Sun of Venice is a seven second video loop, that shows the reflection of the setting sun in the glass pane of the Vaporetto stop Giardini in Venice, Italy, with view on the Lido. It was filmed during the Venice Biennale in 2011. – JP
Category: Sunset
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“Eventide” Cassandra C. Jones
Eventide (2004) is a Snap-Motion Re-Animation of the sunset, an icon in snapshot photography. It is a collection of 1,391 found photographs that are placed in succession to reveal a story about innate aesthetics and one grand universal tie that binds us. – CCJ
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“sun song” Sam Hoolihan
Sun Song grew out of a daily ritual I developed years ago of sitting on the shorelines of city lakes around Minneapolis, filling my last rolls of Kodachrome and Ektachrome Super 8 film with the dying light at sunset. For me, the four projections mimic four melodies on a four track cassette recording. Sun Song is an opening for introspection and meditation, a moment to sit with the light at the end of the day. – SH
vimeo.com/user14082595
shoolihan.tumblr.comAiring throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“Untitled (together)” Max Grey
New Hampshire, Summer 2014
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“The Day of Two Noons” Mike Gibisser
An experimental essay regarding alterations in the progression of time. Space shrinks by collapsing the duration it takes for a body to traverse it—or a mind. A railroad redesigns the temporal system of a nation. A man photographs a horse. A woman hallucinates the past.
Weaving together portraiture, travelogue, and landscape The Day of Two Noons uses shifts in space, subject, and historical circumstance to investigate standardized time as a process experiential normalization. Exploring the context in which a cultural experience of time is developed, an outline is formed of experiences that do and do not fit within such a standard. The film attempts a diagnostic on the nervous system of a country. – M.G.
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“Dean sunsets, all of them (1952-2006)” Laura Mackin
A distant relative gave me a collection of home movies, shot from 1946–2006 by a man named Dean. By persistently recording 60 years of his everyday experiences, Dean captured his own life cycle. From 8mm film to DV, Dean filmed 24 sunsets. Displayed simultaneously—tiled, like a surveillance monitor—at normal speed, 24 tiles of sunset footage begin playing. As the footage runs out, the screen flickers to black, tile by tile. – LM
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“a beach” Andrew Rosinski
An old dusty beta-max tape, with unknown origins. – AR
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“wake” eric stewart
Before the existence of electric lights, photography was know as “heliography” (writing with the sun) and the first camera-less photograms were called sun-prints. Unlike the photography, the photogram does not record the object in a photo-realistic sense, but instead creates a representation of the space surrounding an object. The photogram is a shadow which charts the distance between things.
When my father died, there was never a chance to see his body after life had left it. This film was made by placing his ashes directly on 35mm film in a dark room and moving the film a frame at a time. Wake is a dirge in celluloid. It is a celebration of my fathers life, a meditation on his body and a visual record of mourning. – ES
e.l.j.stewart@gmail.com
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015
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“Sun Sunset Set” Robert Ladislas Derr
At sunset, it is common for one to reflect on the day’s events and consider the next day. Sunset presents a visual symbol for the promise of a new day. It also gloriously rewards the end of the day. Contemplation of the sunset is age-old as we reflect on our existence in the universe. In the three-channel split screen video, I visually draw attention to the metaphorical aspects of the sunset–the past, present, and future. The center camera with its continual gaze at the sunset represents the present. Panning back and forth with the two end cameras reifies the past/future dichotomy of the sunset. To further emphasize this duality, corresponding to the movement of the cameras, I record an audio track of me phonating “sun” and “set”. The three videos create one panorama of the setting sun. The camera movements accentuated by the spoken words sun and set, create a hallucinogenic effect. – RLD
home1.arts.ohio-state.edu/derr34/
Airing throughout the Sunset program, May 10-31, 2015