studio béluga


our filmic friends
August 19, 2009, 11:16 am
Filed under: environmental béluga, filmic béluga, social béluga

1. petra costa, brazil. undertow eyes, premiering at the vancouver international film festival, october 1-16 2009 (watch subtitled trailer here).

daughter of vera and gabriel

daughter of vera and gabriel

2. caterina scorsone, toronto/la. alice, a re-imagining of lewis carroll’s alice in wonderland, set in modern times (take a sneak-peek here).

caterina scorsone as alice

caterina scorsone as alice

3. kevin healy and eric weber, toronto/vancouver. come clean for the congo contest (watch the one-minute submission here). the contest is for videos addressing war in the democatic republic of the congo that is funded by our use of “conflict minerals” in cell phones. their video has made the top three; you can see the others (and vote for this one) here.



lesbian vampire comedy/screenwriting in toronto
July 16, 2009, 10:06 am
Filed under: filmic béluga, upcoming

the liaison of independent film-makers of toronto is a non-profit place for cool kids who want to make movies on celluloid. i used to be part of their screenwriter’s circle, where i met people like Ada Vaughan and Nika Belianina. this workshop is a steal: 12 hours of instruction for $95… that’s less than $8 hour. less than minimum wage, in fact.

LIFT’s SUMMER 2009 WORKSHOPS DRAMATIC CHOICES:

SCREENWRITER’S LAB Learn to develop an engaging story TUESDAY JULY 21, 6 PM – 10 PM TUESDAY JULY 28, 6 PM – 10 PM THURSDAY JULY 30, 6 PM – 10 PM This mini-course is an introduction to screenwriting. It explores in-depth the screenwriting process from idea to finished script and looks at creative devices that can be used to better stories. Using story ideas generated during class, participants will explore character, theme and plot as they take their ideas from logline to synopsis and ‘the pitch’. Formal documents used to sell ideas and scripts to industry will also be covered.

INSTRUCTOR:

Hope Thompson writes for film, theatre and television. Her most recent feature script is the lesbian vampire comedy Wylde House, developed while she was a resident of the Canadian Film Centre’s Writers’ Lab. Her theatre work includes “Tyrolia” (Toronto Fringe Festival, 2008), and most recently “She Walks the Line” (Buddies in Bad Times Theatre’s Rhubarb Festival, 2009). Hope has written on the CBC animated series, “What It’s Like Being Alone” and has also written and directed several short films, including the award-winning film noir, “Switch.” She is currently developing her next feature with Toronto’s New Real Films and co-directing a short.

COST:

LIFT Members $95 / Non-Members $125 Enrollment is limited to 10 To register please contact 416.588.6444 Ext. 222



deanna musgrave/sexy artists

newly established, new brunswick-based artist deanna musgrave is definitely interdisciplinary. i got all excited when i first heard about her practice of “intermedia synthesis” because that just sounds amazing. i was thinking new media, which she does a little bit, but for the most part she does stuff a little more lo-fi with painting and music — and it actually doesn’t seem totally contrived (only a little, but them’s the breaks): watch ‘moon’ with andrew miller on youtube.

this is what she says about her work:

Since 2003 she has researched the interdisciplinary practice of “painting/drawing music” or “intermedia synthesis”, continuing a discourse which she sees stretching across art history from early philosophy to Wassily Kandinsky to John Cage and Fluxus. In endeavoring to express commonalities of music and visual art, she has developed motives and patterns to express her own musical language. She uses this language to express the movement, fragmentation, regeneration, and evolution of an invisible substance. This substance could be music, Pythagorean concepts of musica mundana (music of the spheres) or simply the gases of earth’s atmosphere.

She sees value in visually expressing the changes of something invisible in the 21st century, where fear of the unknown is still pervasive. By envisioning an invisible world in flux, she invites the viewer to step into a sensory experience which is unknown, disintegrating, and changing while also, remaining intriguing, familiar, and comforting.

that last bit reminds me of a little something i wrote about my own photography:

I photograph lines and textures found in unexamined, neglected, or taboo areas. Initially created through human agency – such as the scars that result from surgery – these patterns are then modified by uncontrollable natural forces. Scars stretch and grow with the body; metal rusts, paint peels and stone cracks. These are lines and textures of infinite detail and beauty.

let’s all hear it for change, decay, erosion! here are some images of her paintings:

this piece blows me away. she (wisely) uses it as the homepage for her website (http://deannamusgrave.com/)

this piece blows me away. she (wisely) uses it as the homepage for her website (http://deannamusgrave.com/)

turquoise+orange = happily married

turquoise+orange = happily married

artist at work as seen through paintbrushes (cliché much?)

artist at work as seen through paintbrushes (cliché much?)

one not-very-nice thing i was thinking was: would musgrave get such recognition if she weren’t so pretty? her art is good and well-grounded in theory — but it doesn’t hurt, right? and then i thought: why do i even care?

lots of hot girls have told me that life is not exactly made simpler by being a good-looker — but it does make people want to look at you, and people wanting to look at you is a very, very good thing for an artist of any kind. it’s such an important part of being a successful pop singer that we basically consider it a given. we expect the female pop-artist (yup, using that term loosely again) to present herself as conventionally attractive as possible, all the time. remember the outrage when britney shaved her head?

