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Video Locomotion (man performing forward hand leap)

Peer Bode

1978 00:05:10 United StatesEnglishB&WSilent4:3Video

Description

"Homage to Eadweard Muybridge. A historical Muybridge photo grid is put into an electronic video signal space. Working with collected postcards, in this case, the durational photo series by the 19th century photographer Eadweard Muybridge, this video re-enacts the proto-cinema moment using two varyingly synchronized b+w video cameras and a video keyer. The movement effect is created by detuning the horizontal and vertical video sychronization of one of the video cameras. One of the video camera’s image remains still while the other drifts horizontally and vertically at varying speeds. Drift and doubling takes place. When the video camera’s horizontal frequency doubles the man appears to double up, on top of himself. A basic video signal structure, sync, along with a basic video process, keying, together create a cinema like shutter, creating a crude persistence of vision machine. The physical structures of the time-detuned and keyed video signals bring to Muybridge's photogrid a new electronic animation of false movements. Keying the second moving camera image over the first, the real-time composite ironically creates the shutter like film (cinema) effect.

The Muybridge photo grid sent through significant video architectures creates a new real-time moving image event, moments to see the persistence of vision. With the keying and the drifting we simultaneously see within the image the transitioning back and forth between the single drifting image elements and the illusion of continuous movement. The constructs of video and still photography cross within this evocation of cinematic magic. The thresholds revealed are those of the apparatuses of photography, video and that of our perceptual cognitive systems. If Muybridges’s photogrids are the proto-cinema moment, what might the electronic animations of Video Locomotions (man performing forward hand leap) be the precursor to? Possibly, it is that of an electronic art, which we are now only beginning to know and live in with confidence. The overall structure of the five-minute video piece is that of periodic pause and movement. The screen-duration of the frozen photogrids increases as the screen-duration of the photogrids in movement decreases. The apparatus for magic; one postcard, two b&w cameras, one screwdriver for camera time-base detuning, fingers and video keying. This piece was made at the moment when we also began to use digital frame buffers. The flowing movements of the original recording were made with real-time analog electronics. The frozen frames were the result of another recording using a new digital frame-grabbing device. The two, the analog and the digital, were then edited together. The analog signal/culture crossing into the digital, it turned out, marked another historical threshold moment captured in Video Locomotion (man performing forward hand leap)." 

– Peer Bode

 

About Peer Bode

Video artist Peer Bode, in a career spanning over five decades, has created an extensive body of work that experiments with electronic media events, active perception systems, and culture. A graduate of Binghamton University’s Cinema Department, Bode studied with Larry Gottheim, Ken Jacobs, Nicholas Ray, Peter Kubelka, Ralph Hocking, Sol Levine, Daniel Barnett and later with Woody and Steina Vasulka, Paul Sharits, Tony Conrad and Hollis Frampton at SUNY Buffalo’s Media Study Program.

From 1974-1987, Bode worked at the Experimental Television Center (ETC), which was established in 1969 by his lifelong mentor and friend Ralph Hocking. Bode made his foundational early works with the Paik-Abe Synthesizer and Jones Colorizer at ETC, and later used the Rutt-Etra Synthesizer at Media Study Buffalo. Working together with video engineer David Jones at ETC, Bode built and created extensive recordings with two digital video prototype instruments, which became a significant tools within his oeuvre. The two real time, analog/digital prototypes he built, evolved to become the Jones FB-1 Buffer, used by communities of artists in numerous video studios.

Bode’s work has been widely exhibited nationally and internationally at venues including: MoMA, The Whitney Biennial, The Anthology Film Archives, The American Center (France), The II Biennial International Video Festival (Colombia), The European Media Art Festival (Germany), The Impakt Film and Video Art Festival (the Netherlands), The Viper Festival (Switzerland), Image Farm (Japan), and B.S.1 (China). Bode headed the Video Arts Program at the School of Art and Design, NYSCC at Alfred University,1987-2020, where he introduced and co-founded and co-directed, together with Jessie Shefrin and Joseph Scheer, the Institute for Electronic Arts (IEA),1998-2020. Bode is Professor of Art, Emeritus at the School of Art and Design, NYSCC at Alfred University, Alfred, NY.

In 1998 Pauline Oliveros, Peer Bode and Andrew Deutsch founded the electro-acoustic project, Carrier Band. Currently, Carrier Band is comprised of Peer Bode, Andrew Deutsch and Rebekkah Palov.