Saturday, 28 November 2009

Homework: Experimental and Underground cinema November 25th 2009


One of the videos we saw in class was The Big Shave. Watching the beginning, it gives you a different idea of what you are watching. I thought that it was advertising bathrooms as it was showing a new bathroom, but then when the m

an comes in and starts shaving, you get a different idea of what it is about. I then thought that it was advertising a shaver as it was showing alot of close ups of the shaver. I thought that it was a strange video as he starts cutting his face open with the shaver. The video was good but i thnik that it is very different compared to the other videos we saw.


The Big Shave is a 1967 six-minute short fil

m directed by Martin Scorsese. It is also known as Viet '67. Peter Bernuth stars as the recipient of the title shave, repeatedly shaving away hair, then skin, in an increasingly bloody and graphic bathroom scene. Many film critics have interpreted the young man's process of self-mutilation as a metaphor for the self-destructive involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War, prompted by the film's alternative title. The music accompanying the film is Bunny Berigan's "I Can't Get Started", recorded in 1939. The film was produced at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts for a film production class called Sight & Sound Film.

This information about Big Shave comes fro

m Wikipedia, here is the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_Shave


Here is The Big Shave video:

This video has come from youtube.

Here is the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wvdKMnnQz8


Martin Marcantonio Luciano Scorses

Here is a photo of him:

He was born on the 17th November 1942, and is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and film historian. He is the founder of the World Cinema Foundation, a recipient of the AFI Life Achievement Award for his contributions to the cinema and has won awards from the Oscars, Golden Globe, BAFTA, and Directors Guild of America. Scorsese is president of the Film Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to film preservation and the prevention of the decaying of motion picture film stock.


Scorsese's body of work addresses such themes as Italian American identity, Roman Catholic concepts of guilt and redemption, machismo, and violence. Scorsese is widely considered to be one of the most significant and influential American filmmakers of his era, directing landmark films such as Taxi Driver, Raging Bull and Goodfellas; all of which he collaborated on with actor Robert De Niro. He won the Academy Award for Best Director for The Departed and earned an MFA in film directing from the New York University Tisch School of the Arts.


Martin Scorsese was born in New York City. His father, Luciano Charles Scorsese died in 1993, and his mother, Catherine Scorsese died in 1997. They both worked in New York's Garment District, his father as a clothes presser and his mother as a seamstress.


As a boy his parents would often take him to the movie theaters; it was at this stage in his life that he developed his passion for cinema. Obsessed with historical epics at an early age, at least two films of the genre, Land of the Pharaohs and El Cid, appear to have had a deep and lasting impact on his cinema psyche. Scorsese also developed an admiration for neo-realist cinema at this time. He recounted its influence in a documentary on Italian neorealism, and commented on how The Bicycle Thief alongside Paisà, Rome, Open City inspired him and how this influenced his view or portrayal of his Sicilian heritage. In his documentary, Il Mio Viaggio in Italia, Scorsese noted that the Sicilian episode of Roberto Rossellini's Paisà which he first saw on television alongside his relatives, who were themselves Sicilian immigrants, made a significant impact on his life. He has also cited the Indian neorealist filmmaker Satyajit Ray as a major influence on his career. His initial desire to become a priest while attending Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx was forsaken for cinema– the seminary traded for NYU Film School, where he received his MFA in film directing in 1969.


Scorsese has been married to Helen Morris since 1999; she is his fifth wife. They have a daughter, Francesca, who appeared in The Departed and The Aviator. He has a daughter, Cathy (Catherine), from his first marriage to Laraine Brennan, and a daughter, Domenica Cameron-Scorsese, who is also an actress and appeared in The Age of Innocence, from his second marriage to Julia Cameron. Scorsese was also married to actress Isabella Rossellini from 1979 to their divorce in 1983. He married producer Barbara De Fina in 1985; their marriage ended in divorce as well. He is primarily based in New York City.


