Week 04 – The Avant Garde. Experimental, abstract constructs and analysis
Experimental Animation
Significance:
- Experimental pioneers and seminal works form the foundation for contemporary practical and theoretical investigations in animation.
Context:
- The ability to manipulate multiple images allowed artists to transform their ideas into movement, often as a reaction against traditional artistic ideologies.
- In the early 1900s, avant-garde artists focused on the formal aesthetic potentials of film and animation, exploring line, form, movement, rhythm, color, and light.
Abstraction:
- Expresses ideas appreciated intellectually, not related to concrete objects.
- Focuses on internal structure and form, emotionally detached.
- Represents qualities, emotions, or ideas rather than depicting objects.
- Develops thoughts from concrete realities to general principles or intellectual ideas.
Early Visual Effects; Sound and Image:
- Hans Richter’s “Filmstudie” (1926)
- Len Lye’s “Kaleidoscope” (1935)
- Len Lye’s “Rainbow Dance” (1936 highlights)
- Oskar Fischinger’s “An Optical Poem” (1938)
- Norman McLaren’s “Boogie-Doodle” (1941)
Importance of Experimental Work:
- Technological advancements fuel independent and groundbreaking work in visual and film language.
- Personal vision through independent film and animation remains central to the medium’s development.
Elements to Consider in Analyzing and Implementing Formal Experimental Animation:
- Categorization: Genre, sub-genre, background, setting, mood, tone, theme, and topic. Determine if the work fits a category or is unique.
- Form and Function: Interpret meaning in relation to format or presentational mode, considering artist objectives and limitations.
- Process: Techniques, materials, and technologies used, and their relationship to the message. Determine if the process or tool becomes the message.
- Formal Elements: Use of space, composition, light and color, movement, rhythm, timing, pacing, transitions, and audio relationships. Analyze how the work investigates these elements.
Conceptual Abstraction
Definition:
- Involves the abstraction and juxtaposition of narrative structures, storytelling tools, traditional canons, and communicative vehicles.
- Aims to question and build film language, challenge perception, and exploit semiotics, metaphor, and symbolism.
Key Points:
- Historically, these experimental approaches are produced outside the commercial mass media industry.
- Movements like Futurism, Surrealism, Dadaism, and Cubism have significantly influenced formal language and conceptual approaches to film.
- Personal vision through independent film and animation remains crucial to the medium’s development.
Example:
- Jan Svankmajer’s “Dimensions of Dialogue” (1982)
Non-Dialogued Film
Definition:
- Films that develop narrative or themes without dialogue, relying on gesture, performance, filmic language, special effects, and alternative audio components.
Key Points:
- Challenges the communicator to convey information without spoken words.
- Significant examples span from Hollywood’s silent films to Surrealism, children’s narratives, and Expressionism.
Examples:
- Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis” (1927)
- Max Hattler’s “Serial Parallels” (2019)
- Balázs Simon’s “Bastille ‘Thelma and Louise’”
- Balázs Simon’s “BBC ‘Winter Olympics 2022’”