This is a kool kat animation made in the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic. The director Priit Pärn is an animation legend still going strong.
This is a kool kat animation made in the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic. The director Priit Pärn is an animation legend still going strong.
Carolina Melis’s video are nothing less than enchanting. This particular is not only psychedelic, but also send sout a message against violence. Check out her Vimeo channel, She made my day look brigher.
This hypnotic short film won the Oscar in 1974 for Best Short Subject, Animated Films.
The creators, Frank and Caroline Mouris, currently live in New York looking after their dogs.
You might be able to trace the roots in the animations of Harvey Benschoter back to that joyous sense of anarchy we find everywhere in the likes of Monty Python or Frank Zappa. But there is a very important difference today, which he points out in the interview he was nice enough to give us last week.
While the basic forms of psychedelic culture might have developed with the determination and within the limitations of a counterculture, not only its artefacts but also its attitude of transgression and exploration has now mingled with everyday’s expression. Here on DPV we have seen psychedelic commercials, lots of psychedelic music clips, psychedelic video games e.a. (just browse the categories on this blog). Psychedelic culture is no longer a cosy niche but a major part of our cultural consciousness, the very way we percieve and live our everyday life.
But with the limitation of the countercultural stance it loses its clear definition and purpose as well. So beyond reaction, let’s sharpen our awareness once again.
Just as flashing light effects and pulsing color patterns have become a common sight, the most common and available things might become the sight or sound or smell that will blow our mind.
Henry Miller once put it that way: getting drunk on pure water.
How did you encounter the weird and the psychedelic in the first
place and what kept you coming back for more?
I guess I was first exposed to things weird and psychedelic through music, much of it through skateboarding culture. I was introduced to a lot of great music early on like The Dead Milkmen, Butt Hole Surfers, experimental tracks on Ministry albums, early Cure b-sides, and an old Frank Zappa mix tape my dad gave me. My interest grew from there. For whatever reason, I’m naturally drawn to weird stuff. Maybe it had something to do with how bland so much of mainstream culture seemed to me. Now though, mainstream culture itself often seems bizarre and psychedelic, even if unintentionally so. Sports mascots, television commercials, and Christmas light displays, are a few random examples. Whatever sparked my interest, I think it now has less to do with reacting against anything, and more just that I see value in weirdness for its own sake.
In comic strips and animation psychedelic themes seem to be around from early on (Little Nemo and Dumbo or Fantasia come to mind).
How are these things connected for you or how did these things come together in your own work?
There’s something inherently strange and dreamlike about animation as a medium (and comics too, for that matter), so it would be surprising if those kinds of themes didn’t show up. Part of it, I’m sure, has to do with the cultural climate those early works were made in, but I don’t feel qualified to really speculate about that too much.
Psychedelia is all about exploring the subconscious, amplifying and distorting it. And that’s something I’m interested in doing with animation.
There are a lot of ways to travel the brainwaves widely available these days.
Is there a way you clearly prefer, a way you think is underrated or
one you’d simply like to point out?
Well, I don’t take any drugs. But there are other ways to alter consciousness, as you mentioned. I never could get the hang of meditation. Music, or really, sound in general, is a powerful way to alter consciousness. It’s also a great way to generate visual ideas. When I’m working on an animation, I start with the music I’m synchronizing it to, and create a basic motion guide, which is just an abstract animated sketch of how it feels to me. Everything else is built on that.
I guess there’s always sensory deprivation chambers too. Not sure if anyone still uses those. If you watch the movie Altered States you might get the idea that going into one of those tanks will make you enter a primitive caveman state of mind, and that you’ll end up running around killing and eating zoo animals. At least that’s my memory of the movie. It’s been a few years since I saw it. Pretty ridiculous movie, by the way.
I remember when the Beastie Boys used to be one of the most interesting bands around. Now after quite some time they are back to show that they still rock. To do that they got a huge group of known actors, a bottle of LSD and created this short film.
I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. It made me look up my old B-Boys CDs

Mathieu Devavry lives in my city : Lyon,France. I first met this unique dancer, painter, scriptwriter and movie director in the street. Later on, we met several more times randomly in my quarter. The connection was obvious, exciting and really cool.
Not so long after, he asked me if I would like to work with him on his dance/theatre and video project, a huge show mixing different people and media, I accepted this exciting opportunity immediately.
When I had to pick an artist to interview for the first DPV anniversary, Mathieu was the first to come to mind. We corresponded (in French, this piece was later translated to English) regarding the story of his artistic activities from 2003 to 2011.
Mathieu tells about the last years:
During the summer 2003, after I’ve met three artists and a producer, we started to write a scenario but never put it in images.
