
• Relation to screen area
• Environment & scale
• Reference to a person
• Image size
• Size constancy – we perceive people and their environments as
normal sized regardless of screen size
• Image size & relative energy

• Requires constant psychological closure
• Facilitating Closure – low definition image is helpful only if it facilitates,
rather than inhibits, closure
• Proximity – when similar elements lie in close proximity to one
another we tend to see them together
• Similarity – similar shapes are seen together
• Continuity – once a dominant line is established its direction is not
easily disturbed by other lines cutting across it
Vectors – directional forces that lend our eyes from one point to another (force
with direction & magnitude)
• Vector Field – combination of vectors operating within a single picture field;
picture field to picture field; picture sequence to picture sequence; screen to
screen; on screen to off screen events
• Vector Types
• Graphic Vector – stationary element that guides our eyes in a certain
direction
• Ambiguous direction
• Index Vector – points in a specific direction
• Vector Magnitude – determined by screen direction, graphic mass, perceived
object speed
• Z-axis vector: points toward or away from the camera
• The larger the graphic mass in motion, the higher its vector magnitude
• The faster the speed of an object the higher its vector magnitude
• Vector Directions
• Continuing Vectors – point in the same direction
• Converging Vectors – point toward each other
• Diverging Vectors – point away from each other
Chapter 8 – Structuring the 2D Field: Interplay of Screen Forces
Stabilizing the Field Through Distribution of Graphic Mass & Magnetic Force
• Graphic Weight
• Dimension
• Shape
• Orientation
• Location
• Color
• Hue
• Saturation
• Brightness
• Screen Center – most stable position of an object
• Off Center – the more the object moves off center the greater its

11 Δεκεμβρίου 2012

LISBON IN MOTION IS ALL ABOUT SOUND LIGHT AND MOVEMENT

Filed under: Notes,NOTES ON VIDEO,NOTES ON VIDEO INSTALLATIONS — admin @ 23:04

[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/40263000 w=500&h=281]
“Angola is not a small Kingdom” at The Gopher Hole from Paulo Moreira on Vimeo.

“Angola is not a small Kingdom” at The Gopher Hole from Paulo Moreira 7 months ago Footage of a pop-up show by Paulo Moreira. Venue: The Gopher Hole Place: London Date:Thursday 5th April 2012 Exhibition schedule: 11:00 Opening 11-19 Public viewing 19:00 Screening of 2 short films – UK premiere 20:00 Book launch & conversation 21:00 Party 23:00 Close
77777777777

[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/36802384 w=500&h=281]
Lisbon IN Motion -preview- from Cristina Zabalaga on Vimeo.

Lisbon in Motion is all about sound, light and movement. It is conceived as an interactive video-installation, aiming to create informal and spontaneous appropriation of the public space, through a sensorial experience. Starting from contact-improvisation dynamics and wearing headphones that isolate and amplify each sound of the city, participants create their own urban experience.
Participants move forward and backward riding up and down through the seven hills of the city with the beats of the knife sharpener, claxons, brakes, and construction works. All of them running in parallel with the gradations of sun light throughout the day. The mechanical movement of a tram contains the sound of the city.
Introduced in the 19th century, the yellow trams are a traditional form of public transport in Lisbon, and were originally built in England, all polished wood and chrome. The old yellow trams still employ four wheel vehicles designed in the early 20th century.
CAST: Barbara Lobato, Genises Azevedo, Maíra Santos, Valentina Paravicini. is all about sound, light and movement. It is conceived as an interactive video-installation, aiming to create informal and spontaneous appropriation of the public space, through a sensorial experience. Starting from contact-improvisation dynamics and wearing headphones that isolate and amplify each sound of the city, participants create their own urban experience.
Participants move forward and backward riding up and down through the seven hills of the city with the beats of the knife sharpener, claxons, brakes, and construction works. All of them running in parallel with the gradations of sun light throughout the day. The mechanical movement of a tram contains the sound of the city.
Introduced in the 19th century, the yellow trams are a traditional form of public transport in Lisbon, and were originally built in England, all polished wood and chrome. The old yellow trams still employ four wheel vehicles designed in the early 20th century.
CAST: Barbara Lobato, Genises Azevedo, Maíra Santos, Valentina Paravicini.

More than 2000 photos with an interval of 2 seconds over a period of several days taken at sunset and during Summer in Portugal.

[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/27489379 w=500&h=281]
Sunset, somewhere in Portugal from Cristina Zabalaga on Vimeo.

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