TV these days…
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Dans le cadre du Paris Photo 2014, au Grand Palais, les artistes suisses Jojakim Cortis et Adrian Sonderegger ont recréé de célèbres photos historiques en des maquettes miniatures. A travers toutes ces petites mises en scènes, on peut voir la photo du Lochness, du Titanic, de la bombe d’Hiroshima, de l’attentat des Tours Jumelles et la trace du premier pas sur la Lune.
Making of The Hidenburg Disaster, 2014. Original photo by Sam Shere, 1937.
Making of Nessie, 2013. Original photo by Marmaduke Wetherell, 1934.
Making of The last photo of the Titanic afloat, 2014. Original photo by Francis Browne, 1912.
Making of Tiananmen, 2013. Original photo by Stuart Franklin, 1989.
Making of Concorde, 2013. Original photo by Toshihiko Sato, 2000.
Making of Five Soldiers Silhouette at the Battle of Broodseinde, 2013. Original photo by Ernest Brooks, 1917.
Making of 208-N-43888, 2013. Original photo by Charles Levy, 1945.
Making of 9/11, 2013. Original photo by Sean Adair, 2001.
Making of Abu Ghraib, 2014. Original photo by unknown US soldier, 2003.
Making of AS11-40-5878, 2014. Original photo by Edwin Aldrin, 1969.
Making of The Wright Brothers, 2013. Original photo by John Thomas Daniels, 1903.
Making of Olympia München, 2014. Original photo by Ludwig Wegmann, 1972.
Making of Mont Blanc la Jonction, 2014. Original photo by Louis-Auguste Bisson & Auguste-Rosalie Bisson, 1861.
Making of Rhein II, 2012. Original photo by Andreas Gursky, 1999.
Pour la Croix-Rouge, l’agence suédoise åkestam.holst s’est demandée comment inciter les passants des aéroports aux dons. Aux Stockholm Arlanda Airport et Göteborg Landvetter Airport, ils ont eu l’idée ludique d’installer des jeux d’arcade payants, tels que Pac Man ou Space Invaders, qui serviront à faire patienter les voyageurs avant d’embarquer ou de récupérer leurs bagages. L’argent revient directement à la Croix-Rouge.
Nick Frank est un photographe professionnel allemand basé à Munich. Dans sa série intitulée « Memories, Some day at the carnival… », l’homme s’est amusé à capturer une multitude de manèges complètements vides, un envers du décor paisible et coloré à contempler.
Music: German director David Aufdembrinke created the video for Alban Endlos’ solo debut by transferring documentary footage from India onto an old video tape and manipulating it using magnets.
Aufdembrinke, also known as DAV.ID, recorded 10 hours of digital video footage and took 12,000 timelapse images to produce the video for Umda.
He cut together the footage from the six week journey into a procession of rapidly changing images, and then transferred the results onto VHS video film for added distortion.
The song is the first release from Goldene Welt, the debut solo album by Hamburg-based electronic artist Alban Endlos.
Endlos and Aufdembrinke were already friends, and the pair wanted to develop an idea that would be cheap to produce but deliver enough impact to be noticed online.
“I found out that Umda – a title he chose just for it’s phonetic sound – was actually a Hindi word meaning excellent. I always wanted to travel through India, and thus the concept was born,” explained Aufdembrinke.
“I knew from the start I wouldn’t be able to stage anything, so I came up with some visual concepts that I could execute in a documentary-style of shooting.”
The ad-hoc nature of filming while travelling meant that a lot of the shots would have to be steadied in post-production, and the images might lose some of their quality. Aufdembrinke decided to make a feature of this and investigate how the footage might look when recorded onto a video tape, with the particles of the film then manipulated by hand using magnets. This process would determine the final colours and visual effects.
“I had just found my old VHS-recorder in my mother’s basement and was looking for a way to apply it to a project,” he explained. “But to be honest, I had no clue how this video would work out.”