This information and the photo has come from Wikipedia. Here is the link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Scorsese


Friday, 27 November 2009

Friday 27th November 2009

Today we projected our five frame pictures on to big pieces of card, then we got a black board pen and outlined each picture frame. When that was done we decided to color it in. It took a long time to colour it in as the pen were really thin. When that was done we went out and placed the first frame against the wall and took a photo, then we did it to the next one. Once we did it all it made an animation. It now really looks like a pea getting stabbed. The video can be seen below. I was good to learn how to do this. This was the first time that i have done anything like this. It did take a long time but you don't mind doing it if you get a good outcome.

Thursday, 26 November 2009

Thursday 26th November 2009

Today we started to do a mini animation out of five frames. We had to draw our images first, then we used tracing paper to trace our images to produce an image that will loop. Then we took a photo of each frame. Now we need to project the pictures on the wall and draw them on big pieces of card. Then paint the images the colour that we want, then take a photo of each one moving along the wall. It is meant to be a pea getting stabbed by a fork. When the photos are played it will look like an animation.

Here is an example that Steve has done:

Stage 1: Create five frames that loop

Using tracing paper produce an image that will loop.
There are two ways to loop the frames:

1. Frame 5 will go back to frame 1 and start the sequence all over again. (1,2,3,4,5 > 1,2,3,4,5 etc.)

2. The sequence will go in reverse after frame 5.
(1,2,3,4,5 > 4,3,2,1 > 2,3,4,5 etc.)

JUMP_tracing-paper-sequence

Stage 2: Upload into Photoshop
Using a stills camera, Photo Booth or a scanner.

Stage 3: Create the images
In Photoshop centralize the drawings and save as jpegs.

CARDBOARD_JUMP_sequence-image

Stage 4: iStopMotion test
In a new Photoshop project set up the looping sequence.
Make the motion travel from left to right on the screen.
Save (As) each stage as a jpeg and import into iStopmotion.
(Main menu > Movie > Import Images)
Test your animation.

L3 JUMP LOOP TEST from cmdiploma on Vimeo.

Stage 5: Project the image & draw the frames
Open the 5 jpegs in Preview. Connect your laptop to the digital projector. Copy out the frames on the cardboard sheets using a board marker pen.

drawing_loop

Stage 6: Paint the images on the cardboard

painting_loop

Stage 7: Film the loop sequence

L3 ANIMATION LOOP CLASS DEMO from cmdiploma on Vimeo.

L3 ANIMATION LOOP CLASS DEMO from cmdiploma on Vimeo.

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Drawings

These are some drawings that i have done in my spare time. I don't think about what i am going to draw, i just do it as i go along







Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Artist From Beautiful Losers

The artist that i liked from Beautiful Losers is Chris Johanson.
Here is a picture of him:
Chris Johanson is an American painter and street artist. He is a member of San Francisco's Mission School art movement. Chris was born in suburban San Jose, California in 1968. He has no formal training in art, learning some technique by painting skateboards and houses. He moved to San Francisco, California's Mission District in 1989, where he became a member of the local art community, initially drawing cartoons on lampposts and bathroom walls using black Sharpies. In 2004 he bought a home and moved to Portland, Oregon. Chris achieved international fame after participating in 2002 Whitney Biennial exhibition.
This information in red comes from wikipedia. Here is the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Johanson

This is one of the peices of art that he has done. I like this painting as if you look at it from a distance, it looks like the top of a city. This painting featured in Beautiful Losers and that is when i saw it.
Here is the picture:

Here is a close up of it:

Tuesday 24th November 2009

In the morning we looked at 6 vieos that was made many years ago.
The first was called Colour Box, The second was called Dog Star Man, The third was called Scorpio Rising, The forth was called The Big Shave, The fifth Fuzzbox, The sixth was called Berlin House.
Later me and Ali researched Dog Star Man Part 2. It was very hard to find information about it as it was made many years ago. Stan Brakhage directed it and he also acted in it. While he acted in it his wife was filming. He died at the age of 70. You can read all this in my sketchbook.

Sunday, 22 November 2009

Mood Board

Here is my mood board that i made. All these pictures relate to the word risk. When we here the word risk, this is some of the things i think about. Anything you do can be risky, even stepping out your front door.

