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Implying the Surface in Animation

Animating Affect in the Algorithmic

by Despina Papadopoulos • March 5, 2024 • 0 Comments

I have been taking photos, screenshots from my computer, printing them, re-photographing them, cropping them on my phone and reprinting them, creating assemblages that follow connections and human neural networks.  In this process I take the role of a generative…

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Implying the Surface in Animation

The Floating Horizon and Animated Disorientation

by Alla Gadassik • February 27, 2024 • 0 Comments

The horizon line is a key visual principle of the Western world-view, binding together histories of navigation, spatial representation, and philosophical inquiry. Ancient mariners valued the horizon as an orienting boundary between the earthly and the celestial, scanning perpendicularly across…

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Implying the Surface in Animation

Animating the surface of the screen and the body

by Sharon Young • February 20, 2024 • 0 Comments

Animation goes, in all its superficiality, deeply into the substance of being, the hidden realms, the crevices beneath usual exposure, the constructions and reconstructions. […] Film is the unknowing suspension of disbelief in stand-­ins, doppelgangers, avatars, things that only pretend…

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Book Review

Review: Figure and Force in Animation Aesthetics (2019), Ryan Pierson

by Colin Wheeler • February 16, 2024 • 0 Comments

Cover of Ryan Pierson's Figure and Force in Animation Aesthetics

Writing about the way elements move in animation proves to be a formidable challenge for any book on the medium, but Ryan Pierson’s Figure and Force in Animation Aesthetics (2019) manages to explore philosophical theories related to change while providing…

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Implying the Surface in Animation

Unstable surfaces in home is where the heart is (2023)

by Karen Bosy • February 13, 2024 • 1 Comment

I work within a tradition of documentary practice. Whilst a documentary can follow a narrative structure, this video complicates any notion of narrative to present a section of path in a wetland forest. This is an essential watershed area where…

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Implying the Surface in Animation

Surface Effects in Frame-by-Frame Filmmaking

by Nicky Hamlyn • February 6, 2024 • 0 Comments

I have been working frame by frame for several years in both 16mm film and video. Although I do not consider myself to be an animator, I use single frame shooting to elaborate and control what are sometimes very complex…

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Sight and Vision

Visual Alchemy: Transcending the Frame in Phenakistiscope Animation

by Guido Devadder • January 22, 2024 • 0 Comments

In an effort to prove his theory on persistence of vision to a wider, non-scientific audience, Joseph Plateau developed his first phenakistiscope (1832) depicting a dancer who performs a pirouette in 16 distinct steps, each of them separated by a…

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Sight and Vision

The Grace of Vision: A Bergsonian take on Persistence of Vision

by Jack Parry • January 16, 2024 • 0 Comments

The phenomenon of persistence of vision (POV) is central to the conceptualisation and pedagogy of animation.  There exists however controversy between film/animation theories and empirical science as to the parameters of this phenomenon.  POV is classically seen as the phenomenon…

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Sight and Vision

Beyond Persistence: Debunking the Myth and the Science of Animated Motion

by Philippe Vaucher • January 9, 2024 • 0 Comments

One of the reasons for the popularity and resilience of what is today referred to as the “persistence of vision” theory is that it mistakenly provides a simple explanation for two distinct perceptual phenomena. The first is flicker fusion, which…

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Animation and Holiday Traditions

A Rugrats Passover: A Personal Reminiscence

by Jonathan Greenberg • December 11, 2023 • 0 Comments

In 1992, I was a recent college graduate who had moved to Los Angeles in the hopes of making a career as a screenwriter. A few happy accidents landed me work as a writer for a new series on Nickelodeon,…

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