Artists' Statements

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Artists' Statements Artists’ stAtements Free PlAy meets GAmePlAy: iGotBand is an experimental video tumultuous and spontaneous, although iGotBAnd, A Video GAme game produced in collaboration with readily carried to unruly excess [2]. For imProVisers four undergraduate Worcester Poly- This is an equally apt definition for free technic Institute students [1]. The improvisation. The essential view of play Joshua Pablo Rosenstock, Department basic mechanic---the game’s system as freedom is important to improvisers, of Humanities and Arts, Worcester Poly- of player actions, causal relationships who associate the act with unfettering technic Institute, 100 Institute Road, and feedback---consists of a series of not only musical but also social and Worcester, MA 01609, U.S.A. E-mail: animated avatars, each of which is political boundaries. Ludus is the <[email protected]>. accompanied by a row of floating col- contrasting impulse of ordered rules, ABSTRACT ored blocks, representing suggested manifest in improvisation within estab- note sequences and corresponding to lished genre boundaries and in the The author presents an experimental musical the game controller’s colored buttons 20th-century literature of instruction- video game called iGotBand. Fans are central to the (Fig. 1). If a player plays the series of based or indeterminate compositions. game’s narrative, capturing a feedback loop in which notes “requested” by a particular avatar, Paradoxically, ludus constraints grant the audience shares responsibility for performance. that avatar is “captured” and becomes a the player agency, allowing choice- Recently, musical video games like “fan.” A fan has a finite attention span making to occur. Guitar Hero have burgeoned in the and will periodically request its own As a formal game, iGotBand typifies pop-cultural zeitgeist. Although these notes. If a fan’s demands are not met, ludus, although its graphic-notation simulations democratize the experience it will lose interest and wander away. As scheme balances freedom with con- of performing music, they enshrine the avatars proliferate, the players must straint. These pre-composed sequences the songs upon which they are based increasingly choose between the com- of colored blocks form a skeletal struc- as immutable “classics”; participants’ peting demands of capturing new fans ture that the player freely ornaments, actions are limited to mimicry. I pro- or maintaining existing fans. The player as a bebop improviser would interpret pose an alternative path for musical can play a requested sequence of notes a standard. video games, extending these exhilarat- in any rhythm or may intersperse other ing play experiences into the equally notes of her own choosing. Audience thrilling creative realm of improvisa- The competing fans in iGotBand drama- tion. My projects refocus music games Play as Freedom, tize a musician’s fundamental choice be- from specific musical outcomes to Games as Rules tween predictability and novelty. “When open-ended processes that attempt Roger Caillois divides play into oppos- . musicians note a positive reaction to balance the goals of gameplay and ing forces, ludus and paidia. Paidia from the public, they are tempted to creative musical play. denotes childlike free play---exuberant, reproduce the effect which provoked Fig. 1. iGotBand screen- shot, 2009. Players per- form sequences of notes to win fans. (© Joshua Pablo Rosenstock) ©2010 ISAST LEONARDO MUSIC JOURNAL, Vol. 20, pp. 11–15, 2010 11 Downloaded from http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/LMJ_a_00004 by guest on 30 September 2021 this reaction” [3]. By making the fans analog, digital and craft techniques to create Rather than mimicking the autonomy central figures in the game’s narrative, dynamic intermedia works that incorporate of humans, then, we aim to use tech- iGotBand acknowledges this feedback moving images, sound, sculptural installa- nology to support and facilitate. Our loop, wherein the audience shares tion and interactive performance. He earned approach resonates with the prevailing responsibility for the performance. a B.A. in Visual Art & Semiotics from Brown ideology at STEIM [2], which seems to University and an M.F.A. in Art & Technol- focus on the remapping of touch and ogy from the School of the Art Institute of Chi- Winning cago and is currently an assistant professor of physical exertion, as well as on conjur- Of all the conceptual issues we grap- Interactive Media and Game Development at ing a phantom auditory presence that is pled with in creating iGotBand, the Worcester Polytechnic Institute. at once very real and yet also imagined. most contentious was the question of This might be summed up as “fantas- winning. As a formal game, it by defini- tic,” the etymological root of which can tion needed a win condition, but we Whistle PiG sAloon: be traced to fantasy or “illusory appear- struggled to find a technological means PerForminG technoloGies ance” [3]. for quantifying a player’s performance. John Robert Ferguson (musician), During embodied activity, illusion My frustrated students fell back on the Kingston University, Coombehurst and interpretative legibilities frequently Guitar Hero paradigm, incorporating a House, Kingston upon Thames, KT2 collide. For example, when one is scoring system that tracked percentages 7LB, U.K. E-mail: <john@johnrobert cycling along a narrow and uneven of “correct” notes played, a decision ferguson.com>. Web site: <johnrobert track, a rough surface texture might that obviously fails to account for the ferguson.com>. redirect the flow of the bike, yet it is improviser’s novel contributions. possible to remove one’s hands and Is winning and losing relevant to Robert van Heumen (musician), steer around corners or navigate rela- improvisation? Certainly an element STEIM, Achtergracht 19, 1017 WL tively large obstacles, negotiating veloc- of competition exists, such as between Amsterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail: ity via balance, accrued momentum and “battling” soloists. Much of the frisson <[email protected]>. Web site: <hard flow. These notions resonate strongly of watching an improvisation comes hatarea.com>. with technologically mediated impro- from its uncertainty---“the risk of failure, vised music making. Koestler suggests abstract or complete collapse, is everywhere that “most of our thinking, planning present” [4]. However, one of the pre- and creating operates in imaginary The authors discuss their practice of technologically requisites of improvisation is to accept mediated improvisation while exploring questions environments,” and because the posi- unwanted outcomes. about the relationship of performers to technology. tion at which perception lies between the real and the imagined is a “matter Conclusion Among the multitude of connotations of degree,” all our perceptions are Although iGotBand effectively marries of the notion “performing technolo- “coloured by imagination” [4]. While improvisation to the formal aspects of a gies,” we would like to focus on the not claiming a spirit lurking within, guitar game, there remain differences following: Are we performing the tech- Whistle Pig Saloon searches for life- between game-playing and improvised- nology or is it performing us? As the like resonances with which to interact, playing, most notably in the issues asso- duo Whistle Pig Saloon, we compose therefore fantasy and folklore may ciated with winning. One direction for systems and situations from which a provide a useful metaphor, and we sug- future experimentation would expand creative work can emerge. The work is gest “dragon-slaying” as an appropriate the role of audiences, leveraging social improvised, but to what extent are we metaphor for performing technologies. networking technologies [5]. Overtly accountable for it? Figure 2 was taken by Thor Brø- competitive models of improvisation When artistic materials are recog- dreskift in the moment of near-silence such as Theatresports remind us that nized as potential controllers of a at which the ending of the concert improvised performance thrives in a situation, and conditions for collabora- emerged. This photograph immediately variety of different contexts, even if the tive creative emergence are fostered, followed a loud and intense improvisa- win/lose binary is not easily reconciled notions of negotiating inertias, setting tion, which might well have continued with the musical improv tradition. processes in motion and intervening without the audible camera click that within established trajectories are fore- occurred in a short moment of silence. References and Notes grounded. For Whistle Pig Saloon, in With the camera click, that was it, done, querying the role of non-linearity, insta- no question that we could play any 1. Shelli Clifford, Tim Cushman, Brian Hettrick and Alex Schwartz. bility and unpredictability, the facilita- more. tion of cracking and fracture (both real 2. Roger Caillois, Man, Play and Games (Urbana, IL: Univ. of Illinois Press, 1962) pp. 13, 27. and metaphoric) is a productive and The improviser has to be like a man essential process in the pursuit of cre- walking backwards. He sees where he 3. Derek Bailey, Improvisation: Its Nature and Practice in has been, but he pays no attention to Music (New York: Da Capo, 1992) p. 44. ative orientation. Thus, in exploring the the future. Very often an audience dialectical relations between precision 4. John Corbett, “Writing around Free Improvisa- will applaud when earlier material is tion,” in Krin Gabbard, ed., Jazz among the
Recommended publications
  • UPA : Redesigning Animation
