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ARTD 7820: Video Art: Schedule

Schedule

 

Schedule

Class 1, Jan 28: Shaping A History


READING: John Hanhardt, Video, Media, Culture of the Late Twentieth Century
Hollis Frampton, The Withering of the State of Art
Robert Bresson, Notes on the Cinematographer

SCREENING:
Warhol, Inner and Outer Space
Acconci, Red Tapes, mcc
Vasulka, Violin Power mcc 9:54
Peter Campus, Three Transitions
Joan Jonas, Vertical Roll
Richard Serra, Television Delivers People
Robert Bresson, Au Hasard Balthazar

optional:
Art of Memory (excerpt) mcc 36:37
Lilith, Steina
Ernie Gehr, Serene Velocity mcc 23:00

Technical: Premiere introductory tutorial

To begin: Shoot video on your phone, with Mitch's SLR cameras, with the GoPro. Think about and use the characteristics of each. Change it up. What if you shot something with a GoPro that is better suited to the SLR etc.

Read this website:
http://learnaboutfilm.com/

and this for composition:
http://www.photographymad.com/pages/view/10-top-photography-composition-rules


Class 2, February 4: Immediacy

READING: Rosalind Krauss, “Video: The Aesthetics of Narcissism” from Art and the Moving Image: A Critical Reader (Tate Publishing, 2008).  PEEKABOO POINTE


William Kaizen, “Live on Tape: Video, Liveness and the Immediate” in Art and the Moving Image: A Critical Reader (Tate Publishing, 2008).
ADRIAN CAMERON


Further reading with a good sense of the life and times of early video technology:
Interview with Gary Hill by Lucinda Furlong

SCREENING:
George Kuchar, Weather Diary I (excerpt)
(Kuchar's statement about Weather Diaries)
Bruce Nauman, Dance or Walk on the Perimeter of a Square, 1967 ubu
Baldessari, I Will Not Make Any More Boring Art 13:00

for fun: Bjork Talking About Her Television:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75WFTHpOw8Y

Technical: Playing and marking shots, subclips, insert editing, moving/swapping shots, 3 pt editing, basic trims, splitting clips


Class 3, February 11: Cinema and Time
READING:
Gilles Deleuze, “The Crystals of Time,” in Cinema 2 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1989): 68-97.  JAYDEE
Barbara London, Time as Medium, Five Artists Video Installations


SCREENING:
Sans Soleil (Chris Marker, 1983, 16mm transferred to video, 100min)
Bill Viola, Reflecting Pool
Bill Viola, Anthem
Douglas Gordon, 24hour Psycho or Play Dead
Gary Hill, Suspension of Disbelief


DUE: EVERYONE screens their work…. (either in progress or finished!)


Class 4, Feb 25: Jean-Luc Godard: Montage as Ontology

READING:
Gilles Deleuze, “The Crystals of Time,” in Cinema 2 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1989): 68-97.
Jean-Luc Godard, “Montage My Fine Care,” in Godard on Godard

 
Montage, My Fine Care 

HILLARY

Jacques Ranciere, “Godard, Hitchcock, and the Cinematographic Image” in Godard For Ever (Black Dog, 2004): 214-231. KAIJA

SCREENING: Selections from Histoire(s) du Cinema (Jean-Luc Godard, 1988-1998, video, 266min)
Harun Farocki, How to Live in the FRG

Due: in progress screenings

Class 5, Mar 4: Video and Projection (rescheduled to Mar 11)
READING:
Rosalind Krauss, Sculpture in the Expanded Field, October   MICHAEL SERAFINO
Graham, Essay on Video, Architecture, and Television
Malcolm Turvey, Chrissie Iles et al., “Round Table: The Projected Image in Contemporary Art,” October , Vol. 104 (Spring 2003), pp. 71-96.
Henriette Huldisch, Before and Besides Projection 

 

OPTIONAL:
Miwon Kwon, “One Place after Another: Notes on Site Specificity,” October , Vol. 80(Spring 1997), pp. 85-110.

