Hello all,
My name is Kyle Mosler and I am a senior BFA dance major here at UF. In my choreographic experience here at the UF School of Theatre and Dance, I have performed a solo which had a video projection which served as a house of memories for the audience to interpret as well as creating a small dance film based on another work I created in 2012. I am also finishing up a small video art/documentary about contemporary dance throughout Africa as a part of my research that I conducted during a six-week dance workshop in Senegal, West Africa over the past summer. I am interested in utilizing the skills I attain from this class to improve my ability to make projections and dance films in the future. It is a rapidly growing interest in the dance community and I share that hunger. Although it's incredibly primitive, here's my dance film, if you're interested in viewing it.
http://vimeo.com/42764826
Patrick Pagano - Large Scale Graphics Research
Projection Design
“Projection Design” offers a hands-on approach to the design, planning and execution of digital projections in a variety of performance spaces by using a combination of industry standard and open source research software tools. This blog will serve as an online text for the developing book, "Technical Ecstasy" and link for the web-readings, online tutorials,software resources historical examples, video art and performance examples and essential class communications for Projection Design class taught by Patrick Pagano
1 comment:
I'm going to post my comment on the dante quartet here. In this 6 minutes it took to watch, I feel that my thoughts and feelings shifted often. I spent time in so many different emotional states. At a point I was frustrated because I craved for something else to occur. Another time i felt overwhelmed by the beauty of the colors and textures as they sped by, wishing I could see them longer. I was also under a bit of stress because I could never read all of the words before they disappeared. Not only this, but I felt tension from watching the flashing and white noise type effect of the piece.
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