    This document is downloaded from DR‑NTU (https://dr.ntu.edu.sg) Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. UPA : redesigning animation Bottini, Cinzia 2016 Bottini, C. (2016). UPA : redesigning animation. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/69065 https://doi.org/10.32657/10356/69065 Downloaded on 05 Oct 2021 20:18:45 SGT UPA: REDESIGNING ANIMATION CINZIA BOTTINI SCHOOL OF ART, DESIGN AND MEDIA 2016 UPA: REDESIGNING ANIMATION CINZIA BOTTINI School of Art, Design and Media A thesis submitted to the Nanyang Technological University in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2016 “Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.” Paul Klee, “Creative Credo” Acknowledgments When I started my doctoral studies, I could never have imagined what a formative learning experience it would be, both professionally and personally. I owe many people a debt of gratitude for all their help throughout this long journey. I deeply thank my supervisor, Professor Heitor Capuzzo; my cosupervisor, Giannalberto Bendazzi; and Professor Vibeke Sorensen, chair of the School of Art, Design and Media at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore for showing sincere compassion and offering unwavering moral support during a personally difficult stage of this Ph.D. I am also grateful for all their suggestions, critiques and observations that guided me in this research project, as well as their dedication and patience. My gratitude goes to Tee Bosustow, who graciously
    [Show full text]
  • Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music Bill Alves Harvey Mudd College
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont All HMC Faculty Publications and Research HMC Faculty Scholarship 8-1-2012 Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music Bill Alves Harvey Mudd College Recommended Citation Bill Alves (2012). Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music. Organised Sound, 17, pp 114-119 doi:10.1017/ S1355771812000039 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the HMC Faculty Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in All HMC Faculty Publications and Research by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Organised Sound http://journals.cambridge.org/OSO Additional services for Organised Sound: Email alerts: Click here Subscriptions: Click here Commercial reprints: Click here Terms of use : Click here Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music Bill Alves Organised Sound / Volume 17 / Issue 02 / August 2012, pp 114 - 119 DOI: 10.1017/S1355771812000039, Published online: 19 July 2012 Link to this article: http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S1355771812000039 How to cite this article: Bill Alves (2012). Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music. Organised Sound, 17, pp 114-119 doi:10.1017/ S1355771812000039 Request Permissions : Click here Downloaded from http://journals.cambridge.org/OSO, IP address: 134.173.130.244 on 24 Jul 2014 Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music BILL ALVES Harvey Mudd College, The Claremont Colleges, 301 Platt Blvd, Claremont CA 91711 USA E-mail: [email protected] The concepts of consonance and dissonance broadly Plato found the harmony of the world in the Pythag- understood can provide structural models for creators of orean whole numbers and their ratios, abstract ideals visual music.
    [Show full text]
  • The Emergence of Abstract Film in America Was Organized by Synchronization with a Musical Accompaniment
    EmergenceFilmFilmFilmArchiveinArchivesAmerica, The Abstract Harvard Anthology Table of Contents "Legacy Alive: An Introduction" by Bruce Posner . ... ... ... ... ..... ... ... ... ... ............ ....... ... ... ... ... .... .2 "Articulated Light: An Appendix" by Gerald O'Grady .. ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... .... .3 "Cinema as a An Form: Avant-Garde " Experimentation " Abstraction" by Vlada Petric .. ... 3 "A New RealismThe Object" by Fernand Leger ... ........ ... ... ... ...... ........ ... ... ... ... .... ... .......... .4 "True Creation" by Oskar Fischinger .. ..... ... ... ... ... .. ...... ... ....... ... ........... ... ... ... ... ... ....... ... ........4 "Observable Forces" by Harry Smith . ... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ......... ... ... ... .......... ...... ... ... ... ......5 "Images of Nowhere" by Raul Ruiz ......... ... ... ........ ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... .... ... ... ... 5 `TIME. .. on dit: Having Declared a Belief in God" by Stan Brakhage ..... ...... ............. ... ... ... .. 6 "Hilla Rebay and the Guggenheim Nexus" by Cecile Starr ..... ... ...... ............ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...7 Mary Ellen Bute by Cecile Starr .. ... ... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ............ ... ...... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ... .............8 James Whitney studying water currents for Wu Ming (1973) Statement I by Mary Ellen Bute ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ...... ... ... ...... ... ... ... ... ..
