IN DRAFT A slight change of tenor as I will give you some information about what might happen after your degree. Options, the differences, and why you might do one rather than the other. Then we moved into a reflective… Continue Reading →
Just wanted to follow up after our crit session with Paul Ritchard and Sophie Langley. I was talking with both of them yesterday (in a posthumanism research group – the whacky things we do) and they raised again with me… Continue Reading →
June 8 from 2pm. To be followed by a party in the university’s new media precinct. This is where each studio shows what has been done, and you also hear about the studios on offer for semester two. What needs… Continue Reading →
Question: Do the two personal films for Brief 4 need to be linked or related? Answer: No. They can, of course, but don’t have to.
Foggy morning, would have loved the time to have been able to make a short film about the fog. Where I live it was thick and around the street lights were glowing halos. We are moving toward what we call… Continue Reading →
Continuing on, we have Ivens The Bridge from 1928.
Joris Ivens is a pioneering Dutch documentary film maker from early last century. Much of his work is poetic and very much situated in his local place. There are two key films that matter to us and as poetic observational… Continue Reading →
From Offenburg arrives: While groping to define, provisionally and partly, what a particular concept may mean, we gain insight into what it can do. It is in the grouping that the valuable work lies. […] The grouping is a collective… Continue Reading →
Nora wonders about the sort of mesh work her dog is in and makes. Note though, a mesh does not have a centre so your dog (or anything else) is not, cannot, be at its centre. This I find very… Continue Reading →
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Homo Faber
As a teacher I feel like I’m really floundering around in this studio at the moment. I’ve realised that the Offenburg collaboration is interesting, and provocative in all sorts of ways (around ownership, authorship, collaboration, and what Timothy Morton calls… Continue Reading →