Flash Polaroids

"The Flash Polaroids occupy a middle ground between an experimental film/video aesthetic – particularly the works that use the single frame as the unit of composition – and interactive installation video works. The earlier 'Studies' involve loops of digital photographs taken in 'burst mode' – in quick succession – and were partly inspired by David Crawford’s Stop Motion Studies. The 'Portraits' involve several views of the same subject in juxtaposition, and could be compared to a Warholian take on the portrait – a moving image that essentially sits still, or a still image that moves only slightly over time. The 'Micro-narratives' introduce 'stories' to the Flash Polaroids, especially Guy Cat Pan, which, like a metaphysical painting of De Chirico’s, gets its charge by placing disparate, enigmatic objects on the same stage. The 'Interactive' set pushes outward toward the user, and demonstrate what could be done with this simple use of Flash and digital photographs as projections in an installation setting." -- from Turbulence

Flash Polaroids includes the following works:

"Studies
Countryside
Heathrow
Williamsburg Bridge


Portraits
Rachel 1
Rachel 2
David 1
David 2

Micro-narrative
Subway Woman
Guy Cat Pan (w/ sound)


Interactive
Fish Tale
Fisheye TV (w/ sound, a collaboration with geniwaite)" 
-- from Turbulence

1 COPY IN THE NEXT

Turbulence

Published by Turbulence.

This copy was given to the Electronic Literature Lab by Jo-Anne Green and Helen Thorington in Spring of 2016.

PUBLICATION TYPE

Showcase

COPY MEDIA FORMAT

Web

ORIGINAL URL

https://turbulence.org/project/brian-kin-stefans/

ARCHIVE URL

https://archive.the-next.org/turbulence/original/studios/stefans/