Christian Disco (Terminator)
Dean, Mark. 2010. Christian Disco (Terminator). [Film/Video]
Item Type: |
Film/Video | ||||
Creators: | Dean, Mark | ||||
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Abstract or Description: | Single screen video projection installation with asynchronous sound loops. |
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Official URL: | http://tailbiter.com/art/?p=892 | ||||
Additional Information: | THE OUTPUT: A single screen SD digital video projection, 3 min loop, with sound comprising a) one synchronised stereo music track, b) 2 mono loops producing an asynchronous stereo vocal track. FIELD OF KNOWLEDGE: Video installation situated in relation to appropriation strategies (Duchamp/Warhol) applied to mainstream cinema and music (Cornell/Birnbaum/Gordon). My acknowledged contribution to this knowledge is the transmission of meaningful content without reliance on existing filmic narratives: I am also exploring the possibility of a contemporary religious art via these strategies; however, this contribution is less explicitly acknowledged, perhaps due to the absence of a shared language between contemporary art and religion (hence my current research interest in the question). METHODOLOGY: My methodology involves the appropriation of existing cultural material. I often work with small fragments of film (in this case a 2-second extract from ‘Terminator’), and audio samples (in this case formal phrases recorded from a Holocaust Day Memorial Service) which I treat with video effects using mathematical progressions. This technique is adapted from systems music (Steve Reich et al) and applied to video. I often work with colour cycles to register the loops, which in this work are time stretched at variable durations and composited. The work is installed to produce a non-narrative theatrical (cinematic) space. ‘Mark Dean’s grimly impressive video installation Christian Disco (Terminator), 2010, [is] Crafted from a three-second fragment of the 1984 film The Terminator, it shows a young man and woman dancing in a disco, but, characteristically, Dean’s edit desynchronizes and loops the footage, distorting its colors and corrupting the outlines of the swaying bodies. Luridly hued skeletal afterimages trail behind the dancers, occasionally catching up with them and sketching skulls onto their youthful, unconcerned faces. DISSEMINATION: EXHIBITION AWARDS: BIBLIOGRAPHY: WEBSITE: http://tailbiter.com/art/?p=892 |
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Departments, Centres and Research Units: | Art | ||||
Dimensions or Duration: |
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Item ID: | 7093 | ||||
Date Deposited: | 12 Jun 2012 15:32 | ||||
Last Modified: | 29 Apr 2020 15:34 | ||||
URI: |
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