these thoughts were floating around in my cloudy coffee-addled afternoon brain and only cemented when i joined my friend kate matthews‘ facebook group. she’s a good house dj from vancouver and the fact that i went to high school with her does not make me a biased at all. anyway, someone wrote this on her group wall:

ugh play well…if you are good at one you do you don’t need to have trashy photos to sell yourself. You are ruining the reputation of all female DJs around. I have no idea what your skill level is, but you are selling sex here not music. Female DJs already have it hard enough why perpetuate the issues. *banghead*

and i was not pleased, and i replied with something like

so she can’t be super-sexy and super-talented at the same time?
she has to choose one?
sounds a little restrictive to me.

which i stand by, for the most part, even though it is maybe basically post-feminist. kate does not represent all female dj’s any more than weirdo ex-governor sarah palin represents all weirdo conservative ex-beauty queen politicians. and she has a right to present herself however she pleases; given our social economy, it’s smart to convey herself as a sexpot you’d like to see on a stage.* so why did i have trouble accepting deanne musgrave’s success and good looks when she’s not taking it nearly (at all!) so far as kate — not even doing naked soft-core ‘performance art,’ which would totally sell? you tell me.

*nota bene: in highschool she looked normal. like, she looked like the rest of us: overly made-up and under-developed. girl next door. i remember green fleece, curly hair, curvy body, pretty eyes — not the supermodel you see here:

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she says: "legal disclaimer: these are not my breasts. my breasts are bigger!"

she says: "legal disclaimer: these are not my breasts. my breasts are bigger!"

...and it's probably true.

...and it's probably true.



voyeurism
June 18, 2009, 2:07 pm
Filed under: environmental béluga, filmic béluga, social béluga

Beluga cam at the vancouver aquarium.

All belugas all the time.

Belugas on demand.

5beluga_wideweb__470x315,0

What is this doing to our psyches?

Will we still be excited by real-life flesh-and-blood belugas in the real world?

Or will we find them not porn-I-mean-cam-worthy? Tell us, Naomi Wolf. Show us the way.



gender-bending at the museum

…the musée de beaux arts in montréal, that is. this is a video/installation/performance piece that knocked my sox off when i saw it today. it’s free, you should go.

From May 6 to October 4, 2009, the Museum will present the latest masterwork of Toronto artist Kent Monkman, Dance to the Berdashe. This video installation, composed of five large projections, offers a contemporary re-interpretation of a traditional Aboriginal ritual featuring the Berdashe, that special male figure whose gender-bending behaviour and very existence astonished and appalled many explorers of the American West.
– musée write-up (http://www.mbam.qc.ca/en/expositions/exposition_141.html)

oeuvre1_b



call for submissions in video/film — International Art Expo, Columbia
May 19, 2009, 8:51 pm
Filed under: filmic béluga, performative béluga, submissions

I’m on this mailing list that Luca Curci sends out. He’s Italian, always doing interesting things, lotsa stuff about cities, but since I don’t really work in film/video, I’ve never worked with him (or tried to work with him). Maybe you work in film. Maybe you work in video. Maybe you should apply to a conference in *columbia*.
This expo is just one of many amazing events.

Call for Artists: ESSENCE / BORDERS
November 14-16, 2009
Deadline for applications: June 30, 2009

email: lucacurci@lucacurci.com
more details: www.lucacurci.com/artexpo

International ArtExpo is selecting all interesting video/short.films to include in the next 2009 Exhibitions:

ESSENCE / BORDERS – 5th water homage – Institut Alexander Von Humboldt at Villa de Leyva, Boyaca – Colombia (November 14-16, 2009). The deadline for applications is June 30, 2009.

The number of works with you can participate is unlimited. All works must be on DVD (PAL or NTSC), no matter what the original source medium. The duration may be any, with a preference given to a max lenght of 15 minutes. If you are interested, send your video submissions (Name/Surname, City/Country, Film title, Running time, Brief film synopsis) with a CV/biography, videography and an introduction about the piece to:

arch. Luca Curci
via Casamassima, 75
70010 – Capurso (Bari) – Italy

Participation open to: professional artists, architects and designers, associate groups and studios.

world



images Festival call for submissions

The images festival (yes, another toronto event, so sue me) is really great. it’s all about ’showcasing contemporary moving image culture’ and happens every april. they’re accepting submissions now, so if you have a short/doc/artsy film/new media installation in your attic, click here. they also offer great internships. i know because i did one!-1



PhD studentships — middlesex u.

check it out if you’re interested in any of the following areas (or something like the following areas):
# locative media
# educational applications of technology, especially locative technologies (for details please contact Magnus Moar)
# spatial and located audio
# access by older users (65 years plus) to media technologies and/or social networks (for details please contact Stephen Boyd Davis)
# history, theory, aesthetics, analysis of electroacoustic music with particular reference to the music and works of the Groupe de Recherches Musicales (for details please contact John Dack)
# theory, aesthetics, analysis of contemporary music with particular reference to serial thought (for details please contact John Dack)
# ‘open’ forms in music, media arts (for details please contact John Dack)
# stochastic approaches to music (for details please contact Gordon Davies)
# novel applications of eye-tracking (for details please contact Gordon Davies)
# interactive visual representations of historical time, such as timelines (for details please contact Stephen Boyd Davis)
# visual narrative and interaction (for details please contact Helen Bendon)

you can contact these people from the Lansdown Centre for Electronic Arts website.

News_RichardWright_Baroque_300x207

(image: Computer Baroque, richard wright)