Archive

Video posts by nodeberlin.com

Jun
27th
Sat
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Pixillation (1970)

“With computer-produced images and Moog-synthesized sound Pixillation is in a sense an introduction to the electronics lab. But its forms are always handsome, its colors bright and appealing, its rhythms complex and inventive.” - Roger Greenspun, N. Y. Times. Golden Eagle-Cine 1971. Moog sound by Gershon Kingsley; Version III: pulls the viewer into a primal experience. Awards:Red Ribbon Award for Special Effects from The National Academy of Television, Arts & Sciences; The Smithsonian Institution and The United States Department of Commerce, Travel Services for Man & His World at the Montreal Expo, ‘71; collection The Museum of Modern Art. Commissioned by AT&T. (4 min.)  /via www.ubu.com
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Giant White Glove

This is an experiment for the White Glove Tracking project, made with Java and processing.
the white glove tracking project is here:http://www.whiteglovetracking.com/
http://www.pacesetter2000.be/whiteglove/
Jun
25th
Thu
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Le Cirque de Calder (1961)
By Carlos Vilardebó
19 minutes

Alexander Calder’s fascination with the circus began in his mid-twenties, when he published illustrations in a New York journal of Barnum and Bailey’s Circus, for which he held a year’s pass. It was in Paris in 1927 that he created the miniature circus celebrated in this film - tiny wire performers, ingeniously articulated to walk tightropes, dance, lift weights and engage in acrobatics in the ring. The Parisian avant-garde would gather in Calder’s studio to see the circus in operation. It was, as critic James Johnson Sweeney noted, `a laboratory in which some of the most original features of his later work were to be developed.’ This film exudes the great personal charm of Calder himself, moving and working the tiny players like a ringmaster, while his wife winds up the gramophone in the background. The Circus is now housed at the Whitney Museum in New York. —The Roland Collection of Films & Videos on Art 

—— 
Le Cirque as made in 1961 by Carlos Vilardebó, and it’s been shown widely around the world—and in the lobby of the Whitney Museum—ever since. Since the Circus’s actual figures are now too fragile to leave the Whitney, the film usually serves as a proxy, providing a window into this crucial, early body of Calder’s work. 

Calder’s fascination with movement and working with wire led him first to create wire sculpture ‘portraits,’ and later informed his creation of mobiles. But the popularity of le Cirque Calder in 1920’s and 1930’s Paris helped Calder form relationships with artists like Miro and Mondrian who were themselves extremely influential on Calder’s work. 

Live performances lasted up to two hours and included twenty or more acts and an intermission. [The Calder Foundation’s website rather irrelevantly points out that Circus performances predate so-called “performance art” by several decades. The work is important enough not to try to stretch it so far beyond its obvious theatrical and puppet show precedents.] 

A note about distribution-uber-alles, the Vilardebo film is at least the second filmed version of the Calder Circus. In 1953, the pioneering science filmmaker Jean Painlevé made Cirque de Calder, which exists in both 40- and 60-minute versions. But it’s Vilardebo’s later film—and the shorter version of it—which has gained the biggest audience. — Greg.org

via www.ubu.com

Jun
24th
Wed
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We are currently working on the design of HAPPY NORDIC MUSIC DAYS, 2009, check this out:

Bandrom Fjell, Oslo - Bergen, mai 2009 (via nymusikk)

Lørdag 23. mai kom Happy Nordic Music Days’ prosjekt Bandrom Fjell av Øyvind Torvund, rullende over fjellet til Bergen fra Oslo for programslipp av Happy Nordic Music Days. Her satt musikere og lærte hverandre nylagede melodier, tone for tone i campingvogna. Bilstereoen i rånebilen spilte bass. Når en ny slått var i mål, ble det konsert utenfor.

Anna Lindal, fiolin
Karin Hellqvist, fiolin
Synnøve Bjørset, hardingfele
Kjell Tore Innervik, perkusjon
Kristian Krüger, video
Øyvind Torvund, komponist 

www.happynordicmusicdays.com

Jun
23rd
Tue
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The Yardbirds performing ‘Stroll on’, Blow Up (Antonioni)
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Blow Up - Michelangelo Antonioni (Original Trailer) (via lebleufleur)
In this Film also The Yardbirds perform Stroll on, a stylish raging Mod song, a permited version of “Train Kept A-Rollin”. Originally, The Who were approached, but they declined, and then The In-Crowd had been planned but they were unable to attend the filming. The Yardbirds filled in at short notice, and the guitar that Beck smashes at the end of their set is a replica of Steve Howe’s instrument. Antonioni instructed Beck to smash his guitar in emulation of The Who’s Pete Townshend
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Jimmy Page , The Yardbirds , Train Kept A Rollin 1966 France (via ikhnaton)
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Chronotopic Anamorphosis on Vimeo (via Vimeo)

This experiment was made within the context of Marginalia Project. More information: marginalia-project.blogspot.com.

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Game Over Stop Motion by PES (via PESfilm)
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Stop Motion (via TheLastLaugh)
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DEADLINE post-it stop motion (via bunliu)
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Bizzy & Co. / Take A Chance (Italian TV 1982) (Italo-Disco). (via Discoimperium010)