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Multi-Channel Video Installation
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- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Six screen video installation proposal for a church social hall – the black bars represent pillars between the screens in the proposed exhibition space.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 07/23/2019
- Date Modified:
- 07/23/2019
- Date Created:
- 2018
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Produced almost entirely at Experimental Television Center (ETC), the video uses a simple animation of a rotating rectangle (produced in Deluxe Paint on the Amiga Computer) as a stencil into which are keyed various versions of a processed live image of the river outside the window at ETC. This was my second attempt at a multi channel piece. The four programs have been shown in grid’s of twelve and sixteen monitors. While relatively simple in structure and shown only three times, this remains a personal favorite.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 05/31/2019
- Date Modified:
- 05/31/2019
- Date Created:
- 1991
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Featuring Jack Charney as the nude. All made with analog tools. Shot and mixed during the six months I lived and worked at the Vasulkas home/studio in Santa Fe. Two ¾” tapes of the nude were mixed through a key/stencil of third video (originally shot on 8mm film in Sienna Italy) to make one version of the combined images Video1+ Video2+stencil=A then this process was repeated Video1+Video2+stencil=B, then the combined images were mixed together again through the same stencil A+B+stencil=Mix1. This whole process was repeated twice and then those two were also combined. Then later some of those mixes were transferred to Betacam and slowed down. The final tape contains excerpts from a variety of the previous combinations with 2, 4 and 8 layers.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 05/21/2019
- Date Modified:
- 05/26/2019
- Date Created:
- 1992
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Six screen video installationFeaturing Jack Charney as the nude. All made with analog tools. Shot and mixed during the six months I lived and worked at the Vasulkas home/studio in Santa Fe. Two ¾” tapes of the nude were mixed through a key/stencil of third video (originally shot on 8mm film in Sienna Italy) to make one version of the combined images Video1+ Video2+stencil=A then this process was repeated Video1+Video2+stencil=B, then the combined images were mixed together again through the same stencil A+B+stencil=Mix1. This whole process was repeated twice and then those two were also combined. Then later some of those mixes were transferred to Betacam and slowed down. The final tape contains excerpts from a variety of the previous combinations with 2, 4 and 8 layers.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 05/21/2019
- Date Modified:
- 05/26/2019
- Date Created:
- 1992
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Demo of five screen installation. I was fascinated by the photos on gravestones in the Cemetery at San Minato in Florence, Italy. I began to think about the way in which a single image came to represent the entire lived experience of the person. Cinema as a whole also seems to be about representations of actions. I wondered about trying to film an experience directly lived as opposed to being represented. "I Morti" presents four streams of diary footage, images of daily life and travel. Collected over a 4 or 5 year period, these function as a counterpoint to the images of the dead on the fifth screen.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 08/04/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/07/2019
- Date Created:
- 2002
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- My first attempt at a multi-channel video installation. The work was highly influenced by Nam June Paik’s retrospective at the Whitney and by Steina Vasulka’s “The West”. This piece was produced while I was living and working at the Vasulka’s House/Studio in Santa Fe. I had persuaded them to let me house sit while they spent six months in Japan. Access to their equipment, particularly to 4 adjacent monitors and four ¾” video decks, was what made it possible to compose a multi image work. “Virtual Space” was originally an eight channel work, mounted as two 2X2 stacks of monitors facing each other across a narrow space. Standing in the middle, the viewer had to look back and forth between the two sides. One side (L) is an assembly of footage gathered at the Lightning Field (a land art project in southern New Mexico by artist Walter Di Maria.) The other side (V) features four views of the interior of the Vasulka’s live/work interior as a handheld camera slowly and continuously pans across interior surfaces in the space. Subsequently, each of the 2x2 grids of images composing the two sides (L&V) was transferred to a single tape. These are represented here as LX4 and Vx4.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 03/24/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/18/2019
- Date Created:
- 1989
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Produced almost entirely at Experimental Television Center (ETC), the video uses a simple animation of a rotating rectangle (produced in Deluxe Paint on the Amiga Computer) as a stencil into which are keyed various versions of a processed live image of the river outside the window at ETC. This was my second attempt at a multi channel piece. The four programs have been shown in grid’s of twelve and sixteen monitors. While relatively simple in structure and shown only three times, this remains a personal favorite.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 03/24/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/18/2019
- Date Created:
- 1991
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- A mostly formal exercise in composition and image processing, using footage of water. Probably the first in a ongoing series of works dealing with landscape, investigating the idea of video as a contemplative viewing experience akin to painting. Filmed in California and Mexico, and developed over the course of two visits to Experimental Television Center. Final editing at PPG onto 1” open reel tape.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 03/24/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/07/2019
- Date Created:
- 1992
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- My first multi channel work for synchronized video streams. The piece starts in Cape Cod and moves gradually across the North American continent, ending at the Pacific Ocean. There is no attempt to cover all this of ground in any complete way - the work is an assembly of the places I traveled to and landscapes I admired during the four-year period in which I collected the material. All the scenes were shot with a single camera, then staggered in editing to create the appearance of a continuous shot. During filming I would pan, pause, and then move again, resulting in a series of staggered movements in which the different screens appear to drift in and out of synchronization.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 03/23/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/07/2019
- Date Created:
- 2004
- License:
- All rights reserved
-
- Type:
- Media
- Description/Abstract:
- Three part work created for my exhibition at Shirley Jones Gallery in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Features dance treatments from Experimental Television Center, as well as footage from my backyard on Riddle Rd in Cincinnati. The piece was projected onto the store front windows of the gallery.
- Creator/Author:
- Woodman, Charles
- Submitter:
- Charles Woodman
- Date Uploaded:
- 03/15/2016
- Date Modified:
- 05/14/2019
- Date Created:
- 2006
- License:
- All rights reserved
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