Archive for the ‘london’ Tag
How to VJ #5
To recap: you should be (1) gathering and making material; (2) figuring how it moves; (3) getting it in time – understanding how it works in the fourth dimension.
Now to performance specifics – and the third dimension. All good VJing has a strong and nuanced understanding of layers.
If you’ve got decent Photoshop skills then you’ve got one up on me. And you’ll certainly understand layered composition.
What VJing can do is manipulate different layers in different time (according to the software and mixer you use). I’ll give you a very simple example with screengrabs from Henry Stead’s poem ‘Earth, Too Soon’.
1. Cut Out
When you’ve got a cut-out detail, i.e. the background is cut out as a block colour, you’ve got more versatility. This detail is from a painting by Elisa Muliere.
The detail was kept static as a video clip. But the same applies to moving footage. Think green screen.
2. Background layers
In this case, we had the background from the original painting. I could fade that background in manually on the night, in time, by making this my second clip. Just mixed from channel A to channel B.
So the background of the painting faded in from black, with the foreground figure staying present throughout – because it retained exactly the same position in the 640×480 frame.
3. Multiple layers
At the next stage, we introduced a new video layer but also preserved the background painting beneath it.
In After Effects, I composed the clip so video of worms in soil slotted in between the foreground figure and the background of the original painting.
By reducing the opacity of the worms video clip, you can still see the integrity of the original painting beneath. We mixed this in and out over the full painting (screengrab 2 above).
Mixing media is a lot easier if you do it in layers. Otherwise you chop around too hard and fast. Your fingers will get tired, and you’ll hurt your audience’s eyes.
Although it can work great in edited compositions, it won’t always suit live mixing.
4. Overlaying
At the end of this piece, I started to overlay a clip of snow. This came in on top of the painting, so the black sky darkened everything underneath it as we faded to a close.
This was a standard cross-fade. The same as 100s of edits you’ll see every day on TV. Nothing in the pre-editing, just executed live with a V4 mixer. The snow came over the painting, creating depth.
Some rules
1. Live layering is easier with at least some cut-outs. You can develop more complex textures when you reduce the content of the frame.
2. Not everything has to be moving. You can keep some bits still. Different elements can move at different speeds – think about how the music’s composed and what’s suitable to match it.
3. You can layer many things at once, but only with control. Otherwise it’s a mess. You’re creating orchestration, so you should aim to reflect that in the live mixing.
4. Even when you mix into a new section, there’s no necessity for a hard cut. Bashing between clips can work for a tough, alternating beat. Using a BPM sync, it can be smart way to keep time.
But with layers you can get into the melody. That’s where you’ll pull off the most impressive performances.
Previously: #4 You know the type.
Clouds vs. Adverts
Round 1 - São Paulo, January 2007 (photos by Tony de Marco)
The general public terrorised by aimless, drifting clouds. Where still, stately adverts once filled billboards on highways and street corners, the hoardings now stood bare.
São Paulo banned outdoor advertising. And, joking aside, there weren’t many complaints. (Advertisers aside.)
Sure – some folks lost landmarks that helped them navigate the streets. Outdoor ads can have this auxiliary function when they stay put long enough. But the reduction of visual noise was and has been appreciated.
For the record, here’s a glimpse of what São Paulo was like before:
Round 2 – Tel Aviv, January 2008 (via Treehugger)
The central “Ayalon” highway was the battle ground. And once again, on New Year’s Eve, ads lost.
A 40 year-old law won – ensuring that “fields and hills will not be stained as well with objects foreign to them.” First shroudings were broadcast live on TV (see below).
Round 4 – Buenos Aires, August 2008 (via The Anti-Advertising Agency)
It’s not happened yet, but it will do soon. Original story (for Spanish readers) from Clarín, reported at length by Treehugger and remixed for your leisure here.
Buenos Aires will remove 40,000 billboards that are infracting the city’s code. That amounts to 60% of the city’s outdoor advertising. It’s projected to result in something that looks like this. But it won’t be illustrated. It’ll be so real your camera can taste it.