Find examples of the following:
Video as Apparatus:
Projected image on gallery wall (Off floor)
Projected image on gallery wall (At Floor)
Video Monitor (Synced Multi-channel, Multi-channel, Repeated)
Projected on objects
Buried in Architecture
Buried in Furniture
Embedded in Mirror/obstructive reflection
VR
AR
Live Feed Video Installation
Projected on Ceiling
CCTV Feedback System
Projected outside on Architecture
Architectural Screens (Drive-in?)
Holograms
Projected on Nature
LED installation
Projected Light
Performance with screens on stage
Projection on body
Laser Shows
IMAX
Planetarium
3D Project
CRT Monitor
LCD Monitor
OLED Monitor
iPad/iPhone/Tablet/Kindle
Ambient Video
Broadcast TV
Social Media
Live Streaming (Twitch, Youtube, Facebook Live, Instagram live)
AR App (Pokemon Go)


SCREENING:
Rivane Neuenschwander, The Tenant
Douglas Gordon, Play Dead
24 Hour Psycho (Douglas Gordon, 1993, Documentation)
Tony Oursler MCA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTG1oxBo-3o
Jesper Just, Intercourses

Lunch Break (Sharon Lockhart, 2009, excerpt) (website)
Stealing Beauty- Guy Ben Nur.


Class 6, March 11: Fractured Narrative
OPTIONAL (because of SNOW DAY) READING:
Liz Kotz, “Video Projection: The Space Between Screens,” , pp. 371-385.

Today (Eija-Liisa Ahtila, 1996, 10 min.),
ConsolationService (Eija-Liisa Ahtila, 1999, 23 min,),
Dammi i Colori (Anri Sala, 2003, 15 min.),
Parc Central – Taipei (Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, 2000, 10 min.).
Linda Montano, Mitchell is Dead

SCREENING: (ideas)
The Third Memory (Pierre Huyghe, 2000, 10 min.),
Streamside Day (Pierre Huyghe,2003, 26 min.),
Isaac Julien : Interview

Turn in FINAL project ideas...



Class 7, March 18:  Embodiment

READING:

Chrissie Iles, “Issues in the New Cinematic Aesthetic in Video” from Saving the Image: Art After Film (Glasgow: Centre for Contemporary Arts, 2003): 129-141

George Baker, “An Interview with Pierre Huyghe,” October , Vol. 110 (Autumn 2004), pp. 80-106. (login through proxy server)
Amelia Jones, "From Body Art/Performing the Subject" Art of the Twentieth Century" introduction and chapter 1.

OPTIONAL:

Bill Viola, Video Black, excerpts
Vito Acconci, “Television, Furniture and Sculpture: The Room with the American View” 

SCREENING:
Burns and Martin, Total Recall
Pipilotti Rist, early tapes
Rashad Newsome
Linda Montano, Mitchell's Death


Technical: After Effects

Class 8, March 25: Circulation and Speed
READING:
Paul Virilio, “The Vision Machine” rom The Vision Machine (Indiana University Press, 1994) p. 59-77.   SARA
Hito Steyerl, " In Defense of the Poor Image" e-flux, Journal no. 10, November 2009. 

SCREENING:
Screening: War at a Distance (Harun Farocki, 2003, video, 58min)

XTRA READING:
Giuliana Bruno, “Architecture and the Moving Image: A Haptic Journey from Pre- to Post-Cinema"
Dana Liljegren, Suspension of Disbelief


Class 9, April 1: Image and Site

DUE:MID TERM WORK DUE, Last Call
READING: Jonathan Walley, Modes of Film Practice in the Avant-Garde, Art and the Moving Image: A Critical Reader (Tate Publishing, 2008). 
Maeve Connelly, Event Sites and Documentary Dislocations, The Place of Artists Cinema, 2009.