Friday 20th November 2009

In todays lesson we looked through the CAPTURE: Creative Risk task sheet so that i knew what we have to do in the set time that has been given.
In the after noon we made a mood board which was pictures of anything that we would relate to the word Risk. Me and Ali found many pictues. They can be seen in the mood board which is above.

Saturday, 21 November 2009

Robot Drawings

Here are most of my robot drawings. I realy enjoy drawing different robots and creatures. I have done many in the past, but these are the ones that i have done lately. I have a book where i draw these in. When i come up with new ideas, i will draw them up as well.

I have done two versions of this drawing. I wanted to see if i could change anything. This one was done on A4 size.

This one that i have done is the first version. It is spread out over 3 pages. I am not sure about putting any arms on it. I really like it how it is.

This is the bottom half of it. It is to big to take a picture of the whole thing.
Here some other drawings.


Friday, 20 November 2009

Timeline


Here is my timeline that i created in Photoshop. It took a while to make. First i had to research information about the history of animation. Then place some information form different years into the timeline. It is the fairly important information that is needed on the timeline.
After that i added some photo's of the particular points that i have. I am very pleased with the timeline. It has taken alot of time and effort to make.

References For Timeline

Here are the references for the information from my timeline. Each reference is under its years that it appears on my timeline.

1824: http://www.cs.brown.edu/courses/cs229/animTimeline.html

1889: http://joshuamosley.com/UPenn/courses/Ani/AnimationHistory.html

1906: http://joshuamosley.com/UPenn/courses/Ani/AnimationHistory.html

This here is a book reference:
1923: (Animation Art, Flame Tree Publishing Book, 2004, Page 21,)
Picture Link: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/08/Walt_disney_portrait.jpg

1928: http://joshuamosley.com/UPenn/courses/Ani/AnimationHistory.html

1934: http://joshuamosley.com/UPenn/courses/Ani/AnimationHistory.html

1938:   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugs_Bunny

1993: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jurassic_Park_(film)
Picture Link: http://api.ning.com/files/DzYwj7Cp-4S5MRJyRA4V-pV8hK9ak8wY5vLXB0*ekbY_/800pxJurassic_Park_screenshot_4.jpg

1995: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toy_Story
Picture Link: http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/toy_story_ver1.jpg

2007: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Simpsons_Movie#Development
Picture link: http://users.cs.cf.ac.uk/S.C.Bull/Photos/Simpsons.JPG

Timeline Research

This is a timeline about animation that i found on the internet. This timeline is some information that iwill need to create my timeline. It has identified some important parts of animation.
The website was last modified on Friday 25th September 1998 by Nancy Pollard.
http://www.cs.brown.edu/courses/cs229/animTimeline.html

Animation Timeline

Date

Event

1824

Peter Mark Roget, who did research in physiology at the University of London, published "Persistence of Vision with Regard to Moving Objects." This book presented the idea that a succession of still images could create the appearance of motion.

1832

Joseph Plateau (a Belgian scientist) developed the phenakistiscope.

1889

Emile Reynaud (from France) patents the praxinoscope .. a device that used mirrors to project a sequence of images (along with a fixed background) onto a screen. It was sufficiently complex that only he could run it. The infinite length tape changed the medium from a curiosity into entertainment.

1895

The age of movie camera and projector begins .. experimentors discover they can stop the crank and restart it again to obtain special effects. Example: James Stuart Blackton creates "The Enchanted Drawing" in 1900 .. a caricature is drawn with no evidence of an artist.

1907

Emil Cohl (from France) begins a long animation career..

1914

Windsor McCay produces perhaps the first popular animation .. Gertie the Dinosaur, which becomes part of his vaudeville act

1915

John Bray patents the use of clear cels over a background

1917

John Bray patents rotoscoping (developed by Max Fleischer)

1919

Koko the clown (Max Fleischer) appears

1920's

Otto Mesmer creates Felix the Cat

1928

Walt Disney releases "Steamboat Willie" .. an early cartoon w/ sound -- cartoons are now seen as entertainment. Disney innovations over the next 10-20 years include the storyboard, pencil tests, and the multi-plane camera stand (3D effects). Disney also promoted the analysis of real-life motion.

