|
Films like Catalog and Arabesque used sequences that were like "words" which
were later combined together in the optical printer into compositions. The
technique is somewhat similar to the composer (Schoenberg) working with a
musical "tone row."
But it would be the 70's that truly defined successful digital synthesis of
sounds and visuals in John Whitney's work. He had long abandoned the analog
machine in favor of digital, and by 1975 would no longer be coloring his films in post
production with the optical printer. The final film to see the use of this process is what
is considered by many to be his best. Arabesque, completed in 1975, was funded by
a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and IBM sponsorship
(1965 - 69) starting at the UCLA Health Sciences Computing Center. It was the climax to a creative
period where such films as the Matrix series were completed. For some Arabesque is
considered "the seminal computer film" Set to the music of
Manoochelher Sadeghi, the film ran 7 minutes. It is an example of the artist perfecting
his art. The whirling, exotic flow of the music is in perfect synthesis with the quasi-
psychedelic blooming of colored forms. John Whitney had balanced science with
aesthetics, and defined the computer as a legitimate medium for art.
|
|
|
|