sabato 9 maggio 2015

Fabian Oefner

A kinetic installation by Swiss artist Fabian Oefner  that translates sound waves into motion using thousands of illuminated stems that moves to the sound of music. The motion of the stems is controlled by a mechanism that captures the ephemeral sound waves for a few seconds and induces the motion at different positions in the field depending on the pitch and intensity of the music, resulting in an emotional, poetic and unique interpretation of sound.

William Albert Allard





                               William Albert Allard


venerdì 8 maggio 2015

SHORT FILM :: Un dìa de estos



Producido por PLANO SUBJETIVO.
Dirigido por FALI ÁLVAREZ.
Guión de FALI ÁLVAREZ y VLADIMIR RÁEZ.
Fotografía de HIPÓLITO VIDAL

Clark & Pougnaud










http://www.clarkpougnaud.com/

Granularity



Listen to the full track here :
soundcloud.com/redhootoboemonger/granularity
all visuals and audio by redhoot 2015

Chiharu Shiota










http://www.chiharu-shiota.com/en/
more Chiharu Shiota HERE



giovedì 7 maggio 2015

STREAM - Explore The Unseen


The idea of this piece was to stage the genesis of a tiny universe, which only exists for a very short time on a glass plate and then dissolves into a messy stream of oil, ink and water.
The universe itself needed to appear as a well defined, glowing and shining phenomenon which reminds the viewer of a look through a telescope. The atmosphere full of stars, planets, clouds and fog emerges from huge colorful streams, forming balls and bubbles. Their surfaces reflect the background pattern, giving the objects quite a three-dimensional look and feel. The space expands more and more into the depth, until upcoming star bursts make the whole system collapse. The illusion decomposes to a dark splash of substances and disappears as fast as it came up.
The areas you can see in this short film are only a few square centimeters in size, often less than a coin. The streams and interactions of fluids are not visible to the naked eye and have to be caught with a 1:1 macro lens and some very bright led lights. Directed by Roman De Giuli

Lindsey Adelman Studio











http://www.lindseyadelman.com/