Exploratory Project - Wk 12 - extended - Video

Video works:I created several video works for the project. One was a Stop-Go Animation,[vimeo 273833616 w=640 h=360]516748 K VennerWoodbridge Video Fractured Foam from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeo.I did not create a storyboard or plan for this. I cut up some foam that was supplied by a friend and set about creating a small sequence. I wanted to explore order and chaos in a very simplified format that would still maintain the air of my work. By looping the video it reflects the daily routines and repetitions that I am so fond of and displays the way they ebb and flow. In hindsight, the material was not great and moved very easily if there was a breeze etc. I would also make a storyboard next time to make sure that the piece flowed steadily and developed into a more choreographed piece.After a tutorial with Kimberley Foster, we discussed the temporaryness of the drop collage pieces and I decided I would turn them into a performance and record it.[vimeo 273836648 w=640 h=360]516748 K VennerWoodbridge Video Performance Drop Collage sml from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeo.This piece as has a timelapse but I couldn't get the file to edit properly. I watched it on the camera and it felt so rushed I was happy to keep the real-time video. The element of sweeping the pieces away and starting afresh is cleansing, like a good night sleep. If the pieces don't land favourable, sweep them away and drop them again. Having chance play a role through the act of dropping also brings another element of chaos into the work. I would like to take this to a larger audience and allow participants to create the work and ask their reactions, so if they feel the need to stop when they have a favourable layout etc.Lastly, I created a large Performance piece, this was after speaking to Les Bicknell and his suggestion of making a systematic piece. It had also come up in a previous group critique. I set about planning pieces and drew out a 4x4 (5cm each so 20cm x 20cm) square on a piece of cloth. I then set up a filming area and proceeded to set a timer for 10 minutes and an alarm to remind myself to do the task daily. I tested the fabric would work first on a scrap.img_1614 img_1607.jpgimg_1616  img_1622I proceeded to punch embroider everyday for 10mins inside on of the squares, a couple of the day I didn't finish, the rest I had to stitch over as I was faster than expected.img_1653img_1695img_1699 img_1723img_1719Once I had done the first 16days I began to unpick the work. This did not need a timer. I systematically unpicked each square carefully bundling up the yarn for display afterwards. This is in honour of Hassan Sharif's piece "Cotton" pictured below. Which is a video installation alongside the artefact of the lump of cotton her created.

Hassan Sharif, Cotton (still), 2013. Cotton and single-channel HD video, silent, 20 x 67 x 46 cm, 8 minutes 26 seconds. Courtesy Estate of Hassan Sharif and Gallery Isabelle van den Eynde, Dubai. http://sharjahart.org/press/sharjah-art-foundation-presents-landamrk-hassan-sharif-retrospective-i

img_1727img_1731 img_1733img_1771 img_1770 img_1760img_1923img_1773.jpgThe video would be displayed alongside the artefacts and played on a loop. It is 3:36 hr: mins long. I chose to leave it like this as the point of the use of the techniques was its rhythmic movement and sound. It is tedious to watch, mirroring the common thought fo the 'daily grind' but in its sum creates a textile piece. As the chaos ensues ans it comes apart a different, perhaps more aesthetically pleasing textiles arises.[vimeo 273833967 w=640 h=360]516748 K VennerWoodbridge Video Performance deConstruct from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeo