Wondering, Lingering and Priming // Seeing the Unseen V2 // Assignment 2

Wondering, Lingering and Priming are three terms associated with noticing, and can be used to increase  intentional noticing, no matter what your profession. In the reading “Ghostly Forms and Forest Histories” by Andrew Mathews, Mathews suggests that by using these three actions, to linger, to wonder and to prime oneself, a person can notice and comprehend their world around them to a fuller extent. Furthermore, he talks about how a persons profession can further aid them in noticing and understanding.

Mathews, who has studied in the fields of forestry and anthropology, took a journey through the forests of Italy. He writes that we was “walking, looking and wondering” through these chestnut forest ruins, being primed for whatever he faced and lingering on the special parts of his journey. He used these three tactics to notice as much as he could during his trip, and while it may not be as intense as Mathews, we as media practitioners can follow these same rules of wondering, lingering and noticing within our profession to enhance our films.

As discussed in class, these three strategies of noticing can aid in the creation of recipes for production. Taking the time to set out and linger on a location, just to observe, allows that person to notice and pick up on aspects of the place that weren’t instantly recognisable. For example,  a person setting out to record audio on location wonders what they might pick up, priming themselves to hear certain sounds. Listening back to that recording intently allows the creator to pick up on unique sounds and events within a space that they did not expect. This will give the person an advantage in knowing what they want to film, based on what stands out within the recording and what they know will be interesting and engaging, because of their media experience.

Mathews, Andrew S. “Ghostly Forms and Forest Histories.” Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts of the Anthropocene, edited by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing et al., University of Minnesota Press, 2017, pp. 145–56

Recipes for Production // Seeing the Unseen V2 // Assignment 2

Recipes are essential for any kind of creation. You can’t bake your first cake without sourcing ingredients, step by step instructions and an idea of an outcome. This is the same for filming. You can’t produce and collect the footage and audio you want without first planning how you are going to collect it, what process you are going to use, such as shot types and movements, as well as what you want to film. We discussed in class how important it is to be specific with the movements, object themes and time periods for content. This was something that we as a pair discussed immensely in the process of writing up a plan. The big terms we took from the class were:

  • Equipment
  • Orientation
  • Movement -Pan, handheld vs tripod,
  • Budget
  • Length/duration
  • Framing/Shot Types

 

From there we talked about the themes we wanted to explore in our chosen areas, which happen to be a park and a train station. We settled on this idea of nature and industry, and how these ideas overlap and contrast in the different locations. For example, how and what light sources work within the location, such as the flickering lights of industrial white lamps in the stations and the completely different, bright rays of the sun in the park. We kept with this idea of broad themes and terms for what to film and notice in our locations, drafting up this list:

  • Light – 3 five second shots tracking up (portrait) (still)
  • Dark – 3 five second shots tracking down (portrait) (still)
  • Straight Lines – 3 five second shots panning from left to right (landscape) (still)
  • Abstract Lines – 3 five second shots panning from right to left (landscape) (still)
  • Walking – 3 five second still shots (portrait) (moving)
  • Sitting – 3 five second still shots (landscape) (still)
  • Nature – 3 five second still shots (landscape) (still)
  • Industry – 3 five second still shots (portrait) (still)

 

Reflection // Seeing the Unseen V2 // Assessment 1

From this assessment and the work we have been producing and discussing as a class throughout weeks 1 and 2, I have learnt how much of the noticing I can recall from throughout my day. Especially the little details that I would otherwise of never thought about unless purposely doing so. This and the project work task showed me how different and intentionally and unintentionally noticing things in our environment, specifically how little I personally purposely notice. While filming my chosen thing to notice, ‘cracks’, I found myself constantly rejecting the world around me, purely focusing on the cracks themselves and my filming of them. This often lead to me missing aspects of my world I would normally notice, such as other people, or the road.  Furthermore, through this task i discovered that my neighbourhood is littered with cracks, and while the video contains a vast amount of 10 second videos of cracks in roads and walls, towards the end of my journey I was ignoring basic cracks and seeking out interesting and unique ones.

I also felt like my choice of cracks was quite fitting to the theme of non-fiction that both the course as a whole and this specific assessment task revolve around. These cracks were not made intentionally, and have come to light due to excessive pressure, age, possibly rushed work and/or chance. These cracks in themselves are a pure form of truth and reality. Furthermore, the sequence of these clips is in order of when i shot them, meaning I did not alter the story and journey of the video in a fictional way, but rather displaying the real and personal process of my walk to and from work. Like in the prescribed text, Reality Hunger, “Act naturally” (130)

I compiled two edits of this task, one with music and the diegetic sound of the shots, and one with just the audio from the shots. I was inspired to do this because of the group task in week 1, in which we chose a specific thing to go search and shoot (in our case, signs) and compile it, similar to the assessment task. During the editing process of the task, I felt like music enhanced the experience of the shots, creating a strong emotional feeling that accompanied the narrative of the shots. While compiling the assessment task video, I felt like experimenting with music, and seeing how different the version with and without music would be. I felt that the version with the track carried a lot more emotional weight to it, adding a sense of vulnerability to the cracks that was not necessarily felt beforehand, when the audio just contained background noise. The song I chose to incorporate into the musical version is called ttktv by Arizona hip hop group ‘Injury Reserve’.

Overall, the process of this assessment task felt like a success, and I feel like I have a greater understanding of what noticing and non-fiction really is.

 

Shields, David. Reality Hunger. Hamish Hamilton, 2010. pp. 48

Injury Reserve, 2015, ttktv, sound recording, Las Fuegas, Arizona

What Do You Understand Noticing To Be? // Seeing the Unseen V2 // Assessment 1

Noticing can be simply observing your surroundings, whether it be the important and integral aspects of the world, such as what is in-front of your next step, or the little things, such as the colours of the leaves on the trees on your way to work. During the first week of class, we as a collective discussed the different ways we as people notice, such as through our senses, how we often notice the strange and out of the ordinary, and how we have become more aware of our technology and what it tells us.

In the set reading for this week, John Mason’s Forms of Noticing , the author discusses the accidental nature of noticing, and how it is so much harder to deliberately notice specific aspects of our life.  An example of this is posture, gesture and breathing, some of which are mentioned in Mason’s work. Once we start intentionally paying attention to these things, they become harder to manage and control, such as with becoming self conscious of your movements and presence, as well as ‘forgetting how to breathe’.

During the group exercise in which we listed what we noticed throughout our journey to class, I was surprised with how much I could recall, and the detail I could do so, down to the specific colour and style of a bag belonging to the person sitting next to me on the public transport I took in, or the number of cyclists I saw pass through a roundabout. This task showed truly how much I do notice in everyday life, and how much I can recall on demand.

For this assessment task, we are required to set ourselves a goal, using the prompt ‘tomorrow I shall notice…’, and pick something that we don’t often purposely pay attention to in a regular day. I have chosen to notice and mark the cracks, as I feel these are things I don’t often unintentionally seek out.

 

Mason, John. “Forms of Noticing.” Researching Your Own Practice: The Discipline of Noticing, RoutledgeFalmer, 2002, pp. 29–38.

What Do You Understand Non-Fiction To Be? // Seeing the Unseen V2 // Assessment Task 1

I once considered non-fiction to be a style of writing that focuses purely more on facts and reality, telling true stories and details about the world of the film. However, this idea is quite open ended and vague. After a class discussion, I’ve determined non-fiction to be both extremely broad and yet also succinct. Non-fiction can be, but is not limited to a vast range of educational multimedia, as well as personal content such as vlogging, or even the current process, blogging. Non-fiction is the conventions and narratives of documentaries and in most cases, mockumentaries (more so the conventions). It is maps, dictionaries, news (most of the time) personal diaries. The extent and depth of what non-fiction can be is endless.

This idea is further shown in David Shield’s Reality Hunger, a collection of quotes from various sources, compiled in a way that presents the truth found throughout humanity. These quotes show realities of many different people in many different situations, as well as words that are often lived by. Examples of this include ‘All the best stories are true’ (149) as well as an exert from 147 asking ‘What did it feel like? What was it like inside his skin?’.  I felt a strong emotional response to some of these quotes. In context with the overarching theme of truth and reality, these sections often brought on a sense of shared pride in a lot of the quotes, that the truth is upheld and honoured. It is somewhat unexplained, and extremely inspiring.

Discussing and analysing non-fiction has given me a new found appreciation for the form, as I know understand how broad the media form can be, and how much inspiration it can give audiences.

Shields, David. Reality Hunger. Hamish Hamilton, 2010. pp. 52-53

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