In keeping with the zombie theme I keep bumping up against (in fact, as I write this I’m on my way to dragon*con in Atlanta where I will – you guessed it – dress up as a zombie), Paivi and I attended a staged “zombie” raid in DC a few weeks ago – this time as photographers. There weren’t as many zombies as we had hoped, but the effect couldn’t have been better. The zombies: Scared a woman back into an elevator, scared Starbucks patrons by clawing windows, broke a metro escalator by riding down at the same time, converted innocent bystanders on the metro train to zombies, mixed and mingled with Scientology Protesters in costume, and finally ended up at the MTV Real World DC House where they convinced one of the cast members to put on some makeup and a zombi-fied tshirt.
For the raid, my goal was actually to create an 80’s style fim strip of the raid (to be projected)using a cheap half frame 35mm camera. I did get some great shots, but I had the camera 90 degrees the wrong way the whole time (horizontally positioning the camera resulted in….vertically framed shots. ugh).
I’ll try and figure out a fix for that later, but for now I wanted to post some of my digital shots from the raid. I think they’d some of the best shits I’ve gotten in awhile. In keeping with the theme, though, I did break one of my rules and really played with the colorization of the shots to make them feel more apocalypse-movie than they did by themselves. Let me know how you like the results?
Art, Community, District of Columbia, Events, Life, Local, Photography, Washington DC, digital | admin | September 3, 2009 |
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costumes, DC, dead people, District, facebook, flash mob, fun, infection, kids, living dead, march, raid, Washington, zombie, zombies
Last year I did a super-sized meta self portrait exploring identity and the relationship between technology and art. The year before, I did a Second Life virtual reality installation dealing with similar concepts in a different way and how our concepts of location and identity are gradually becoming more fuzzy.
Originally, I was going to put up my webcam based audio visualizer written with Quartz Composer. I’m still going to be using Quartz, but the content will be completely different.
This year, take a look and you tell me what it’s about. Or not. Or who. I think this year, the name might make the rose. I have some specific points of view I’m coming from, but responsibility for defining other specific parts of the meaning are intentionally being passed on to the viewer.
Look for the video being projected onto a wall near the elevators on the 7th floor:
Floor-7
Area-12
Type-C
Space-1
Artomatic: http://artomatic.org
Also, remember, you can also visit ArtDC.org for current unofficial discussions and updates on Artomatic news, events, participants, etc:
http://artdc.org/forum/index.php?board=37.0
"Quartz Composer", 2009, Art, Artomatic, Business, District of Columbia, Events, Personal, Process, Projects, Technique, Washington DC, artist, new media | admin | April 26, 2009 |
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2009, AOM, Art, artist, Artomatic, dada, entertainment, fun, identity, installation, meta, projection, recursion, show, video