SCREENING: (ideas)

Amie Siegel, Quarry
Third Party (Sam Taylor-Wood, 10 min.),
and Method in Madness
Der Sandmann (Stan Douglas, 1995, 10 min.),
Inconsolable Memories (Stan Douglas, 2005, documentation),
Sleepwalkers (Doug Aitken, 2007, documentation),
or this or thi


Class 10, April 8:  Found Footage, Readymades, Appropriation
READING:
Nicolas Bourriaud, “Deejaying and Contemporary Art,” Postproduction/Culture asScreenplay: How Art Reprograms the World, trans. Jeanine Herman (New York:Lukas & Sternberg, 2002), pp. 39-45 (page 19 of the pdf).


SCREENING (options):

Decasia, Bill Morrison
Candice Breitz, "Her"
Alex Bag, '95
Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman (Dara Birnbaum, 1978, 5 min.),
Spectres of the Spectrum, Craig Baldwin
Alone: Life Wastes Andy Hardy (Martin Arnold, 1998, 15 min.),
Kristall (Christoph Girardet andMatthias Müller, 2006, 14 min.),
Ja'Tovia Gary, An Ecstatic Experience
Les Leveque
Paul Pfeiffer



Class 11, April 15: New Narrative
READING:
Ursula Frohne, Dissolution of th Frame: Immersion and Participation in Video Installations
Holland Cotter, Video Art Thinks Big, The New York Times, January 2008.
Chan Marshall, Kalup Linzy, Interview Magazine

Screening:
Shana Moulton
Broker
History of Glamor
Alex Bag '95
Martin Arnold Piece Touche

Guy Richards Smit



Class 12, April 29: Field Trip
KARRABING Film Collective

PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101

2:15-5pm

Class 13, May 6: Future/Post Cinema

READING:
Lev Manovich, “What is Digital Cinema?”
Peter Weibel, “Expanded Cinema, Video, and Virtual Environments,” Future Cinema:The Cinematic Imaginary After Film, eds. Jeffrey Shaw and Peter Weibel(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003), pp. 110-125.
Jennifer Chan, Notes on Post-Internet Art

Extra:
Brian Feldman, New York Magazine, Video Is the Web’s Future and It’s a Wonderful Mess



Class 14, May 13: Final Work

*note- this order has been randomly assigned.  You may switch with someone if that helps the timing. Plan on up to 25 min total (including screenings of up to 15min lengths).


FINAL PROJECTS

1. Kaija

2. Jaydee

3. Paul C.

4. Michael

5. Hilary

6. Alberto

7. Jess

 

Class 14, May 15: Final Work

FINAL PROJECTS
 

1. Deborah

2. Erika

3. Paul W.

4. Sara

5. Ben

6. Peekaboo

7. Adrian

8. Jesse

 

 

 

 

 

 

Extra Artists to keep in mind:

AIda Ruilova-BMuseum
http://www.ubu.com/film/ruilova_comp.html
Natalie Djurberg - collection

Pipilotti Rist- collection
Linda Montano- - collection

Vasulka-- collection

John Pilson
Paul Pfeiffer- R. Rampelman
Torsten Burns- collection
Gary Hill- NYU
Bill Viola- collection
Pierre Huyghe- melissa
Shana Moulton- vimeo
Ryan Trecartin- EAI
Stan Douglas-
http://www.ubu.com/film/douglas_television.html
Douglas Gordon- collection
Laurel Nakadate-
Tony Oursler- NYU
Eija Lisa-Attila-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSUQcjNvYh8
Omer Fast
http://www.ubu.com/film/fast_list.html
Candice Breitz
Aernout Mik
http://www.ubu.com/film/mik_touch.html
http://www.ubu.com/film/mik_training.html
Guy Ben Nur- vimeo

 

Kaija Matiss

Using archival footage from interviews with psychiatric patients and a PSA film about mental health from the 50's - 60's I'll create a soundtrack to footage of my own from the past few years. My footage explores themes of otherness with costume, heightened landscapes of nature, femininity and gender. These will be put together in kind of collage style. 