1937

Snow White is released at cost of $1.5M

1930's

Fleischer studios create Betty Boop and Popeye

1930's

Warner Bros .. Porky Pig, Daffy Duck, and Bugs Bunny appear

1940's

Walter Lantz and Woody Woodpecker, Paul Terry and Mighty Mouse, MGM w/ Tom & Jerry (animators William Hanna and Joseph Barbera)

1963

Ivan Sutherland and SKETCHPAD at MIT/Lincoln Labs

1972

University of Utah, Ed Catmull develops an animation scripting language and creates an animation of a smooth shaded hand. Ref: E. Catmull, "A System for Computer Generated Movies", Proceedings of the ACM National Conference, 1972. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1972

University of Utah, Fred Parke creates first computer generated facial animation. Ref: F. Parke, "Computer Generated Animation of Faces", Proceedings of the ACM National Conference, 1972. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1974

National Research Council of Canada releases Hunger/La Faim directed by Peter Foldes and featuring Burtnyk and Wein interactive keyframing techniques. Ref: N. Burtnyk and M. Wein, "Interactive Skeleton Techniques for Enhancing Motion Dynamics in Key Frame Animation", Communications of the ACM, 19(10), October 1976. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1982

Tron, MAGI, movie with CG premise

1983

Bill Reeves at Lucasfilm publishes techniques for modeling particle systems. "Demo" is Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn. The paper also promotes motion blur. Ref: W. Reeves, "Particle Systems -- A Technique for Modeling a Class of Fuzzy Objects", Computer Graphics, 17(3), July 1983. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1984

The Last Starfighter, CG is used in place of models

1984

Porter and Duff at Lucusfilm publish paper on digital compositing using an alpha channel. Ref:"Compositing Digital Images", Computer Graphics, 18(3), July 1984. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.) T. Porter and T. Duff,

1985

Girard and Maciejewski at OSU publish a paper describing the use of inverse kinematics and dynamics for animation. Their techniques are used in the animation "Eurythmy." Ref: M. Girard and A. A. Maciejewski, "Computational Modeling for the Computer Animation of Legged Figures", Computer Graphics, 19(3), July 1985. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1985

Ken Perlin at NYU publishes a paper on noise functions for textures. He later applied this technique to add realism to character animations. Ref: K. Perlin, "An Image Synthesizer", Computer Graphics, 19(3), July 1985. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1987

John Lasseter at Pixar publishes a paper describing traditional animation principles. "Demos" are Andre and Wally B and Luxo Jr. Ref: J. Lasseter, "Principles of Traditional Animation Applied to 3D Computer Animation", Computer Graphics, 21(4), July 1987. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1987

Craig Reynolds then at Symbolics (now at Dreamworks SKG) publishes a paper on self-organizing behavior for groups. "Demos" are Stanley and Stella and Batman Returns. Ref:"Flocks, Herds, and Schools: A Distributed Behavioral Model", Computer Graphics, 21(4), July 1987. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.) C. W. Reynolds,

1988

Willow uses morphing in live action film

1992

Beier and Neely, at SGI and PDI respectively publish an algorithm where line correspondences guide morphing between 2D images. "Demo" is Michael Jackson video Black and White. Ref: T. Beier and S. Neely, "Feature-Based Image Metamorphosis", Computer Graphics, 26(2), July 1992. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1993

Chen and Williams at Apple publish a paper on view interpolation for 3D walkthroughs. Ref: S. E. Chen and L. Williams, "View Interpolation for Image Synthesis", Computer Graphics Proceedings, Annual Conference Series, 1993. (In the SIGGRAPH 98 Seminal Graphics collection.)

1993

Jurassic Park use of CG for realistic living creatures

1995

Toy Story first full-length 3D CG feature film

What is Animation?

