June 4th, 2010

Gateway Spring 2010

Gateway is the video production workshop that I have been teaching for the past two years at the University of Macau.  It is a graduation project for 4th year students majoring in English communication that  I inherited.  Generally speaking, each semester involves a theme.  I have consistently tried to theme the course in a way that straddles the border between narrative fiction and documentary or ethnographic approaches.  This semester, the contrast of styles is clear as one film, “One less lonely fish,” is a narrative short and the other, “This Stop, Macau,”  is a kind of ethnographic reflection on the lives of mainland Chinese students studying at UM. The connection is between these films is that both are original approaches to the theme of “Crossing Cultures.”

I was a bit reluctant to use the name, “crossing cultures,” as it sounds a bit too anthropology 101 to my ears; but I eventually came around to it as good starting point.  I like it both because I can relate to it from my own personal experience of living in Macao; and I like it as it forces some working definition of culture.  What is it?  How can we work with it or combine it?  How can you mark or define it’s boundaries?  These questions are not so easily answered.  The student films are not so much answers as invitations to the audiences to consider along with them how we see and experience a world that is largely cross cultural.

You can watch “This Stop, Macau” here and soon I also hope to have “One less lonely fish” available.  We are also working to make the previous semesters films available.  I would love to hear feedback from anyone whose managed to find their way to this site and takes the time to watch these videos.  I am proud of their hard work and as always finish off the semester eager for the next.

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
December 15th, 2009

+853

853image

+853 is the area code of Macau and the name of my student’s gateway video project this year. Empowered to work together as one production team, they were able to realize a larger scale project. The reward for all their hard work was a big turnout from the Macau community to see their premiere at the first “Commfest” festival of student work here at the University of Macau. Their invest and this large show of community support suggests a some what unrealized potential within Macau for local productions. I hope we can do our part in the University and work together with others locally to grow this scene and industry in Macau.

So thank you to everyone who participated in the production and the first screening. And for those of you reading this that didn’t, I’ll update this post later with information on where to see it.

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
October 22nd, 2009

Image mining

Here are a few ways of searching of images that have been licensed using one of the creative commons licenses. First one can use google to search for such images from this link, http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2009/06/find-creative-commons-images-in-google.html and next you can do a similar search on flicker from here, http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/by-2.0/

Other sites include http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page and http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Image which contains links to still other archives of cc licensed images.

And for inspiration here are a few sites that focus on advertising. Adaccess http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/adaccess/browse is a searchable archive maintained by Duke University. Coloribus http://www.coloribus.com is a large archive of advertising in print, tv, and radio. It has a searchable archive but the first page of results are only viewable without subscription.

And a collection of English perspectives on china, and chinese media/advertising, http://www.danwei.org/blogs/model_workers_eng_2008.php and
http://jeanneboden.typepad.com/jeanneboden/advertising/

And lastly some blogs that offer collections of older advertising and poster design, http://www.iisg.nl/landsberger/ provides a collection of Chinese propaganda posters. http://pzrservices.typepad.com/ contains vintage advertising of all kinds.

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
October 20th, 2009

Commfest and Gateway logo ideas

These are some initial logo designs for the launch of a unified end of the semester communication festival at the University of Macau. Also included is a new logo for “gateway,” the fourth year video workshop that I’ve been teaching over the past couple of semesters. The inspiration for the first design comes from one of the three, or four depending on how you count, bridges that connect Taipa and the University Campus with Macau.

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
October 19th, 2009

Mypaint

I’ve been working with the open source paint program mypaint for the past few months. I noticed it when I came across it’s use in the Durian open movie project at the Blender Foundation. David Revoy is the concept artist for this project and a user of this relatively young program.

Working in mypaint feels like both a continuation of my studies of light and form in photography and 3d animation but also a significant departure. I’ve gained more confidence by using reference images; but still I feel like I am painting toward and not necessary with reference images. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but I do see how a more experienced painter would use these references in another way.

continue reading

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
September 6th, 2009

This is My City

I had the pleasure of participating in the “This is My City” workshop in this summer. It was organized by Bert de Muynck, Mónica Carriço, Belgian and Portuguese architects working out of Beijing, and Nuno Soares, a local architect in Macau. The premise was to “explore Macau’s urban landscape by investigating the relation between the cultural/media imaginaries and the concrete conditions of the everyday.” Practically speaking, this involved surveying the city from a few hand picked vantage points and then a second day spent producing designs that envisioned possible directions for Macau’s future development.

It was nice being a tourist again in the city that has become my home over the past year. The rapid development and confined geography of Macau, together with the vernacular architecture of the gaming industry certainly make for a unique urban environment.