    [Show full text]
  • 32 Rudolf Pfenninger in His Laboratory with Hand
    Rudolf Pfenninger in his laboratory with hand-drawn sound strips, 1932. Source: Pfenninger Archive, Munich. 32 “Tones from out of Nowhere”: Rudolph Pfenninger and the Archaeology of Synthetic Sound THOMAS Y. LEVIN 4.014 The gramophone record, the musical idea, the written notes, the sound waves, all stand in the same internal representational relationship to one another that obtains between language and the world. —Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus logico-philosophicus (1921) “All-of-a-tremble”: The Birth of Robotic Speech On February 16, 1931, the New York Times ran a story on a curious development that had just taken place in England: “Synthetic Speech Demonstrated in London: Engineer Creates Voice which Never Existed” read the headline.1 The day before, so the article began, “a robot voice spoke for the first time in a darkened room in London . uttering words which had never passed human lips.” According to the accounts of this event in numerous European papers, a young British physi- cist named E.A. Humphries was working as a sound engineer for the British International Film Co. when the studio ran into a serious problem. A synchro- nized sound film (then still quite a novelty) starring Constance Bennett had just been completed in which the name of a rather unsavory criminal character hap- pened to be the same as that of a certain aristocratic British family. This noble clan was either unable or unwilling to countenance the irreducible—even if seemingly paradoxical—polysemy of the proper name (so powerful, perhaps, was the new experience of hearing it actually uttered in the cinema) and threat- ened a libel suit if “their” name was not excised.
    [Show full text]
  • Save Pdf (0.42
    EDITORIAL One hundred years ago in 1912, the art critic Roger effects of sound for the ear. If they were less successful Fry coined the term ‘visual music’ in an attempt to than composers of auditory music,thesolereasonrests describe Wassily Kandinsky’s paintings, generally in the fact that light is harder to manipulate than air’ recognised as the first purely abstract canvases. (Moritz 1986: 1). With today’s technology, light has Connecting Kandinsky’s non-representational art to become as easy to control as air. the similarly abstract nature of music was a way to Our first group of articles approaches visual music explain and interpret this new art form. Within a through the language of music. In ‘From Sonic Art to decade’s time, this analogy was applied to moving Visual Music: Divergences, Convergences, Intersec- images; Augenmusik (eye-music) was one of the terms tions’ Diego Garro presents a new approach for the used by the German absolute film movement of the electroacoustic community to relate to, and engage early 1920s. Today, many definitions of visual music with: the visual music phenomenon. He covers the exist, though perhaps the most useful refers to visuals intersection of the two art forms from technological, composed as if they were music, using musical struc- historical and cultural perspectives, drawing connec- tures. Another definition refers to a visualisation of tions from electroacoustic music to visual music. In music, using the structures of an underlying composi- the next article, Bill Alves focuses on a single rela- tion in a new work. Still more examples of visual music tionship between visuals and music, that of con- include works using manual, mechanical or algorithmic sonance and dissonance, in the appropriately titled means of transcoding sound to image, pieces which article ‘Consonance and Dissonance in Visual Music’.
    [Show full text]
  • ``From Painting to Film: Abstract Cinema and Synaesthesia
    “From Painting to Film: Abstract Cinema and Synaesthesia Marie Rebecchi To cite this version: Marie Rebecchi. “From Painting to Film: Abstract Cinema and Synaesthesia. From Sensation to Synaesthesia in Film and New Media, pp.205-215, 2019. hal-03226469 HAL Id: hal-03226469 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03226469 Submitted on 14 May 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. From Sensation to Synaesthesia in Film and New Media From Sensation to Synaesthesia in Film and New Media Edited by Rossella Catanese, Francesca Scotto Lavina and Valentina Valente From Sensation to Synaesthesia in Film and New Media Edited by Rossella Catanese, Francesca Scotto Lavina and Valentina Valente This book first published 2019 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2019 by Rossella Catanese, Francesca Scotto Lavina, Valentina Valente and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
    [Show full text]
  • Film21-2.Chp:Corel VENTURA