Animation is a rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create a movement of them.
It is an optical illusion of motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in many ways. The most common method of presenting animation is as a motion picture or video program, although several other forms of presenting animation also exist.
These six frames will make a ball animation when they are play repeatedly.

Traditional animation (hand-drawn animation) was the process used for most animated films of the 20th century. The individual frames of an animated film are photographs of drawings, which are first drawn on paper. To create the illusion of movement, each drawing differs slightly from the one before it, but not too much as it will not look right. The animators' drawings are traced or photocopied onto transparent acetate sheets called cels, which are filled in with paints in assigned colors on the side opposite the line drawings. The completed character cels are
photographed one-by-one onto motion picture film against a painted background by a rostrum camera.

I researched this on Wikipedia. Here is the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animation

Beautiful Losers Review Fromm Me!!!!!!!!


Beautiful Losers was a good film, but i don't really like films presented in documentaries. I would have found it better if it was in a proper film style with the contents of it included, but with the artists explaining about the painting when they are painting it.
I thought that it was very good how each of the artists came from completely different backgrounds but they all had the same interests which is art. Thier art work is very different to what art work is produced today. The film is set a long timer ago. Margaret Kilgallen has now died at the age of 33. She had Breast Cancer. She was born on October 28th 1967 and died in June 26th 2001.

Flick Book From Thursday 19th November 2009

Here are a few pictures of a flick book that i did in lesson. I did it on sticky notes. We was only meant to do a ball bouncing but i did another one and you can see a picture of this below.
I found it fun doing this as it is the first time that i have done it and it had a really good outcome. You can see it in my sketchbook.






Thursday 19th November 2009

Today we look at animation and how it can be created. We looked at many different animations including animations from Blu. We also watched two animations from Blu. One was a person being made out of clay and the other was painting on different wall and they were made into an animation. I really like the animations and it must of taken a very long time to make. We had a go at drawing many pictures of a ball bouncing and the final product we had many pictures and we flicked through them and it looked like a little movie.
This is the Blu website, www.blublu.org

Thursday, 19 November 2009

Beautiful Losers Film


Here is the Beautiful Losers Poster:

Beautiful Losers celebrates the spirit behind one of the most influential cultural moments of a generation In the early 1990's a loose-knit group of likeminded outsiders found common ground at a little NYC storefront gallery. Rooted in the DIY (do-it-yourself) subcultures of skateboarding, surf, punk, hip hop & graffiti, they made art that reflected the lifestyles they led. Developing their craft with almost no influence from the "establishment" art world, this group, and the subcultures they sprang from, have now become a movement that has been transforming pop culture.

Starring a selection of artists who are considered leaders within this culture, Beautiful Losers focuses on the telling of personal stories.


The Artists:




Aaron Rose:
Aaron Rose is an artist, writer and independent curator currently living in Los Angeles. Aaron founded the highly influential Alleged Gallery in New York, curating shows there for ten years. In the 1990s, Rose produced numerous short films and worked as a producer/director for MTV Networks producing on-air promos in conjunction with contemporary artists and indie-directors. Since 2002, Rose has been working as a freelance curator, choosing artists for the Undefeated Billboard Project, a public art project in Los Angeles produced in conjunction with Nike. He is co-curator of the large-scale museum exhibition Beautiful Losers: Contemporary Art & Street Culture", which will tour the world through the end of 2008. In addition to curating other exhibitions and publishing books under a new publishing label, Alleged Press, Rose is co-editing a quarterly large format art magazine (ANP Quarterly), which is offered free as an outreach of RVCA Clothing's non-profit initiative the Artist Network Program.

Barry McGee:
After exploding from the streets of San Francisco as the prolific graffiti artist TWIST, Barry McGee has become one of the leading artistic figures in California youth subculture. He draws his force and inspiration from the contrast and tension that exists between the city center and the suburbs, between wealthy districts and the slums. His visual language is at once eclectic, ephemeral, radical and, above all, heavily influenced by the daily realities of the city. McGee's complex installations convey a sense of vitality and chaos, juxtaposed with a precarious nature and sense of alienation. Large-scale wall murals, clusters of small-framed drawings and snapshots, various tools and other street detritus make their way into his installations in an almost symphonic fashion. Intricate paintings are executed then rolled over with latex paint, echoing the 'buffs' that cover graffiti in urban areas. Clusters of glass bottles hang in a corner with painted portraits of derelicts and other characterizations of street "personalities." In recent years, McGee has exhibited his works internationally to great acclaim. Recent exhibitions include
Museum of Modern Art in New York, UCLA Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, Foundation Cartier in Paris, and the Fondazione Prada in Milan.