The billboards were causing a hazard to drivers. With the digital flashes and cavalier cab-driving of the capital, this move could match the pleasure of finding a seat belt.
Better still – the new codes insist that different types of signs are tailored to each district’s visual style. Now that’s personalisation. Localisation, for the literal-minded reader.
Round 5 – Atlanta, sometime in 1951 (photo via)
The lights are turned off. Not even the messaging of the sky to mist this scene.
Just two signs catch my eye: Coca-Cola and Club Perchtree.
Club Perchree has a strapline I wish I’d written: “Dine and Dance”. That’s all you need to know, isn’t it? I’d go if I was hungry and wanted to move my feet after the eat.
And Coca-Cola? Well – it’s Atlanta. Colonised by Coke as a 20th-century sugar plantation. The first brand flag stabbed into the landscape by its native conquerors.
Incidentally, although Butler’s Shop is highly visible it doesn’t interest me. What kind of shop? Don’t know – so I’ll go for a dine and dance instead. Maybe drink a Coke while I’m there.
Points Score
The judges give a unanimous victory to simplicity in the city.
I’m an advertiser who lives in the city. So where does this leave me?
Content, for one. Excited, for two.
Because if you can reduce and organise, as John Maeda would say, you’re off to a start. Proceed with integrity – you’re communicating to other people – and you’ll be heading somewhere.
Not a billboard on your cobblestone highway.
Bathtime in Clerkenwell
Award-winning animation by Alex Budovsky, to a soundtrack by The Real Tuesday Weld. Alex was born in St Petersburg and studied in New York. I clocked this through the happenstance of working in Clerkenwell (or thereabouts), so it’s a crazy little cuckoo world.
Thought I’d heard the song before, but didn’t realise it had been so loved by animators. This second interpretation is a short piece by Ori Toor. Couldn’t find much out about Ori (sorry, Ori) but I think he’s Israeli and he’s definitely a talented illustrator.
If you enjoy this kind of modern swingbeat jolly, and you happen to be in London, you should have a gander at The Correspondents. Congrats to Ian and Tim on their record deal! A lot of hard work, and I’m sure the good people at the Innocent Village Fete were duly treated this weekend past…
Who Let the Clowns Out?
I don’t know where you live. But I live in London. And I’m seeing more colour on the city walls every day.
Street artists are embracing happytalism (no need for a dictionary, just click it). We’re getting Space Invaders and 8-bit written bright. Decayed pillars restructured with Lego bricks. Buildings transformed into cartoon monsters.
It’s happening globally, which is the most exciting thing about it. I’m sure Os Gemeos must have set much of the paint in motion. But bucketloads of what’s happening now is new and transformative – going well beyond “graffiti” and exploring all the senses. Using every material to hand. Even balloons.
These pictures come from Washington D.C. and are the work of D.BILLY. I’m massively impressed.
Puts a whole new, and knowing, spin on a huge visual trend. Are we kids again? Or clowns?
For more on D.BILLY, posts at Designboom, And I Am Not Lying and PSFK.
Plus check out D.BILLY’s Flickr photostream.
And if you’re feeling the artier side of this new wave of street art, Ian Tait’s written a nice post about sculptural graffiti in Brighton.
All 3 from Henry
The three poems Henry Stead performed at the launch night for London Poetry Systems.
In order, they are:
- The Love of Phlebas
- A Visionary’s Visionary Vision
- An Ancient Process
Thanks to Kaara for her design work on Phlebas. All three visual scores were outputted through an Edirol V4 mixer, performed with motion dive .tokyo, and pre-produced in Adobe Premier and Adobe After Effects.
Street-Splintered Ad Mosaics
Toronto street artist Posterchild went to New York this month and transformed digital ad platforms into stained-glass graffiti installations. Watch the video below. (via)
At the same time, the CutUp Collective are removing London ad posters wholesale, cutting them into thousands of bits, then reconfiguring the display space with their recycled material. (via)
Do corporate identities represent the last big remix taboo? Now that brands are present in social online spaces, will they ever let themselves be personalised?
Or is it left for the street artist to educate them in humanity?
