Wednesday, 10 January 2007
Extra Research and Thoughts.....
Two short video pieces i found on youtube by CHARTOL, exploring colours and emotions. Watching these films causes you to be really entranced and you are capsulated into the imagery.
Still havent met as a group as Carol is still ill, hopefully we are meeting tomorrow to discuss further our thought and ideas.
Downloaded Audacity today and have been messing around with sounds and the effects you can create on there, luckily i still remember everything we were taught in the lesson with Kit which is good.
Just REALLY want to start the project properly as I feel that my blog cant be made specific to the project without consultation with the other group members. But we still have four weeks left to make the 6 minute piece of film which is good.
human emotions
A video i found on you tube exploring emotions through the use of colour. I like this idea, how our moods can be changed and altered through colours. How some colours can depress us or others make us feel happy.
This is an aspect i would like to include in our video piece.
RED - The colour of love, lust, passion, romance, urgency and blood, red is the evocative colour of life itself. In many cultures, red is used ritualistically in ceremonies that relate to creating and sustaining life. Red can be used to create excitement or invoke urgency while the deeper hues create a chic and polished look.
PURPLE - From Roman senators to Indian Maharajahs, to modern European royalty, purple has been the color of power, mysticism, eroticism and spirituality since the dawn of time. Purple is a healing color related to mind, body and soul. Deep purple tones need light colors or white space as contrast, to bring out the power of the colour.
BLUE - Blue is a divine color that resonates with beauty, purity and wisdom. It can help ease tensions and promote tranquillity. Blue tones can project an image of power, professionalism, credibility and TRUST. Underlying silver metallic can create a deep ice feel. Oceanic, vast, infinite.
GREEN - The color green foretells the coming of spring. The growth of sustenance, food, and the continuance of LIFE. Nurturing, natural green tones represent education, adventure and ecology. Contrast with black for shadows to show height, depth, density, lushness of growth.
YELLOW - Representing the radiance, light and warmth of the sun's life-giving energy is yellow. Bright, happy, exciting, enthousiastic and dynamic. Use varying tones of yellow, gold and orange to express these feelings! Almost good enough to eat.
Monday, 8 January 2007
videos
This is a video I found on youtube. Even though the imagery is very repetitive, i like the atmospherical theme to the video. How simple use of lighting and sound can create a sense of mystery and suspense in the viewers eyes.
This is a video by the same artist, I find this video really impressive how you are deceived into thinking that the person's throat has been slit open and blood is pouring from their neck. It might not have the most thought provoking content but the idea of misconceiving the audience is a good technique.
It has been a long time since I last blogged but I have been thinking a lot over the xmas period about ideas that I can use for our video.
There are three of us working together in a group and we are meeting tomorrow to discuss ideas.
We have previously talked about some sketchy ideas about what we might want to produce for our video....
seem to be an occuring themes from our discussions.
Ideas such as the The Body, People, Emotions, Humans
I have been looking on the internet at independant artists websites and youtube typing in words such as 'lonely' 'sad' 'isolated' 'human emotion' to view what other people have made and try to collect more of a visual idea.
Having looked at Carol's blog I can really see some interesting ideas forming from her behalf and cant wait to meet tomorrow to start the process of making this video.
I have a few ideas of my own such as using metaphorical images to denote other meanings, kind of making the video and content ambigious. Obviously there doesnt want to be a narrative to the video so I feel we must be careful to try not to 'story-tell' but hopefully once we have all sat down and discussed then we can move forward and start collecting video footage and sounds to go with the images.
Friday, 1 December 2006
Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House

A heavy wooden chair stands empty in front of a TV monitor. The monitor shows a man in close-up as he struggles to stay awake and alert. The room is silent. Headphones on the chair reveal his inner body sounds of breathing and swallowing, with multiple voices heard in the background engaged in stream-of-consciousness chatter. At random intervals, the man is struck violently from behind by an unseen figure, causing a loud explosion of sound to momentarily burst out from two loudspeakers in the room.

Bill Viola's video installation series "Buried Secrets" (1995) is so disturbing that its images and associations still float into its viewers consciousness the way the disturbing parts of dreams resurface unbidden, reminding one of anxieties, unresolved conflicts, deep fears. Viola's installations often deliberately blur the boundaries between self and other. This is most evident in "Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House" (1982), where the spectator seems to merge with Viola as he gazes from a monitor into the viewer's eyes, their separate identities disintegrating as the spectator experiences through amplified sounds the trauma of sudden blows to Viola's head. The installation creates the jarring disorientation of seemingly shared consciousness, and it also demonstrates the controlled rage that has been a root of Viola's art.
Clown Torture


Nauman's "Clown Torture" makes its artifice obvious, from the caked makeup of the clowns' faces to the many power cords that run across the ceiling, walls, and floor. With activity occurring from nearly every angle, the viewer - like the clown - is the subject of experimentation and interrogation. While it's easy to tell that these clowns are only acting-out traumas, it is nevertheless difficult to watch and purposefully so. "Clown Torture" makes the viewer question his or her own participation in the events on screen. Alluding to difficult subjects such as insanity, political torture, and surveillance, the work makes complex connections between theater, media, and apathy The makeup, hair, and costume of each clown act as a disguise for the actor or person underneath. Anonymous victims and inciters of brutality and pranks, these scared and scary clowns seem simultaneously real and unreal.

Angela Bulloch

Since 2000 her work has focused on the use of Pixel Box - dmx modules, wooden ply boxes containing red, green and blue fluorescent tubes behind translucent glass fronts. The levels of brightness of each tube are controlled by a system Bulloch created in collaboration with Holger Friese, opening up the possibility of infinite combinations of colours which Angela Bulloch orders from figurative references. A film by Ang Lee, a work by André Cadere or a mathematical harmonic series are starting points for a whole series of variations of colors of these modules installed in the exhibition space. The actual structure of the modules brings to mind dance floors, public lighting and window displays: elements from popular culture encapsulating a reflection on the iconography of an era.
Speaking of her exhibition at Helga de Alvear, she explained “the show is titled The Missing 13th. The title refers to a harmonic beyond the twelve tone system. This harmonic tone exists but is not heard within the western musical tradition. On Tony Conrad's- Slapping Pythagoras record, Conrad attacks Pythagoras’ concepts of harmony as they exclude sounds discordant to our western ears’, like the 13th factor.
In the exhibition there are two different installation works, both works are formed with pixel elements. One work is a specific horizontal arrangement across the floor, which has a filmic basis to the program with an overlaid and conflicting animated layer. This piece was constructed as a whole and then split apart so that the elements combine together to form a different visual perspective to that in which they were made. A composite vertical image - spaced out horizontally.”