Chris Johanson:
San Francisco based artist Chris Johanson transforms the fleeting and commonplace activities of the modern American city into very affecting stories, beautifully frozen in time for us to observe. Johanson has been creating these images since he was a teenager, often using found objects such as old wood and disused paper as canvases to convey a sense of decay and isolation. Johanson's installations consist of paintings, constructions and works on paper arranged in a carefully planned, yet seemingly haphazard three-dimensional maze. Most recently, he has chosen to forego the physical domain for the psychological, delving into another dimension of the American landscape. He comments on the age of consumerism, as well as modern psychological phenomenon such as self-help, psychotherapy, new age and 12-step support groups. He creates a world where nude dancers, good vibes, emotionally centered people, forest energy and rainbows abut a sinister comic edge. Johanson has exhibited his works internationally and received the 2002 SECA Award, given by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He exhibits his works at Deitch Projects in New York and was included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial.

Ed Templeton:
Ed Templeton was born in
Orange County, California, a sprawling suburb of Los Angeles where he still lives today with his wife of 16 years, Deanna. He discovered skateboarding in middle school and quickly went pro before finishing high school. He has devoted his life to it since then. It was skateboarding that gave him opportunities to tour Europe where he spent every free moment absorbing its galleries and art museums. Templeton began to exhibit his works in small galleries and skateboard shops, eventually moving on to large galleries and institutions. His photographs give a sun-drenched glimpse of what it might be like to be young and alive in what Templeton refers to as "the suburban domestic incubator". His first major European museum exhibition opened in October 2002 at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. Since then, he has exhibited his paintings and photographs worldwide. Templeton is the founder of Toy Machine, a blood-sucking skateboard company. He has also done design work for Grand Royal, Spin, Geffen and Factory Records and is currently one of the principles behind ANP Quarterly, a large format art & culture magazine.

Geoff McFetridge:
Geoff McFetridge is a
Los Angeles based artist and filmmaker. A graduate of Cal Arts, he has worked primarily in the world of graphic design, creating graphics and logotypes for companies such as ESPN, Burton Snowboards, Nike, Girl Skateboards, Stussy and others. His first foray into galleries was a 1997 solo exhibition at George's in Los Angeles. The show introduced his work to photographer and filmmaker Sofia Coppola who commissioned him to create the title graphics for her 1999 film, The Virgin Suicides. McFetridge has since mounted exhibitions of his work in New York, Berlin, London, Paris and Tokyo and was included in the 2003 Cooper-Hewitt National Design Triennial, New York. In addition to prints, his installations have included everything from furniture, film, fabrics and silkscreened wallpaper. Outside the art world, McFetridge's designs have been featured on t-shirts, album covers, stickers, buttons, patches, and even athletic shoes.

Harmony Korine:
Harmony Korine is a 35 year-old artist, writer and filmmaker from
Nashville, Tennessee. Perhaps best known as the "19 year-old screenwriter of Larry Clark's Kids," Harmony's career began on an auspicious note when he met Clark while he was skateboarding in a New York City park. He had written a screenplay and wondered if Clark would look at it. Six months later the film was in production and a hefty writer's fee was showered upon Harmony. The film went on to become one of the most criticized and controversial films of the 1990's. After Kids, Harmony went into production on his first venture as a commercial director. The resulting film was Gummo, a sordid and disturbingly comical tale of white trash in America. In 1999, Harmony joined forces with director Lars Von Trier, becoming a member of the seminal film collective known as "Dogme 95." His third film, Julien Donkey Boy, was created in the Dogme style, employing only lo-fi production techniques. As a visual artist, Harmony has exhibited his works in exhibitions in New York and Los Angeles and has a long-standing patronship with Paris based fashion designer and art collector, Agnes B. Korine recently premiered his fourth film Mister Lonely, starring Samantha Morton, Diego Luna and Werner Herzog, at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival.