I'm looking to explore the tension in how mental health patients have traditionally been spoken to and treated and what notions and presumptions we still may have, especially towards female patients. 

The film will be about 10 min long depending on how things go - single channel. 

 

Adrian Cameron

My initial thoughts have been mostly formal. I'm interested in working on something multi-channel, 3-4 most likely. Additionally, I'd like to create a structure with multiple pictures within each channel, potentially moving within the single frame or between multiple frames/channels. I'm interested in exploring how the different channels can be in conversation with one another, creating a kind of shared video space.

I also want to construct a system that has a generative aspect, utilizing random (or quasi-random) processes, perhaps in choosing which video clips to play and how and where the videos move. Maybe even an interactive component.

As far as the content of the videos, my best idea so far is to record different people walking (maybe in different ways), probably in front of a green screen so that I can isolate just the bodies. I would like to record them in such a way so that I can use the clips in slow motion (need to research how best to do this). Finally, I'd like to find a way so that the moving bodies leave some kind of traces behind them.

The idea is to create an installation piece that presents the act of walking by different bodies and makes visible the route they have traveled. The act of walking, along with its components and potentials, is something that has been compelling me recently.

I would develop the project in the Max programming environment.


Erika Farrell
My House-  A Monument

A projection mapping installation using a model of my childhood home; video and photos to commemorate this structure of personal historical importance.

Materials:

Video projector,  Mad Mapper Video Projection Software, Adobe Premiere, Cardboard/paint model of childhood home, video clips, photos

I propose to projection map various scenes on various facades on a model of my childhood home (actual home is in Breezy Point, NY).  Story will begin with a young couple from the 60’s, Mike, an aspiring actor and gym teacher and Ursula, an immigrant and waitress. Their journey moves from a small studio in the warehouse district of Manhattan, to a move to a small insular beach town of Breezy Point. Mike and Ursula set up roots there based on their mutual love of the ocean and the want for space to rear a child. Mike was an avid spearfisherman, Ursula was an outdoor country girl. They journeyed through hurricanes, childrearing, Ponzi schemes, and having the police called on them constantly. They were disliked amongst some of the neighbors for their non-traditional outwardly appearance, non-affiliation with the church, and sometimes loud parties. Pariahs in their hometown, they still managed to raise a child who later returned to the neighborhood to raise her own children.


Ben Gorodetsky
​Reading Specific Books in Specific Places

For my final video art project I propose to create a video series that will implicate my public performance practice, a broad swath of the western literary canon, selfie and live-stream culture, and the deeply personal experience of consuming and processing long-form text.

Reading Specific Books in Specific Places will be shot with a GoPro camera on a selfie stick. I will be quietly and simply reading a book, immersing myself in its literary landscape and doing my best to ignore the unique environmental context of each site of the reading performance. The title is pretty self-explanatory, so rather than belabour the point I’d like to provide examples of these book/place pairings:


-The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway - read on Brighton Beach (as the tide slowly comes in and overtakes me sitting in my folding chair and reading)

-Silent Spring by Rachel Carson - read floating in a canoe in the Gowanus canal

-Moby Dick by Herman Melville -  read aboard the Staten Island Ferry

-Das Kapital by Karl Marx - read in on Wall Street, in front of the charging bull statue

-Orlando by Virginia Woolf - read in the Stonewall Inn

-Just Kids by Patti Smith - read at the Bethesda Terrace in Central Park

-Ida by Gertrude Stein - read in front of Yeshiva of Flatbush

-Art of War by Sun Tzu - read at the 9/11 Memorial

-Notes on “Camp” by Susan Sontag - read at a drag show at Bizarre Bar

-Frankenstein by Mary Shelley - read in front of Amazon NYC HQ

-All About Love: New Visions by bell hooks - read while riding the MTA

-Metaphysics by Aristotle - read in Times Square

 

All of these video pieces would be presented on individual monitors.