Previously: Brand logos remixed; Skullphone hijacks New York billboards.
¡Land of the Lucha Libre!
Luchadors. Mexican wrestlers. They’ve all got a story – and a logo. Their mask.
Where does the mask come from?
Aztecs, if you’re being dreamy and distant. The need for self-promotion, if you’re being 20th century and consumerist.
But hold that disbelief for one second. There are stories behind those masks. There’s honour and history behind the luchadors, even when they’re fighting werewolves in comic books.
Can the same be said of the WWF (WWE?) loudmouth? The hard-selling capitalist breed of this noble and ridiculous warrior, changing identity and allegiance as the money takes him?
I’m not sure. But I know I prefer the underdog’s story. And it takes good storytelling to get millions transfixed by a single TV second, over and over.
Take it away, Santo…
Related: Brazilian logo mashing.
Event: Lucha Libre in London this July.
Remember: This is just cultural mash-up. But feel free to start a serious discussion if you want one…
How to VJ #3
After How to VJ # 2, you’re now in the deep groove of pre-production.
Your footage is moving alright. But you’ve got to cut it correct in the edit, or you won’t be able to make it behave on the night.
You look ahead to that future in loops or lines.
Stop for a second. Listen to music you like – the kind of music you want to perform to. You have to understand that music.
Parts of it will be looping in regular and complete patterns. Parts of it won’t feel complete. They’ll be coming in at intervals and fading out, unfinished. They’ll be stabbing in, hard, jagged, irregular.
Your footage should use both if you want your live performance to be subtle and impressive. You’ll rely on loops to create layers and depth. You’ll need lines to give it surprise and character through manual control.
I’ll end this with Zan Lyons. I was lucky enough to work alongside him for London Poetry Systems this week. His layers, loops and lines reverberated through sound and image together and they explain this core thought much better than I can in words. Truly stunning.
Just watch closely what he’s doing, and turn your speakers up…
Bonus thought: Still not sure what’s meant by loops and lines? Look at the next Flash landing page you hit online. Is the load animation linear (like a load bar with a defined end point) or looping (like a circle going round continually until the page loads up)?
Recommended reading: Gilles Deleuze – Cinema 2: The Time-Image.
Previously: #1 What can you do?; #2 How can it dance?
Up next: #4 You know the type?
Hurdling the Hoo-Ha
What are the Olympics?
Even in this age of media splintering, they’re a festival of global hypnosis. Each one, in time, becomes a cultural artefact.
Without resorting to a Google, I can’t tell you anything about Mexico ’68. Apart from the fact it had a great logo.
Beijing 2008 is already crafting its legacy. PR disaster leads the pack. After events in Paris and London (to name just two of the incidents), it’s going to take a spectacular recovery to turn things around. And that’s before we’ve even heard a starter’s gun.
But whatever the political obstacles, for an Olympics to get off on the B of the BANG it needs well-honed branding. Here, notoriously, London 2012 false-started.
You can check out 100 years of high-performance Olympic design if you’re in London this weekend. And wherever you are in the world, events in Beijing this summer will eventually find their place in your cultural memory.
Recommended: What is the World Cup? Eric Hobsbawn‘s thoughts on ‘Nations and Nationalism in the New Century’.
Tag That Shit Gold
Remember when tagging was something a graffiti artist did?
Here’s something a graffiti artist did at the end of Bethnal Green Rd. He – or she? I’ll finish with their tag so you can decide – made their mark with gold.
Whether you do it to walls, photos on Facebook or blog posts, you’re doing the same thing when you tag. You’re splashing on your own interpretation. You could be daubing shit, or you could add glitter.
What’s the nozzle? Can you add; can you do it with style.
No reason your attitude should be different on or offline. Frederik Samuel clocked Paint That Shit Gold this week. It lets you tag or graf any website you like with a gold spraycan.
Tagging keeps growing and paint gets splashed. You can see why.
We want to add our mark. And we’re getting better at it.
Previously: Brazilians tag Brighton. Who was the artist above? (click thumbnail to see the answer big.)
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