    Film History, Volume 21, pp. 164–176, 2009. Copyright © John Libbey Publishing ISSN: 0892-2160. Printed in United States of America ‘Harmonious sensations of sound by means of colors’: vernacular colour abstractions in silent cinema Harmonious sensations of sou nd by means of colors Joshua Yumibe Why should I prefer the colored picture? Yan- essay, I want to use this modernist tradition of colour kee-like I answer ‘Why should you?’ Why do and abstraction as a context for discussing more the poor of a great city spend their small sav- popular or ‘vernacular’ experiments with synaesthe- ings in occasional efforts to get away from the sia in silent cinema. This discussion will focus spe- dull gray monotony of their lives to where they cifically on the work of two technicians: Charles can obtain a glimpse of radiant sea or vari- Francis Jenkins, who designed an early film projector egated woodland? The beauty of nature lays in the 1890s and was one of the first exhibitors of hold of our senses as does the charm of good colour films, and Loyd Jones, who developed a music without our being aware of an effort of number ofcolour technologiesatthe Kodak Research attention; we lose consciousness of ourselves Laboratories. Through this history I will show that a and our bitter thoughts when we are pos- ‘synaesthetic’ approach to colour was not only crucial sessed by the external will; the love of colour- for experimental modes of filmmaking but was also audition seems to be universal. If I am central to how colour in the cinema was thought about mistaken set me down as an impressionist.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dream of Color Music, and Machines That Made It Possible
    Animation World Magazine, Issue 2.1, April 1997 The Dream of Color Music, And Machines That Made it Possible by William Moritz Elfriede Fischinger, Barbara Fischinger and Bill Moritz at a 1996 Lumograph performance at the Goethe Institute in Los Angeles. The dream of creating a visual music comparable to auditory music found its fulfillment in animated abstract films by artists such as Oskar Fischinger, Len Lye and Norman McLaren; but long before them, many people built instruments, usually called "color organs," that would display modulated colored light in some kind of fluid fashion comparable to music. Ancient Greek philosophers, like Aristotle and Pythagoras, speculated that there must be a correlation between the musical scale and the rainbow spectrum of hues. That idea fascinated several Renaissance artists including Leonardo da Vinci (who produced elaborate spectacles for court festivals), Athanasius Kircher (the popularizer of the "Laterna Magica" projection apparatus) and Archimboldo who (in addition to his eerie optical-illusion portraits composed of hundreds of small symbolic objects) produced entertainments for the Holy Roman Emperors in Prague. The Jesuit, Father Louis Bertrand Castel, built an Ocular Harpsichord around 1730, which consisted of a 6-foot square frame above a normal harpsichord; the frame contained 60 small windows each with a different colored-glass pane and a small curtain attached by pullies to one specific key, so that each time that key would be struck, that curtain would lift briefly to show a flash of corresponding color. Enlightenment society was dazzled and fascinated by this invention, and flocked to his Paris studio for demonstrations.
    [Show full text]
  • Oskar Fischinger - Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia 1/1/08 9:31 PM
    Oskar Fischinger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 1/1/08 9:31 PM Oskar Fischinger From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Oskar Fischinger (22 June 1900, Gelnhausen, Germany — 31 January 1967, Los Angeles) was an abstract animator, filmmaker, and painter. He made over 50 short films, and painted c. 900 canvases which are in museums, galleries and collections worldwide. Among his film works is Motion Painting No. 1 (1947), which is part of the United States National Film Registry. Contents 1 Biography 1.1 Early life 1.2 Early career 1.3 Berlin 1.4 Hollywood 1.5 Lumigraph 2 Further reading 2.1 Notes 3 External links Biography Early life Born in the German town of Gelnhausen, Wilhelm Oskar Fischinger was the fourth of six children. His father ran a drugstore while his mother's family owned a combination brewery, tavern, and bowling alley. At an early age he dabbled in painting, encouraged by the painters who came to capture Gelnhausen's scenery.[1] Also interested in music (he took violin lessons), he apprenticed at an organ-building firm until the owners were drafted into the war. The next year he worked as a draftsman in an architect's office, until he himself was called to duty. He was rejected as being unhealthy, and the Fischinger family moved to west Frankfurt. There Fischinger attended a trade school and worked as an apprentice at a factory, eventually obtaining an engineer's diploma. Early career In Frankfurt he met the theater critic Bernhard Diebold, who in 1921 introduced Fischinger to the work and personage of Walter Ruttmann, a pioneer in abstract film.