Then, in 2005, with the collective “Chouech”, we got back to the project, giving it a name – “Sous Cid Toi” – which, as its name in French points, is a suicidal project based on The Dance of the Painter, but it was a failure… Our copyrights were stolen by the fake producer…and we forbid the use of our images.
In 2007, after I settled in Lyon, I met Jean Baptiste Lepreux and Jeanne Morel and decided to write the scenario again. The first images revealed themselves, the framework was born, and the introduction in “stop-motion’ was realized: “the suicide in the bathtub”. We were setting up the cube, the main point of the story, but then a drama occurred. The project was put on hold after one of the film makers died…
Three years passed, and here we are in the summer 2010, after some discussion, meetings, and making contacts with the video team, the light team, the music team, the photo team and the writers, it became a 18 persons engaged in this project called “Indicium”. It was a fantastic experience!
« INDICIUM »
Babasama: Let’s talk about the story of the central character in this
Devavry: The first idea was to tell the story of a girl in trouble who is between life and death, or more exactly, in a slice of life, in a tunnel, before the light at it’s end, between the little death, a coitus, a Sleep apnea…This moment is transcribed with different medias, it represents her mental imprisonment, materialized by a white cube (a square, an episode…). She appears in a fetal position, between reincarnation, rebirth and shamanic vision. A naked body in the middle of this cube, between disappearance/appearance/dream/reality, it takes life, takes consciousness of his limbs.
She glides into this restricted frame, always in interaction with various evolutions: birth, awakening, body consciousness, observation, retrospection, seeking for freedom, mental imprisonment, observation, aloneness, irritation, anxiety, crisis, escape, destruction of the cube with strips of her life, tearing down pieces of journal paper from the wall of the cube…
Flooded in the journal paper, she get lost inside it, then comes out again cleared, dressed with her souvenirs, she realizes that she can’t get out of being alone, this psychedelic craziness, between a bad-trip, dream, reality, consciousness. It’s an open window between ambiguity of the suicide and a psychedelic orgasm.
Babasamas: What are your artistic references in this story?
Devavry: For the first part (2003-2010), concerning the video part, Yves Klein is THE reference!
His live performances are situated between a plastic showpiece and a scenic piece. For the second part, the one we’re working on at the moment (2011), Josef Nadj was an important artist in my aesthetic construction. He helped me, he was a bridge. For me, he is the link between the canvas and the stage. He found the process that reveals for me the astral travel (how the lifeless doll on a painting in an attic and the dancer on the stage, living the canvas through the motion, the sound and obviously, the aesthetic…
Babasamas: Can you tell a bit more about the psychedelic side of the project?
Devavry: Our goal with these effects was to calibrate, with blue tones, to get away from the “real”. The mesh size of the beginning brings this world between virtual and reality. Disappearance of the character emphasizes this psychedelic state.
She takes out “strips of her life”, letting some blurred images, destructing this solitude, this bad-trip, and coming out from this negation to enter the reality of life, like awaking to consciousness.
In the second part, she gets out of her body, like an astral rise, an awakening after death. Now, she travels inside this known environment, in relative freedom, between life and death. The mouse hole could symbolize an exit, an escape, but also an endless loop, an eternal renewal.
Babasamas: Finally, can you tell us a bit your 2011 project?
Devavry: While trying to schedule “Incidium” in several short film festivals, I realized it was not complete, and hardly comprehensible. I tried to develop the project on stage, then met Manuel Pons (director) and Samantha Barenson (writer). We wrote again the text, the script, the choreography and ending of the whole story…
We are now in a final stage of creation, with 45 actors, artists and technicians; the play is being staged for the first time onMay 31, 2011and takes the forms of an exhibition a show and meetings.
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Moreover, here are the links of his other stuff, enjoy !
Paintings: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/fbx/?set=a.216185532364.135028.621437364
Various stuff: http://www.myspace.com/devavry_mathieu/photos
Poems (in French and Spanish): http://www.facebook.com/media/set/fbx/?set=a.216185532364.135028.621437364
and for anything else: devavry_mat[at]hotmail.fr
Freak Owls – optimistic automatic
valse statique-la théorie du combo
The Aston Shuffle – Your Love
Here are some of the more explicitly psychedelic samples from the portfolio of Maxime Bruneel, a young French graphic & motion designer currently working from New York.
Cool animation short from the late Armenian director Robert Sahakyants (1950–2009) (IMDB info). You can choose English or Russian subtitles. More Sahakyants productions coming your way in the future.
Is psychedelia movement beyond the trace of the Other?
The video above is one of the most beautiful feedback trips I’ve seen in a while. Enjoy!
A surrealistic-psychedelic mixture with a bizarre frolicsome Dali figure, by American animator John R. Dilworth (2005).