Screening
Studies in Perception: Early Computer Shorts
Saturday, November 16, 2013, 3:30 p.m.
In the 1950s and 1960s, artists and animators turned the computer into an experimental tool as a means of altering perception and expanding consciousness. Works such as Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambert’s oscilloscope film Around is Around and Pierre Hébert’s Around Perception are displays of overwhelmingly vivid geometric cutouts set against color fields, flicker patterns, and swirling vortices; James Whitney’s Lapis is a marvelous montage of kaleidoscopic mandalas; and John Stehura’s Cibernetik 5.3 is a mind-bending array of computer graphics, photography, and optical printing.
Dir. Bell Labs, AT&T. 1968, 15 mins. Digital projection.
Around Is Around
Dir. Norman McLaren, Evelyn Lambert. 1951, 10 mins. Digibeta. Loan courtesy of producer, National Film Board of Canada.
Abstronic
Dir. Mary Ellen Bute. 1952, 7 mins. Digital projection courtesy Center for Visual Music, www.centerforvisualmusic.org
Mood Contrasts
Dir. Mary Ellen Bute. 1953, 7 mins. 16mm print courtesy Center for Visual Music, www.centerforvisualmusic.org |
Lapis
Dir. James Whitney. 1966, 9 mins. Archival 16mm © Estate of John and James Whitney.
Digital Experiments At Bell Labs
Dir. Nam June Paik. 1966, 4 mins. Digital projection.
Poemfield No. 2
Dirs. Stan VanDerBeek, Kenneth Knowlton. 1966, 6 mins. Digital projection.
Around Perception
Dir. Pierre Hébert. 1966, 16 mins. Digibeta.
Computer Movie No. 2
Dir. CTG. 1969, 8 mins. Digital projection.
Cibernetik 5.3
Dir. John Stehura. 1960–65, 8 mins., Digibeta courtesy Center for Visual Music, www.centerforvisualmusic.org
Free with Museum admission on a first-come, first-served basis. Museum members may reserve tickets in advance by calling 718 777 6800. For more information about becoming a Museum member and to join online, please click here.