    [Show full text]
  • Early 20Th Century Abstract Cinema Immersive
    1 Vol 16 Issue 6 – 7 “RAUMLICHTMUSIK” - produce abstract imagery and screened engineers…it was fantastic. It was a EARLY 20TH CENTURY this in their multiple projector shows giant apparatus, which was played by ABSTRACT CINEMA (and later completed films). Fischinger him and his many assistants. He built in IMMERSIVE ENVIRONMENTS and Belson continued to extend the a special film projector for my films, and Cindy Keefer, Center for Visual Music, boundaries of cinema, projection, that topped everything. Zeiss Ikon in Los Angeles, CA. Email: audience interaction and their own Dresden helped him…it cost unheard of <[email protected]>. consciousness throughout their careers. sums of money and was shown in all the Fischinger (1900-1967) was the most opera houses of Europe…At that time, important and influential filmmaker in Zeiss Ikon developed the unique and Abstract visual music, producing over 50 films wonderful planetarium projectors. For Filmmakers Oskar Fischinger and Jordan Belson created cinematic multimedia experiments from and 800 paintings. He’s recognized as that reason, and also because of the 1926 to 1959; three of these events are predecessors the father of Visual Music, the publicity connected with it, they were to immersive environments: (A) Beginning in 1926, grandfather of music videos, and the very much interested in László’s Fischinger's multiple projector shows combining abstract films, colored light projections, and painted great-grandfather of motion graphics. Spectrum-Piano [Farblichtklavier] and at slides; (B) Fischinger's 1944 (unrealized) concept His films influenced generations of that time they put everything at his for a dome theatre with center film projectors filling the sphere, creating "endless space without filmmakers, animators and artists, even disposal that he could possibly ask for perspective" and (c) Belson and Henry Jacobs’ continuing today.
    [Show full text]
  • Norman Mclaren and Jules Engel: Post-Modernists — Iota 3/4/08 9:47 PM
    Norman McLaren and Jules Engel: Post-Modernists — iota 3/4/08 9:47 PM The iotaCenter Log In Join Abstraction | Animation | Music You are here: iota » Visual Music » Articles » William Moritz Archive » Norman McLaren and Jules Engel: Post- Modernists A Reader in Animation Studies, 1997. iota About Us Our Programs Norman McLaren and Jules Engel: Our Projects Adam Beckett Post-Modernists Jules Engel Dr. William Moritz William Moritz News Store Support iota Of all the great names in animation, Norman McLaren has, paradoxically, suffered most from a kind of critical neglect. Everyone Site Overview acknowledges his genius, but few discuss it. Numerous books and Visual Music articles chronicle his life and describe his works, usually stressing Artist Profiles the inventiveness of his filmic techniques, but rarely do they analyse Techniques his aesthetic qualities and achievements.(1) Articles Offsite Resources Most texts oriented toward animation as a Fine Art - such as the catalog for the massive Film as Film exhibition that toured Germany and England from 1977 until 1979 - ignore McLaren entirely, while Advanced search including Len Lye, Oskar Fischinger, Harry Smith, James Whitney and other animators who are McLaren's peers.(2) Aside from Terence Dobson's splendid paper delivered at the 1989 Society for Animation Studies conference in Los Angeles, which gave a close textual reading of McLaren's film Synchromy in comparison with Oskar Fischinger's Radio Dynamics, the only other serious critical analysis of McLaren's aesthetics comparatively is David Curtis's article "Locating Norman McLaren".(3) Curtis may have written the article in response to the Film as Film exhibition, which excluded McLaren and of which Curtis was the British co-ordinator.
    [Show full text]
  • William Moritz and Harry Frazier Collection, 1902-2007 Coll2014.001
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c89w0jpv No online items Finding Aid to the William Moritz and Harry Frazier Collection, 1902-2007 Coll2014.001 Loni Shibuyama Processing this collection has been funded by a generous grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources. ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, USC Libraries, University of Southern California 909 West Adams Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90007 (213) 821-2771 [email protected] Finding Aid to the William Moritz Coll2014.001 1 and Harry Frazier Collection, 1902-2007 Coll2014.001 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, USC Libraries, University of Southern California Title: William Moritz and Harry Frazier collection creator: Moritz, William creator: Frazier, Harry Identifier/Call Number: Coll2014.001 Physical Description: 17.6 Linear Feet3 archive boxes, 6 archive cartons, 3 binder boxes, 6 flat archive boxes, 1 mapcase drawer. Date (inclusive): 1902-2007 Abstract: Personal papers, motion picture history files, photographs, film, video, audiotape, artworks, posters, clothing, and memorabilia, 1902-2007, from film professor and animator William Moritz and actor Harry Frazier. Moritz and Frazier were friends and collaborators on several short films and other creative projects throughout the 1970s-1990s, some of which documented bohemian and hippie gay communities in Los Angeles, as well as the Radical Faeries. Moritz is best known for his expertise on animation and experimental film. However, the majority of this collection documents his other work and interests, including poetry, film history, and the gay liberation movement. The collection also includes personal papers from "Buddha" John Parker and Robert Opel, famous for streaking on stage at the 1974 Academy Awards.
    [Show full text]