Soviet-era scifi animation by Vladimir Tarasov. Apparently acid found its way to the Soviet Union as well.
Soviet-era scifi animation by Vladimir Tarasov. Apparently acid found its way to the Soviet Union as well.
Ambient drone sounds reflect off the primitive shapes, conducting electricity.
A meditative piece by Shusaku Kaji for Japan’s digital video festival, DOTMOV.
Last week something upbeat; this week something dark and heavy. Balance is key.
By Dóra Keresztes.
The film, in her own description “grows from a microscopic cell division into a living, surging image-stream of incessant transformation. Sheer intuition, embracing emotion and the significance of interpreting dreams pulsate within it. The emblem-like symbols, mythical symbols of animals and man, reminiscent of the archaic figures of people of nature, appear in an all-embracing organic frame, perpetually taking shape, arousing the notion of cave-aperture or the womb”.
Nice Datamosh/remoshed Kaleidoscopic video by datartist Phillip Stearns. A remix of Idle No More, by Stine Marie Jacobsen, for the 2013 Turku Biennial in Finland. Bonus: check out his Pointer Feedback:
La Faim (Hunger) is a 1974 short film by Peter Foldes, and one of the first computer generated films. An impressive work with a psychedelic edge.
Them distorted, twisted Lovebirds from the psychedelic dimensions.
What realms do they occupy in their amorous inactivity?
Excellently weird video from Nic Hamilton set to music by Actress.