Research on Relevant Sample
As viewers walk in front of the Make Like a Tree’s projected wall, their shadows are recorded and converted to wondering shadows in the background that move between trees that will disappear suddenly or fade away slowly.
Falling Girl
Falling Girl is an immersive interactive narrative installation that allows the viewer to participate in the story of a young girl falling from a skyscraper. During her slow descent, the girl reacts to the people and events in each window. Daylight fades, night falls and passes and at dawn, the falling girl finally lands on the sidewalk. By the time she lands on the sidewalk, she is no longer a young woman, but had changed into an elderly woman. This shows that the story of her life from her young age till the moment she died in an abstract way. In this tale, it shows about the shortness of our lives and the events that often occupy us.
The project is collaborating between interactive media artist Scott Snibbe and choreographer filmmaker Annie Loui.
Outward Mosaic
Center Mosaic
Central Mosaic, part of the mosaic series, records the shadows of people as they walk in front of a projection screen and replays them in silhouette. The recordings move out towards the edges and become smaller as new recordings take their place.
As a viewer walks across the beam of an interactive projection, Shadow Bag captures his shadow and re-projects it onto a screen with unpredictable variation. Sometimes there is no response: the projector acts merely as a light source casting the viewer’s true shadow; sometimes a disembodied copy of the viewer’s shadow comes immediately towards him from the other side; at other times, the shadow follows him, often without his knowledge. The responding shadow might be the viewer’s and at other times someone who came before. Occasionally when a viewer touches one of these disembodied shadows, it collapses like a corpse. The title of the work refers to Carl Jung’s use of shadow as a psychological term to describe unconscious selves. Shadow Bag
Chien
This work is part of a larger series of interactive wall projections that are based on masterpieces of experimental film. Each work focuses on aspects of these films that lodged in the artist’s mind, rather than on a literal revisiting of the work. These memories often turn out to be incorrect, or wholly imagined, when compared with the original film. This working process mirrors the surrealist creative methods of probing the unconscious.
Cause and Effect
Deep Walls
Deep Walls creates a complex temporal relationship between movie loops. Each small shadow-film has the precise duration of its recording: from a few seconds to several hours. The temporal relationship between the sixteen frames becomes complex—in a manner similar to Brian Eno’s tape loop experiments—looping individual recordings of different durations to create a composition that doesn’t repeat for days.
Deep Walls is inspired by the surrealist films of Jan Svankmajer and the Quay Brothers, and the sculpture of Joseph Cornell. In their films and sculptures, small bodies and obsessive collections of objects into cabinets and drawers represent psychological and spiritual states. The rational process of organization brings out an unconscious irrationality.
Deep Walls’ name is inspired by a design pattern from architect Christopher Alexander’s Pattern Language. He recommends building the walls of homes thick, so that the inhabitants themselves can carve out cabinets, drawers, and windows to personalize their homes. In the spirit of Alexander, this work gradually remembers the contents of its environment upon its surface.
Shadow
Precedent Studies
People playing with shadows. We can see the detail of human present under light.
Middle Night - a short film by Anthony Goicolea, working with the basic principles of light, shadow, movement and objects.
Performance using shadow puppets.
Falling Girl by Scott Snibbe. Showing the detail movement off a young girl falling from skyscraper, her reactions to people and events in each window.
Using shadow to make story.
We plan to use video recorder to record the child and make it black and white. It has the shadow effects but clearer than shadows.
The example of body movement of children.
Using shadow to make story.
We plan to use video recorder to record the child and make it black and white. It has the shadow effects but clearer than shadows.
The example of body movement of children.
SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 2011
Shadowgraphy and Shadow Play
Shadowgraphy
Shadowgraphy is the art of performing story or show using images that made by hand shadow. It declined as art since the late 19th century when there are electricity available to homes.
Normally, the light source to create shadowgraphy should be small and bright. The best shadows come from light is proceeding from the smallest possible point. The best like sources included candle light, flashlight or any very small light.
If a bulb is used, it should be clear. Another source of light could be used is the electric arc and the second is being the limelight.
While the background can use a white or light colored wall or a white sheet or table cloth for a small audience such as in a private home. If a wall is dark-colored, the sheet or table cloth can be hung against it.
Shadow Play
Shadow play is an ancient form of storytelling and entertainment using opaque, often articulated figures in front of an illuminated backdrop to create the illusion of moving images. It is popular in various cultures. At present, more than 20 countries are known to have shadow show troupes.
Both Shadowgraphy and Shadow Play also using shadows to make performance just the difference between using puppets or free hands.
Shadowgraphy is the art of performing story or show using images that made by hand shadow. It declined as art since the late 19th century when there are electricity available to homes.
Normally, the light source to create shadowgraphy should be small and bright. The best shadows come from light is proceeding from the smallest possible point. The best like sources included candle light, flashlight or any very small light.
If a bulb is used, it should be clear. Another source of light could be used is the electric arc and the second is being the limelight.
While the background can use a white or light colored wall or a white sheet or table cloth for a small audience such as in a private home. If a wall is dark-colored, the sheet or table cloth can be hung against it.
Shadow Play
Shadow play is an ancient form of storytelling and entertainment using opaque, often articulated figures in front of an illuminated backdrop to create the illusion of moving images. It is popular in various cultures. At present, more than 20 countries are known to have shadow show troupes.
Both Shadowgraphy and Shadow Play also using shadows to make performance just the difference between using puppets or free hands.
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