Showing posts with label Artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artist. Show all posts

Friday, November 25, 2011

In "The Artist," silence is golden

LOS ANGELES | Fri Nov 25, 2011 1:26pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actor Jean Dujardin won this year's best actor award at the Cannes film festival for playing a man who hardly says a word, but not because his character couldn't speak. In fact, he says quite a lot.

Dujardin stars in "The Artist," a silent movie made more than 80 years after those films gave way to "talkies," and the movie has Hollywood buzzing with Oscar talk. Directed by Frenchman Michel Hazanavicius, it tells of a silent film star (Dujardin) whose career is cut short by the advent of sound.

"People think silent movies are intellectual," Hazanavicius told Reuters about his old-is-new-again creation. "It's just the opposite. It's really sensual. Instead, talking movies use dialogue in an intellectual way to tell stories."

In "The Artist," Dujardin plays George Valentin, a pompous leading man in 1920's Hollywood. French actress Berenice Bejo plays Peppy Miller, an ingenue looking for a big break.

The pair meet and fall in love, but the advent of talkies brings divergent fortunes. Valentin's career implodes, while the singing and dancing Miller rockets to stardom.

"The Artist" is, at its heart, a rather simple tale of personal redemption and love, but making a silent movie in these modern days of action, special effects and 3D was anything but easy.

"Everybody tells you that it's not do-able because nobody wants to see a silent movie," he said. "The first person I had to convince was myself."

Giving Hazanavicius and his investors confidence was his enthusiasm for the project and his success with a pair of spy spoofs, "OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies" and "OSS 117: Lost in Rio." Those movies mimicked early James Bond such as 1962's "Dr. No," and starred Dujardin in the lead role.

SILENT CHALLENGES

Bringing back the silent form for modern audiences was itself the obvious challenge, Hazanavicius said, noting that what appears to be a simpler storytelling form is deceptively complicated for both the filmmaker and audience.

"It's a paradox, in a way. The actors are very far from reality. You can't hear them. They are black-and-white," he explained. "But you fill the gap, as an audience, with your imagination. You create the voice, you create the sound design, you create your own dialogue."

And casting, he said, was also critical, because he needed actors who were experts at expressing ideas, thoughts and emotions with their body movements and facial expressions.

Dujardin recalled that when he first read the script, he was impressed by the director's ambition, but he admitted he was initially nervous about some of the more dramatic scenes.

"Up until then, we'd made comedies where we had a lot of fun with characters and situations," he explained. "'The Artist' was full of emotion. I was touched by all it said about cinema, its history and actors.

"I had no lines to hold on to ... But I discovered that silent film was almost an advantage. You just have to think of the feeling for it to show," Dujardin said.

The coming of sound permanently altered the language of cinema, transforming an image-focused medium into one often driven by words. But Hazanavicius feels something more was compromised.

"We lost a universal language and something which was really specific to the medium: to tell a story with moving images," he said.

It's no coincidence that many of Hollywood's greatest directors got their start in silent films: John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Raoul Walsh and Howard Hawks, to name a few.

Still, the director readily concedes that comedic filmmakers like Billy Wilder and Preston Sturges made witty and sophisticated dialogue their trademark.

"If you look at a great director like Ernst Lubitsch, his talking comedies are much better than his silent comedies."

And yet, Hazanavicius said he discovered that making a silent film gave him a better understanding of his craft.

"Watching a silent, I get the same feeling I had when I was a child looking at the movies in theaters," he confides. "I wanted to share that experience with an audience today."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Chris Michaud)

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Saturday, July 9, 2011

Secret Service raids Apple store artist for snapping 1000 spy photos (Yahoo! News)

A young digital artist secretly recorded shoppers peering into computers at New York Apple stores

A sneaky act of experimental Apple store art led the Secret Service to raid a young Brooklyn resident's apartment this morning. Kyle McDonald, a 25-year-old digital artist, secretly snapped a thousand images of unsuspecting Apple store shoppers for a project that sought to explore "how we stare at computers and how computers see us." Using his own custom spyware, McDonald secretly documented exactly that over the course of 3 days in June.