Jo Jackson:
Jo Jackson is an artist from
Portland, Oregon who creates striking canvases that subvert classic American graphic norms. Her paintings are charged with signs and shapes, rendered in pastel colors in high contrast juxtapositions that seem almost as if they were applied with vinyl rather than a brush. Eagles, skulls, wolves, a map of North America and people are layered ironically, subverting typical graphic imagery into a twisted miasma of something that is at once cute and incredibly dark. She re-works classic Americana symbology into soft colors that reveal their true political essence. Although her work most definitely has its roots in the streets, what she executes on canvas is far from raw (She cites the French Situationists and Josef Albers as inspirations). Jackson's aesthetic employs symbols of psychological and social chagrin, creating a form of sly protest, the secret of which is approachability. Jo Jackson has exhibited her work widely throughout the western United States and recently completed solo exhibitions in Los Angeles and Switzerland.

Margaret Kilgallen:
Margaret Kilgallen's art is influenced by both American and non-Western folk traditions. Her bold, graphic art is grounded in a keen observation of the urban landscape such as the contemporary Mexican-American commercial strip that one might find in
San Francisco's Mission District or the seashore towns of Northern California. It is also illustrative of commercial art found in India or Africa, where old, imported graphic conventions continue to predominate. Kilgallen's work does not follow a conceived plan. Her work has almost always been done on-site, drawing large letters completely by hand using house paint rollers. Kilgallen's art achieves human resourcefulness on many levels. Her use of discarded materials or donated paint resonates with her family's history of making due with whatever resources they could to survive. Aside from her gallery work, Kilgallen has been involved in community based art collaborations. Kilgallen passed away tragically in 2001 from complications from cancer.

Mike Mills:
Mike Mills is a graphic designer, art director, filmmaker, and curator currently living in
Los Angeles. He is a graduate of the Cooper Union School of Design, where he studied with Tibor Kalman, eventually going to work for him at his firm, M & Co. It was while he was a student at Cooper he found his way to the Alleged Gallery for their first show exhibiting skateboard art. Since then, Mills has established himself as one of the most respected and sought after designers working today. His list of clients reads like a who's who of popular culture. Past projects include album cover designs for bands such as The Beastie Boys, Beck, Sonic Youth, Air and more. He has designed graphics and textiles for Marc Jacobs, and created the identity for X-Girl Clothing. He has exhibited his unique graphic installations worldwide including solo shows at Andrea Rosen Gallery in New York and Collette in Paris. Recently Mills has focused his attention on directing films. In past years he has directed numerous short films including The Architecture of Reassurance (2000) and Paperboys (2001) and the feature film Thumbsucker (2005). He is currently in production on his second feature.

Deanna Templeton:
Deanna Templeton has always taken photos. When she was 15, her mother bought her a Cannon T-90 for coming back home after running away. When she was 21, she got a Yashica point and shoot. She now has a whole bevy of cameras to choose from, and seems to always have one with her. In Deanna's photographs you see an eye to the feminine experience, –the cracks that are forming in that false persona of being a girl in this day and age. She explores what being a child, or a woman feels like today. The photos leave you with more questions than answers, like good art should. Her work has previously been shown at n44 in Paris, Museum Het Domein in The Netherlands and the
Contemporary Art Center of Virginia.