Below is a frame from a short animation I rendered for the exhibit and a speculative design of Macau’s future development. Their value obviously lays more in the attention they bring to their surrounding than any real architectural value.
Images from the exhibition can be found here

spin3
hodgescomp2smaller

by tablecha | Posted in Portfolio | No Comments » |
September 6th, 2009

Fan Films

So I wanted to make a post to emphasize a nice comment the blog received the other day. It was from Clive Young, who is the author of “Homemade Hollywood,” a study of fan film productions. In his own words, it “covers the history and future of the form, from the 1920s to today’s backyard efforts.” This is definitely an interesting subject, a practice that appears to be growing, and oddly has gone fairly ignored in critical literature or film histories. He does rightly note that such academics as Henry Jenkins, the Director of the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program, have positively responded to his work. Jenkins own interview with Young can be found here.

It would seem as if the question of fan films is only the beginning of a discuss of how we turn public media into part of our personal experience. I’ll try to follow up on this post with more thoughts on issues of mimesis, reception studies, and the shift terrain of media distribution. Meanwhile, check out Young’s blog where he keeps up to date with the latest in fan film productions http://fancinematoday.com/.

by tablecha | Posted in audiovisualIII | No Comments » |
September 6th, 2009

Project III Ideas

First you must find your subject, for instance a film, star, or product, then you must find it’s audience or fans. Once you have found these two you need to think about the context around each one. Think of the context as the world around them, their history, and the media in which they appear. In the case of a pop star, the context would be how she or he became a star, their raise to fame, and the place they occupy in media such as television, on-line, and print press. Then think about the same for the audiences or fans, where do they come from, what do they do to express their interest in the star, and do the see themselves?

As to the form of the project, you might first think of it as a long blog post or short article, with images spread through out to illustrate and reference the subjects being talked about. One technique would be to juxtapose the original artist material and fan made material. This could be two youtube clips, one the original video and another a video made by a fan.

Another idea is to show how people have added a favorite star or character to their world. An example would be someone’s car that they have painted in the colors of their favorite cartoon character. This could also include changes to the interior, steering wheel, and seat covers. Along the same lines you could look at the fashion that people wear, how it is themed around their favorite sport’s team or how it mimics the fashion of their favorite star.

And lastly, you could look at fan films which are often short films made as a tribute to a commercial feature film. Sometimes the tribute is clear and other times amateur films try to mimic a popular film without explicitly saying they are a fan film. Here it would be interesting to look at discussion forums and comments on video sites where people discuss and critique each other’s films.

Ok I hope these additional notes are helpful in continuing to work on your final projects.

by tablecha | Posted in audiovisualIII | No Comments » |
September 6th, 2009

Fan Cultures

Fans are people into one thing, person, or hobby. Using our friendly online etymology dictionary we can learn that “fan” most likely comes from fantatic, itself “pertaining to a temple” or “fanum.” So a fan is someone who is dedicated to something in an almost religious sense. In Japanese there is the similar term “Otaku,” which, as wikipedia describes it, “is a Japanese term used to refer to people with obsessive interests, particularly anime, manga, and video games.” This specific emphasis on technology is similar to the slang term, “nerd,” a relatively new word in American English that refers to someone with an obsessive relationship with knowledge or originally a conservative traditionalist.

So fandom always implies two things, the original and the place from which it is appreciated. A fan of the anime from Kyoto is similar to but different from a fan of anime from Orange County California.

Nerd, otaku, and fan are all now positively used. They are a marker of inclusion in a community of interest and a sign that one is passionate about something. The valorization of nerdiness is a trend against the image of cool, e.g. a kind of laid-back disinterest. This can be overstated but it it interesting to think if a larger trend toward nerd or fan culture is a reaction against the individualism of a lone rebel. Surely on some level fan cultures and communities sometimes form tighter bonds than traditional neighborhood and geographic definitions of community.

A few documentaries that deal with Fan Cultures and Nerd or Otaku Culture:
Heavy Metal Parking Lot
Vinyl
Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control
Michael Lau

http://www.flickr.com/groups/harajuku/

http://thesartorialist.blogspot.com/

by tablecha | Posted in audiovisualIII | No Comments » |
May 3rd, 2009

Building context, fighting context

It seems like there is a simultaneous push and pull online of building and erasing context. Blog posts, comments, and forum chatter build the story around an image or an event. They make the links and attach possible and sometimes appropriate interpretations. Significance, or should I say culture, is hung like a caption beside them reminding us how to read what is before us.

The other move or tendency is to strip images away from their discovered context, to erase the frames and colors that surround them. Stripped bare, the image can be re-contextualized or exhibited in all it’s original beauty/purity.

godardcontext

by tablecha | Posted in visual research | No Comments » |





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