To keep his baggage light, Aufdembrinke assembled a minimal camera kit that included a Sony A7, three old Nikon lenses and a single tripod. The relatively low value of the kit also allowed him to take risks with shooting that he would have otherwise avoided, including attaching the camera to the end of a two-metre-long stick for filming out of the window of a moving train.
“The manual Nikons attached to the classically-designed camera body gave the impression of an analog photo camera, which was a great disguise,” said Aufdembrinke. “People react differently if they think you’re photographing them than if they know you’re filming them.”
The journey started in New Dehli, taking in Manali, Ladakh in the Himalayas, Jodhpur, Jaipur, Varanasi, Chennai, Quroville, Munnar and Kochi. Most of the shots were unplanned.
The footage was assembled with match cuts – putting together shots where the end of one and the beginning of the next were graphically similar.
Aufdembrinke edited the images using Adobe Premiere, with the clips transferred into film processing programme After Effects using a piece of software called Dynamic Link and then transferred back after they had been treated.
He used a stabilisation technique he had developed for steadying hyperlapse footage as part of an earlier project.
“I created the first 30 seconds as a test, involving the creation of the ‘Umda’ logo that I painted by hand, animated in After Effects and then exported into an eight-colour gif animation that fitted the visual style of what I had experienced in India,” he said.
The speed of the changing scenes was inspired by fast-paced cartoons he had watched with his godchild.
“I tried to see if I could guide the viewer’s attention by showing shots so short you can perceive but not understand them completely when watching them the first time. I called the technique ADD-editing,” he explained.
“Inspired by the disregard of pixel resolutions I had witnessed in Indian designs and videos, I also allowed myself to use every effect I could find in the editing suite, but no other post effects. This meant I could scale the digital zoom up to 600 per cent – the limit in Premiere – and reframe a lot of the shots that wouldn’t have matched otherwise.”
The resulting edit was then recorded onto old video tapes, with additional effects created by cutting up one tape, and running magnets across the surface of the other. These distortions were the only colour changes applied to the film.
“I used two tapes and two strengths of magnets for the process, opened the tape and started to experiment,” explained the director.
“I had one copy, which I would cut, crumble and paste to see if the effect was what I wanted and the tape was still working afterwards, and one master-tape on which I applied the effects after the successful testing.”
The final tape effects were recorded back into digital to produce the final high-resolution video. This process created some unexpected effects.
“‘Errors’ appeared, like the hi-fi symbol being superimposed on the screen after a larger magnetic distortion,” said Aufdembrinke. “This was for me a striking comment on the image of the children literally living in the tube behind them.”
“It summed up the whole concept. Looking at the visual quality-standard around the internet today this VHS-look probably was to be considered ‘shitty’ by many viewers,” he added. “Yet my 20-year-old VHS-recorder was still pretty hi-fi compared to what the children in the picture had. Still these children laughed more than most people with several flat screens and Blue-Ray-players do around here.”
The post David Aufdembrinke condenses six-week journey
across India into four-minute music video appeared first on Dezeen.
John Bartram had what had to be one of the most unusual jobs in 1700s colonial America. At a time when most of his fellow Quakers were farming, Bartram—who had become interested in botany from a young age—traveled the colonies collecting seeds from various plants. He’d then build boxes, barrels and crates, load them up with the seeds, and ship them off to eager European buyers interested in growing North American plants. “Bartram’s Boxes” became famous among European botanists, and by all accounts his business was booming.
In addition to indirectly altering the landscape of Europe, the box-making botanist left behind Bartram’s Garden, an eight-acre botanical garden outside of Philadelphia that is still standing today. Sadly, in 2010 a storm ripped through the Garden, toppling more than 50 trees belonging to 13 different species of wood.
Bartram’s Garden subsequently wanted to find something meaningful to do with the fallen trees, and they found it by collaborating with the nearby Center for Art in Wood. The two organizations have teamed up to create an unusual exhibition called “Bartram’s Boxes Remix.” Three dozen artists from around the country were invited to create reinterpretations of Bartram’s boxes, using the fallen trees as the raw material.