Stephen Powers:
Stephen Powers is a
New York artist who is also known by his street moniker, ESPO. In recent years he has established himself on the international art scene with a body of work that reflects a fascination with graffiti, sign painting, urban marketing and con games of all shapes and sizes. Powers left college before his junior year to publish On the Go, a hip hop lifestyle magazine from his hometown of Philadephia. Publishing and editing would reduce his painting time to nights and weekends until the magazine folded in 1997. As a coda, he wrote The Art of Getting Over (St. Martin's Press, 1999), a book about his personal history of graffiti. He began to plan a show that would combine his love for low-level commerce and contrast it with the high stakes machinations of the art world. The result of his efforts debuted at the Philadelphia Institute of Contemporary Art with Indelible Market, a collaboration with artists Todd James and Barry McGee that featured a makeshift bodega filled with items that reflected what the three artists had in their personal stock; "Street Cred, Guilt, Shame, Class and Dignity." etc. The show has since traveled to Deitch Projects in New York and the 2001 Venice Biennale. With each passing stop, Powers' artistic prowess matured into a unique style that has merged his passions for both writing and painting.

Thomas Campbell:
California native Thomas Campbell is a painter, photographer and filmmaker. An entirely self-taught artist, his work directly reflects his life and draws from his experience traversing around the globe on surf trips. During his short breaks between adventures, he has been known to lock himself in for days on binges that produce literally hundreds of fresh drawings and works on canvas. Campbell has mounted solo exhibitions at galleries in New York, Paris, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Paris and Morocco. His feature length surfing films The Seedling and Sprout have been avidly embraced by the surfing community worldwide. He is also creative director for a small independent record label, Galaxia, which has released records by contemporary artists Tommy Guerrero, Ray Barbee, Peggy Honeywell and Black Heart Procession.

Shepard Fairey
:
While attending the Rhode Island School of Design, Shepard Fairey created the "Andre the Giant has a Posse" sticker campaign, which would evolve into a cultural phenomenon called "Obey Giant." Using graffiti techniques mixed with art concepts and graphic design elements, Fairey has been feeding the frenzied masses with a wholesome diet of "Andre the Giant has a Posse." What began as a group of printed stickers has erupted into a growing cult following with wrestler Andre the Giant's head as the deity. Seemingly Big Brother-esque and followed sometimes with the words "Andre the Giant has a Posse," or "Obey Giant," Fairey's Obey Giant series is seeping into the collective unconscious of art and graffiti aficionados throughout the world. His body of work has extended in the past decade from the city streets to Swindle Magazine, Obey Clothing and shows at the
Holly Solomon Gallery, Jonathan Levine Gallery and the New Museum of Contemporary Art employing street as well as gallery tactics to present his work to the public.

Cheryl Dunn:

Cheryl Dunn is a New York based photographer and filmmaker. After traveling Europe in her twenties, she returned to new York to pursue photography... shooting for magazines such as Spin, Vogue, Elle, Harpers Bazaar and Dazed and Confused. In the mid-1990s, Dunn began to focus much more on filmmaking. Her first film Sped (1997), was created as a series of vignettes on young artists from the skateboarding world. Her second film, Backworlds for Words (1999), is a documentation of a skateboard ballet, choreographed and performed by professional skateboarder/artist Mark Gonzales. Her recent film Creative Life Store, documents a group of artists (some of whom appear in Beautiful Losers) as they negotiate a cash-injected media frenzy in Tokyo. Dunn was awarded a residency at the Wexner Center in Columbus, Ohio in 2002.


Crew Info
Director: Aaron Rose
Co-Director: Joshua Leonard
Producers: Rich Lim, Jon Barlow, Chris Green, Noah Khoshbin
Executive Producers: Ravi Anne, Jared Moshe
Production Executive: Doug Matejka
Director of Photography: Tobin Yelland
Supervising Editor: Fernando Villena
Edited by: Lenny Mesina
Original Music by: Money Mark
Co-Producers: Adam Glickman, Tobin Yelland, Arlo Rosner
Associate Producers: Mathew Shattuck, Christian Strike
Titles and Animation by: Geoff McFetridge
Music Supervisor: Randall Poster
Co-Music Supervisor: Joe Rudge
Director of Special Forces: Joey Garfield
Sound Editor: Joel Dougherty
Music Editor: Nick Pavey
Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Joel Dougherty, Tim LeBlanc
Post Production Coordinator: Jay Buim


This information has come from the Beautiful Losers website which is www.beautifullosers.com. 


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