Wednesday 17 January 2018

LAUAN601: Module Evaluation







Practical Evaluation

  • The practical has allowed me break the barrier of intricate technicalities and uses purely imaginative approach within the poetic realm of visual music. 
  • I have used various traditional medium and let their materiality speak of my expression.
  • I have discovered that visual music is not about the music, it is about articulating personal impression of phenomenological experiences.  
  • As I do more of them I felt more engaged with my thought as I embraced the sensation of movements in free form animation.
  • KinoManual experimental workshop has taught myself about the process of direct-on-film animation and creating synthetic sound. It made me realise that everything is in the grasp of the hand as long as the artists have strong passion in their personal emotive expression.
  • It is easy to lose train of thought in the process of free form animation, which resulted on an incoherent animation during the process and have to rethink of doing things differently. 
  • This is why it is hard to put a full stop in the whole practical investigation as I learned new things every time with the framework of embracing the outcome of without having a solid plan. 
  • I found that the process of visual music is similar to meditation in which the physical sensations of things are felt through constant rehearsals of closely observing our surroundings. 
  • In the future, I want to do more of the experiments using nicer music or go even more abstract with the noises, or perhaps create a hybrid animation combining both narrative and abstract aspects; like those animations screened in festivals, I want my animation to have a bit of both.

Tuesday 16 January 2018

Animation: Birds

To complete my practical methodology, I did a visual music piece using the chirping noise I have gathered from Hyde Park.

Mapping out noises at the park

The chirping sound is a fugue. Its impression is conveyed in Klee's painting below.

Fugue in Red (1921) by Paul Klee


Media: Acrylic paints on cartridge paper

I applied the direct-on-film animation technique while doing the visual music of the chirping sound by lining up papers and make long brush strokes over several pages and shapes which interweave.

Sunday 14 January 2018

Animation: Triangles

Inspired by Boogodobiegodongo to create a free form animation using oil pastels. I have developed a workflow by rehearsing the rhythmical pattern in my mind, drawing loosely based on it, then match it up to the music.

Learning points

  • Developed an intuition for timing and spacing.
  • Oil pastels' rough texture combined with loose lines creates jittery movements, saturates the screen.
  • Within the loose synchronisation, there are coincidences in which the sound and visual are synchronised. Having this variation allows the whole composition to achieve harmony.


Peter Millard

Millard's naive drawings are inspired by Basquiat and Dubuffet. By incorporating this style in his animation, he creates a sensorial experience of the manic in everyday life.

Man from Naples (1982) by Jean-Michel Basquiat
The Lost Traveller (1950) by Jean Dubuffet


Animation: Monster Inside the House

Deconstructing the anatomy of a radiator.

Possible forms that goes with the sound rupture.
Learning points:
- Be more spontaneous
- Take the observational approach, using forms from surroundings
- Using characters. Inspired by Boogodobiegodongo and rubber hose animation from 1920s

Critical Reflection:
- I tend to put moving character at the centre of the screen
- Should think about composition within the whole screen

Visual Journal: Len Lye

Lye is interested in motion as a language of art. 

Vibrating sensation through sequence of vivid colours and repeated patterns inspired by tribal art characterises Len Lye's work.

It has vast influence in the history of music video.
Stills from Rainbow Dance

Applying what I have learnt from Len Lye's work:

Potato Stamp Pattern Test

Mark making using paints and dyes by Len Lye compared to the organic look of the potato stamp

Marks conveying a sequence of motion

Repeating patterns in a direction

Variation of overlapping patterns

Brushing action

 Patterns Len Lye's work is inspired by tribal art and cave paintings

There are other exceptions of some monochromatic films and sketches

Primitivism in Free Radicals and Tusalava: messy, strong lines brings out the energy of the jitter

Study Sketches: Mapping the impression of movement through patterns

Visual Journal: Contemporary Inspirations

Books on Books by RAY

Abstract visual composition made using paper cutouts. Mechanical movements tells a satirical narrative of the future of graphic design in China.



Jazz Factory by Ed Cheverton

A unique approach to visual music: Loose synchronisation, timed so that the visuals seemingly produces the sound. Vibrating textures on the background follows the audio trajectories as an accompaniment to the melodic stem. 



Eye Echo from RCA MA Animation Workshop 2016

Visual music exercises done in RCA to explore the effect of vibrations using jittery textures and colour contrast. Judging from these visual responses to the audio, it can be discerned that the visual elements gets more saturated as the stems in the audio increases.



Jazz Foo Foo by Emanuele Kabu
Abstract music video: Uses textures and repetition of sequence helps to convey the pulsing energetic rhythm.



Colorimetrie en Mouvement by Nicolas Menard

Menard creates a mathematical colorimetric system based on his appreciation of Josef Albers' theory of interaction of colour. The film is a montage of recording during the development of the app, showing the metamorphosis of shapes and colour randomly jumping from one rule to another. Soundtrack applied to make the abstract universe more illustrative.


Woop, woop, chop by Nicolas Menard

Early development of colorimetric system.



Spank Shot by Gina Kamentsky

Repetition of audio to create the comedic effect of the players fighting in hockey game. The intensity is conveyed through flashing colours in the background to match up with the upbeat rhythm.

Wednesday 10 January 2018

Visual Journal: Different Stages of Geometrical Abstraction

Basic abstraction of concrete objects:
  1. Non-objective fragmentation
  2. Deconstruction
  3. Two dimensional
  4. Non-figurative two dimensional




Geometrical abstraction used in performing arts:

Dance Curves: On the Dances of Palucca (1926) by Wassily Kandinsky

Dominant Geometry on Chaplin's Performance

30 seconds gesture drawing exercise to convey dynamics of motion:

In this experiments I am trying to abstract concrete imageries in the 'Athletes of God' exercise from https://www.quickposes.com/en into its dominant curves and lines to express the direction of force and weight. The purpose is to accentuate the distribution of energy based on observation.








Wassily Kandinsky - On Spirituality in Art

In the book, Kandinsky explained that spiritual harmony in music is taken from natural phenomena and a matter of soul alone. Similarly, abstract painter is studying and proving their material to create the effect of spiritual vibration.

Kandinsky believes in the spiritual nature of colour:
  • No objective connotation
  • Synaesthesia - 'hear colours' and 'see sound'.
  • Having to paint just circles, makes him focuses on colours interaction.
  • Psychic effects of colours echoes and reverberates to other senses.
  • Manipulation of unsuitable combination gives fresh possibilities to harmony.
Colour Study: Squares with Co centric Circles