Hello, Kate, some videos of Joan Leandre, Toni Serra and Xavier Hurtado deal with meditative ideas. Here you can watch some of them: https://www.retroyou.org/archive_2015-1994.html https://vimeo.com/barzakh http://www.desorg.org/autors/hurtado/
I also thought on videos like *Let Me ASMR You* by the Clint Enns. It is no longer online, though. http://www.visionaryfilm.net/2015/12/let-me-asmr-you-clint-enns.html Best, Albert On Sat, Dec 14, 2019 at 1:46 AM kate lain <[email protected]> wrote: > My gratitude to all of you who have responded to my query both on- and > off-list. I appreciate all the suggestions for works to check out -- lots > of great stuff to look at and think about as I move forward with this > workshop! > > And Dave, thank you for offering your critiques of my request and your > suggestions for how I might approach my class differently. > > My best, > Kate > > On Wed, Dec 11, 2019 at 3:29 PM kate lain <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi, Frameworkers. I’m teaching a multi-part film/video-making workshop >> for high schoolers. We’re exploring rituals of care, different self-care >> practices, calming techniques, etc., and the students will be making a >> collaborative collage film/video related to all that. I’d love to show >> them some examples of moving image works for inspiration (or send them >> links to things they can check out on their own). >> >> Do you have any recommendations for short films, videos, animations, >> gifs, video art, etc. in the experimental/art vein that are that are >> viewable online that might fit with this? (I'm not looking for things like >> straight documentaries on self-care or anything -- I'm thinking about works >> that are more poetic, more in the arena of video art or experimental film.) >> Note that these students are brand new to experimental film, so I’m not >> looking for particularly challenging works that could be frustrating to >> them. Instead, I’m looking for pieces that are slower, poetic, perhaps >> repetitive, meditative that someone might be able to relax into. A couple >> of films that come to mind are Amy Halpern’s “Invocation” (except there's >> no digital version, dang it, and I can only show digital at this school) >> and James Whitney’s “Lapis”. But I hope to find more works that, like >> "Invocation," work with representational imagery—and works that, in >> particular, use documentation/documentary-style moving images since the >> students will recording visuals and audio at the school site where we’re >> working (though we may do some basic animation as well). >> >> I’m particularly interested in works by artists of color and queer >> artists, but I’m open to other suggestions as well. Thank you in advance >> for any recommendations! >> >> Best, >> Kate Lain >> >> -- >> kate lain >> katemakesfilms.com >> >> > > -- > kate lain > katemakesfilms.com > insta: @katelainprojects <https://www.instagram.com/katelainprojects/> > _______________________________________________ > FrameWorks mailing list > [email protected] > https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks > -- http://albertalcoz.com/ <http://www.albertalcoz.com/>
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