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V-LOUNGE vol.2
The Hit Man of Sampling Video!
Sampling
Videos and Demonstration of Final Cut Pro
The members of FAMEFAME will be invited to the lounge,
introduce their sampling videos, and demonstrate how they
made the sampling videos. |
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Shadowplay
Tasman Richardson
2006, 8min excerpt, colour
/ b&w
Tasman Richardson's "Shadowplay" lays bare the
post-human vacuity of pre-recorded existence, echoing Burroughs'
reflection on modern civilization: "nothing here but
the recordings." Through an absurd (while disturbingly
rational), brief explanation of the history of recording
media, Richardson describes our brave new world of artifice,
emptiness and illusion where the magnetic ghosts of civilization
have conquered the living. |
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The Blob Jubal
Brown 2000, 9min, colour
Paranoid science fiction obsessing over the omnipresence
of television and radio waves, wireless communicationsc
in our very midst, in us and around usg ca rock nf roll
fantasia, joining 50s horror flicks, swamp guitar and rave
beats in a juiced up look at the roots of TV.h - Mike Hoolboom,
Images Festival catalogue |
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The Invisible Man
Josh Avery 2006,
8min excerpt, colour
"The Invisible Man" is Josh Avery's individualist
anthem of self-annihilation and triumphant rebirth, like
the bionic phoenix emerging on the other side of technological
immortality. Avery faces the now invulnerable Society of
the Spectacle through strategies of self-marginalization,
isolation and eccentricity to dissect self-image and establish
an identity of pure miscreant individuality. |
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Voorhees Elenore
Chesnutt
2004, 2min 55sec, colour
A collection of horror movie prey as they are hunted. The
faces and eyes emit wildly the emotion of imminent death
- racing hearts, singleness of purpose, horror. We see the
terror, without knowing the cause. Created for the FAMEFAME
Halloween bash Flight 666. |
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The Pack Elenore
Chesnutt
2003, 3min 40sec, colour / b&w
As the leader redefines the possible, the pack instinctively
adapts to the new conditions. This collection of the record-breaking
moments in the men's 100-m dash shows that not only can
the unfathomable occur, it can become the norm. |
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Dark Alana Didur
2004, 3min, colour / b&w
An examination of myth surrounding concepts of good and
evil in relation to day and night. Referencing movie culture
that explores those ideas. |
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Now You Know I Exist
Alana Didur
2005, 4min, colour
Alana Didur's "Now You Know I Exist" offers a
prismatic vision through which the spectrum of the modern
conundrum, nihilism and longing, is enacted in a collage
of sights, sounds and recriminations. Referencing the many
realms and degrees of psychological responses\from daily
acts of passive aggression to her voicepiece, the Zodiac
Killer\a line in the sand is slowly drawn. |
Guests
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Tasman Richardson
Tasman Richardson is a videomaker,
electronic composer, designer, curator, and organizer.
Over the past 10 years he has exhibited or performed in
Argentina, Austria, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Egypt, England,
France, Finland, Holland, Iceland, Peru, Poland, Spain,
Switzerland, and The United States. |
His work focuses on
the spectacle of the tele-visionary existence, video as
language, and the re-nification of sound and image. He
has performed and collaborated under the aliases M.O.I.,
JAWA, Pox, FAMEFAME, theblameshifter, IBM, OHVOV, Anvil,
Polygon Noose, and Noise-Op. He currently lives in Toronto,
Canada. His artworks are available through Vtape, Artcore,
Art Metropole, Microcinema International, Ant-zen, and
FAMEFAME. |
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Josh Avery
Josh Avery is a Toronto based video
and kinetic sculpture installation artist. He has been
exhibiting in Toronto for the past six years. Josh graduated
from the Ontario College of Art and Design with a major
in Integrated Media. He has a general knowledge of a wide
variety of fabrication processes, specializing in metal
fabrication. He is currently a Technician in the metal
shop at The Ontario College of Art and Design. |
All of Josh's work utilizes some form of a cut and past
technique. In his video work he appropriates images to
give them a different meaning. Josh's sculptural works
give the impression that a moment in time has been recorded,
but the humans involved in this moment have been removed
and replaced with machines. The result is a sense of dread.
Anger is a dominant element and gives the pieces an outsider
or antisocial bent. Currently his work examines ideas
of the empty desire that mass media injects into its audience,
and the possible lines of action to negate this desire.
Josh Avery is a Toronto based video and kinetic sculpture
installation artist. He has been exhibiting in Toronto
for
the past six years. Josh graduated from the Ontario College
of Art and Design with a major in Integrated Media.
He has a general knowledge of a wide variety of fabrication
processes, specializing in metal fabrication. He is currently
a Technician in the metal shop at The Ontario College
of Art and Design.
All of Joshfs work utilizes some form of a cut and past
technique. In his video work he appropriates images to
give them a different meaning. Joshfs sculptural works
give the impression that a moment in time has been recorded,
but the humans involved in this moment have been removed
and replaced with machines. The result is a sense of dread.
Anger is a dominant element and gives the pieces an outsider
or antisocial bent. Currently his work examines ideas
of the empty desire that mass media injects into its audience,
and the possible lines of action to negate this desire. |
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FAMEFAME - declaration of war
Famefame exists for the production
and promotion of the aggressive, intense and volatile. Our
aim is to promote an immediacy, that transcends the physical
means of the work itself, threatening the boundaries of
video, sculpture, performance and event arts, audio and
music, generating new strategies for culture making.
Our work is a furious attack on the mysterious doors of
the impossible.
Moralism and every utilitarian cowardice have atrophied
our faith in romantic notions of purity, beauty and truth.
Civilization has domesticated the feral spirit of the living.
This program of convenient submission is one of castration.
We are specialists in Revolt.
We turn bravely to face the abyss, without fear, without
hope; we dive headlong into the oblivion of a tele-visionary
existence.
We undertake an impossible crusade. Unlike our predecessors,
who have resigned themselves to the flesh piles of end time,
we seek to find the bleeding edge of the advance guard of
contemporary thought, while giving a virtuous transmutation
of the passions of the doomed.
We live in the absolute: primitive geometry; experiential
association; and the empirical investigation into the evolving
nature of being.
Our work is the residual iconography of the new ethos condensed
into a singular gesture. We give form to the wall of history
as it crashes into itself, obliterating the lines of demarcation,
to break out of time into the experience of the perpetual
present, the infinite moment, the absolute now.
Death for the dead, life for the living.
FAMEFAME 2002
www.famefame.com |
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Organized by: VIDEOART CENTER Tokyo, Tokyo Wonder Site
Supported by: Canadian Embassy
Subsidized byFPOLA Art Foundation, Japan Arts Fund
Participating as TransIslands Project
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