The unifying aesthetic would be the presence of my folding chair, matching costume of a formal black suit, and the warped, wide angle associated with family vacation videos.

In the final form the books would also be displayed below the monitor, as well as the wikipedia page for the location of the reading.

For the final project in class I will attempt to complete as many of these videos as I can. We’ll see how that goes...


 


Deborah Latz

Empty Your Heart and Mind

I’m going to re-visit my India video for my final idea.

Using blending mode for video effects with live video, stills, text - journal entries, filters, music. Collage look. Compose music and record in Ableton using midi and audio as a bed for a live shehnai concert. The video, stills will be generated from one projector. A second projector will (aka William Kentridge) throw text from shehnai lessons on upstage scrim either on top of video and/or intermittently between the video so the scrim only shows text and if I can manage it augmented figures that are picked up by a dedicated projector light source that throws the shadows of everyone on stage (me and shehnai, sitar player, piano player).

Empty Your Heart and Mind.  The project is  based on my Tow Fellowship research and study of the shehnai, a North Indian Classical instrument (similar to the western oboe), and my relationship with my guru, Sanjeev Shankar (who tours and records with Anoushka Shankar), which took place over the period of one month in New Delhi, India from 21 December 2018 to 20 January 2019. The project performance is a meditation, and a tribute to the deep love and respect that I carry in my heart for my guru, his family, the shehnai, and my recent experience in India.

 


Jesse Scaturro

MahJong Queens 

About 15 years ago I got interested in film making.  Armed with a video camera I set out to find something to film. I stumbled on a documentary about a group of elderly women living in a public housing complex in the Sheepshead Bay area of Brooklyn. The women gathered weekly to play Mahjong. For most of the women this game was becoming their only form of social interaction. The neighborhood around them was rapidly changing. Their children moved out many years ago and were fully engrossed in their own lives. The women felt like the last remnant of a robust past. I shot over 40 hours but unfortunately my ambition outweighed my skill. Most of the footage is unusable due to shoddy camera work and an undeveloped story line. However, I find the women compelling and think there might be just enough usable footage to create something compelling. 

this is a little trailer/sample of the footage  https://vimeo.com/319518838


Mike Serafino

The idea is to make several videos around objects and situations that link a particular characteristic. My recent video of objects arranged by color order exemplifies one idea, connecting objects according to where they fit on the spectrum of color.

The proposed works will be based around the following characteristics:

  1. Things that flow in a circulatory way.

  2. Household objects that roll

  3. Things exhibiting entropy

  4. One more to be determined

Here is a link to my YouTube channel with my currently completed work.  I wasn't able to post it to the discussion board on the class website (access denied!).

 

Peekaboo Pointe

My proposal for my final project is for a performance that involves an Instagram Live performance that will be simultaneously projected to the back of the stage.

It begins with a video of my face projected instructing the audience to get out their phones, link to my Instagram Live though my stories. It’ll be a little sexy, a little tongue-in-cheek. Then somehow it will transition to me, facing my back to the audience, wearing a nude latex catsuit that makes my body look like a plastic barbie doll. In the back of the stage there is a tripod with a ring light attached to it, holding my cell phone. I perform a super strippery, cam girl-ish performance to my phone, ignoring the room full of human audience. I may make connection to them via my phone, and the projection of my phone on the back wall of the stage.

The song that I’ll be performing to I’m still deciding, but I’m thinking either Duran Duran’s Save a Prayer or Girls on Film or Bubble Gum by Rasheeda  During the performance I zip off my latex top. And at the end, up close to the camera, I unzip my crotch zipper in the latex, expose a tampon string, pull it out to reveal it’s only bubble gum. Then I eat it and blow a bubble into the camera giggling.

I am working with the concept of unreal expectations of beauty and female bodies caused by social media and the increasing pressure to present yourself in some sort of super woman of femininity online.