Did some timlapse today for work - got me thinking about the best one I ever saw. Really would like to see this one in a theater as they took such great care to get high quality images. If you ever hear about it playing in New York, or at least a better version online, please let me know.
Here is “A year along the abandoned road” (”Året gjennom Børfjord”) directed by Morten Skallerud in 1991.
Obviously you can see that she has an intense gaze. Here is a portrait she took of her husband Martin Kippenberger who is coming up with a huge retrospective at MoMA.
The other morning I bumped into my buddy Richard on Union Square. We both had just woke up and he had a wonderful Bedhead. I asked if I could take a snapshot of him and he complied. Of course I soon start bossing him around and ask him to stand over here and then over there and so on. Then as I have started doing recently with my little point and shoot it is an easy switch to video mode and grab a moment. It is a still picture really, but it moves. I am loving these little moments. So here it is, I present to you, my very first “Snapshort”.
Found the perfect costume designers for the movie. Nicholas and Chris Kunz are the perfect team to make the characters look great. Check out their site here. BTW this picture is backlit by the fiery billboard in the middle of Times Square.
On 450 Park Ave (57th street) they are starting to fill three huge floors with balloons as an art project - even now with one small test window people just have to stop and look. For those of you who can’t see it, we will probably be able to post a video in a few days. This is a crazy clever use of the space invented by Jeroen Bours, Tore Claesson and Kelly Zuk of the creative agency Hello Darling
I loved how the interface worked on Minority Report - Now one of the science advisors on that film have caught up in the real world and is showing the results in this video.
If you are a camera geek like me you open the box and bring the camera with you everywhere right away. This time the camera was the Lumix LX3 and it came with me on a cab ride to see a bunch of friends at the Moma. There I was immersed in the opening of Pipilotti Rist: “Pour Your Body out” beautifully curated by Klaus Biesenbach.