Film/Video Screenings Artists' Television (ATV) Open Screening In the Gallery Window Installations

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Artists' Television Access
992 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
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ata@atasite.org

Monthly Calendar

ATA Screenings

Thursday, May 27, 2010. 8PM
Odds and Ends

Friday, May 28, 2010. 7:30 Door, 8PM Screening
CCSF Student Film Showcase

Sunday, May 30, 2010. 7PM
Mrs. Goundo's Daughter
presented by The San Francisco Bay Area Chapter of the US National Committee for UNIFEM

Thursday, June 3, 2010. 8PM
CCSF Production Class

Saturday, June 5, 2010. 8PM
Mike Kuchar
An Evening of Collected Consciousness

Sunday, June 6, 2010. 1PM
Set the Screen on Fire: Films for Social Change

Tuesday, June 8, 2010. 7PM
CHRONOTOPIA:
The Past, Present & Future of Queer Histories - Media Screenings

Thursday, June 10, 2010. 7.30pm
"The Inner Tour"
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition Film Screening

Saturday, June 12, 2010. 8PM
Experimental films and sounds from the Bay Area

Friday, June 18, 2010. 8PM
Top of the Food Chain

ATA Events

Tuesday, June 15, 2010. 7-10pm
Jessica Miller: Flagging Allegiance
Opening reception Tuesday, June 15th, 7-10pm

Open Screening

Thursday, June 17, 2010. 7pm Door, 8PM
OpenScreening

Window Installations

May 2, 2010 - May 30, 2010.
The S.S.S.S.S.S. Presents: OBAMA TRAUMA

June 1, 2010 - June 30, 2010.
Jessica Miller: Flagging Allegiance
June 2010

Archive

Find all the past shows and gallery and window exhibitions in the Archive

View the text-only full calendar

Return to: Specters & Machines

Breathe

Sam Barnett (in person) - 2009, 5:24, Animation, Berkeley, CA  

"Everything incorporates some piece of the organisms they consume. In this film we watch the flow of an organism consuming and becoming other organisms it consumes. Its path leads to both entropy and progress.

Breathe is the 3rd in a series of animations by Sam Barnett that utilize sound as a primary force in the narrative. Simple images are made complex by the sounds that define them, turning the ideas in the images into visceral objects and characters."

Questions with Sam Barnett

Elizabeth Wing: Is this your first animation using a dry erase board? Did anything in particular inspire you to use it?

Sam Barnett: t is the first time. I made a flip book of a growing amoeba a while ago, and really liked drawing in a way that allowed each new drawing to respond organically to the one before it. I think it helps you see the intelligence of the growth, like a time lapse film of plants growing. I saw someone do a whiteboard animation on youtube I realized this was a much more efficient way to do the same thing.

EW: The sound in the film is striking. Do you also make sound recordings or write music?

SB: I started out in music, and did allot of experimental electronic work that has been very helpful in animation. And intact, breathe is the third in a series of films I'm calling abstract motion films. Music is... total abstraction. The notes on a piano are nothing but waves of energy. The combination of these notes becomes representative of an emotional reality. It becomes that state. So i try to think about these films as a flow of abstract images the way a song is a flow of abstract sound.

EW: The images you use strike me as dreamlike, literary, and grotesque. Can you tell us about some of the sources and influences that come into play when making work?

SB: For this film, i was studying moss, and alternating generations. Every other generation of moss is a different kind of plant. something like a butterfly i guess. anyways i got obsessed with the idea of... life processes divided across generations. and one of the generations being an opening up to the input of completely alien DNA, and this being kind of a violent predatory kind of learning. which is really like evolution sped up allot. I've been obsessed with the idea of humans as thousands of independent systems held together in this form called human. and to breathe, is this constant action that brings the outside world into this mass of systems. and to me, breathing is particularly symbolic of accepting this situation, not sure why i feel that way about it.

As for literary, a running theme for me is the conflict between words and what they represent. i think about words kind of as these destructive boxes that crush the referent, and transmit this crushed form. i don't have many films without boxes.

Sam Barnett is a San Fransisco Bay Area Film Maker. He makes films and animations that attempt to speak directly from the subconscious. his films have been shown all over the US and the World. Work can be seen at GrowingObjects.com


Last updated 08/31/2009.