Unfortunately the Center for Art in Wood’s web presentation of the pieces is quite poor; there are no artist’s statements next to their work, leaving us with no information as to what their concept was beyond what we can see. But perhaps the on-site presentation is better, and since the show will begin traveling the country this June, some of you may get to see it in person. Click that link above to see the schedule.
When the origin story is this good, it gets repeated. A lot.
Harvey Weinstein’s cinematic tastes were famously broadened when, at age 14, he and younger brother Bob went to Queens’ Mayfair Theater in 1966 thinking that Francois Truffault’s 400 Blows was a “sex movie.” Once the subtitles and black and white started, the pair’s friends left, but he and Bob stayed.
Over the years, Weinstein has told this story often. By his own admission in the 30th-year anniversary issue of New York magazine, a “thousand times.” Or, as a colleague Mark Lipsky put it in 2004 to Vanity Fair, a “zillion times.”
The latest recollections of this moment by Weinstein have included the inaugural Produced By NY event and a Q&A this month with website theyoungfolks.com. And as Weinstein himself wrote after being honored in 2012 at the inaugural Champs Elysés Film Festival in Paris by French Culture Minister Frederic Mitterand, staying for The 400 Blows led him to an equally influential subsequent excursion to the Mayfair for Cartouche, starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Claudia Cardinale.
In terms of future Harvey Weinstein’s, perhaps one or more are currently being inspired by a seminal 2014 American film. The one that Pop Matters’ Bill Gibron described as follows: ‘Boyhood is the 400 Blows of its era, as important a statement for today as that noted New Wave marvel was 55 years ago.’
P.S. In the years following the Weinsteins title misread, The Mayfair went on to become an actual (gay) sex movie theater. Today, it shows Indian films.
[Image courtesy: Fox Lorber]
Reuters has named its mergers and acquisitions team leaders. Details are below.
Tax season is definitely one of the downsides of the freedom/responsibility equation of the freelance life. For help dealing with the added complexities freelance income induces, we went straight to the source, enlisting the help of four accountants accustomed to working with freelancers.
Among the advice we received is that organization is key, whether you’re going it along or hiring an accountant. And if you are hiring an accountant, having all your information sorted and enumerated could make a huge difference in cost:
Expect to pay $200 to a couple thousand dollars, depending on the complexity of your tax return. [Accountant Andrew] Poulos tells us he charges a freelancer with 10 or fewer 1099s and fairly organized records between $325 and $375.
What makes the price go up? [CPA Howard] Samuels echoes the importance of organization. His firm supplies clients with a spreadsheet that has the various deductions and expenses set up in a template. You would fill this out before you go, ideally. Alternatively, you can bring your box of receipts and piles of invoices and let the accountant sort it out — but this method will be far more expensive because, well, time is money.
For more tips, read: Getting Through Tax Season as a First-Time Freelancer
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Never mind the questionable plot trope of a female New York journalist (Amy Schumer) sleeping with her male feature-profile interview subject (Bill Hader).
The Schumer-scripted, Judd Apatow-directed Trainwreck quickly moves on from there to upend many rom-com conventions. Following last night’s SXSW rough cut premiere, the rave reviews today are quickly rolling in:
“Schumer is the real deal, and Trainwreck may be both the funniest and most important comedy we’ve seen in years.”
[Ryan Bord, Esquire]
“Apatow has always had a knack for casting unlikely leading men. But the director really hit it out of the park with Hader… His doctor is refreshingly earnest and supportive — he always tells her she’s beautiful, makes an effort to get to know her dad and even prioritizes her pleasure over his own in the bedroom.”
[Amy Kaufman, Los Angeles Times]
“The rift between the romantic leads comes from an organic place rooted in character, not some silly, externally manufactured misunderstanding. And that’s only one of many ways Trainwreck rises above its genre.”
[Joanna Robinson, Vanity Fair]
The best part about the movie sneaking in March is that it’s too soon for anyone to start handicapping the film’s Oscar chances. The Universal release, which also features LeBron James playing himself, is slated for July 17.