To pull the feat off, McDonald installed the hidden program onto Macs at New York's 14th street and Soho Apple stores. The stealth software, which made use of the computer's built-in cameras, took photographs of unaware New Yorker shoppers as they peered into the seeming abyss of the computer screen. He collected the photos, which were automatically transmitted to a private server, but had to reinstall the software in person each morning during the experiment.

Earlier this week, a video that documents his undertaking in full went live on Vimeo, followed by a Tumblr blog also appropriately entitled "People Staring at Computers." McDonald says he would honor individual requests to remove the photos, though his Twitter account suggests that the federal raid hasn't dampened his commitment to the feat of public art.

The stealthy undertaking resulted in the confiscation of McDonald's two computers, his iPod, and some other storage devices, but it isn't yet clear if the McDonald was actually in violation of any laws. While the Secret Service warrant cited 'computer fraud' as the cause for the raid, the clever digital artist reportedly asked an Apple security worker for permission to take photos in the store — though the guard probably couldn't have imagined the scope of what he had in mind.

(Source)

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Artist Gets Secret Service Visit Over Apple Store Webcam Spying (PC Magazine)

A Brooklyn-based artist has caught the attention of the Secret Service after installing software on Apple Store computers that takes Webcam photos every two minutes, and posting those images on the Internet.

The "@secretservice just stopped by to investigate ... and took my laptop. please assume they're reading any emails you send me," Kyle McDonald tweeted on Thursday.

McDonald took the photos and posted them on a Tumblr blog called "People Staring at Computers." He told Mashable that he got permission from Apple security guards to take photos in the store, but it's unclear if they were aware that McDonald also meant installing software and snapping Webcam shots. Given that it attracted Secret Service attention, it's safe to say that not everyone was excited by the project.

When asked on Twitter if he got permission from every person whose photo appeared on his blog, McDonald said no because "as i understand, photography in open spaces is legal unless explicitly prohibited." He will, however, remove any photos if asked, he said.

It appears McDonald was committed, however; Apple wipes its computers every night, so he had to reinstall the program every day he took photos, Mashable reports. That program focused only on photos; "keylogging public machines would make me uncomfortable," he tweeted.

McDonald said the warrant he received from the Secret Service said his actions violated 18 USC section 1030. That deals with "fraud and related activity in connection with computers," and covers, among other things, accessing a computer without authorization.

McDonald said he contacted the Electronic Frontier Foundation for help with the case, and "they've encouraged me to stay quiet for now," he tweeted.

In a video (below) describing the project, McDonald said he was "thinking about how we stare at computers" and thought, "maybe if we could see what our computer sees we would stare differently?" As a result, he took 1,000 photos over three days at computers in New York Apple Stores. The video shows McDonald at the 14th Street store for what he called a "public exhibition." As shoppers are perusing Macs, the screen flashes and takes a photo; sometimes it displays photos of other people. Most shoppers look confused and try to get their images off the screen. "Most people just hit 'escape,'" when their photos popped up, the video said.

McDonald's fascination with faces continues. He just released a face-tracking app, FaceOSC.

People Staring at Computers from Kyle McDonald on Vimeo.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Artist turns old motherboards into colorful works of art (Yahoo! News)

We've seen people do some pretty remarkable things with their old computer hardware, but artist Joe Dragt's motherboard paintings are definitely the most worthy of hanging on your living room wall. When Dragt, who works out of his home in Arizona, saw a stack of old, unwanted computers, inspiration struck. "The complexity and patterns of all the circuits could make for stunning backgrounds. I asked if I could take one computer home for a trial run, and it just blossomed from there," he says.

Dragt has been selling his art for over 15 years, but only recently began using discarded computer components in his work. He notes that while old motherboards make for interesting canvases, there is an added benefit: they're free. Compared to a traditional, high-quality painting canvas, working on a piece of donated computer equipment is a huge money saver, not to mention some inventive recycling.

In addition to being cool to look at, each piece carries a subtle reference to computer lingo; his paintings titled "Memory" and "RAM" are pictured above. Dragt artist sells his works on his website, and offers both prints of the art as well as original pieces.

Tomorrow and Beyond via Geekosystem

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