Sunday, July 31, 2011

Digital media

Digital media was an important area of focus, particularly from 2004-2005. The most recent productions were Bright with breath, Lapped by water and the earlier Signature of water, produced with visual artist Deborah Faeyrglenn. Signature of water was a set of interlinked, interactive websites and short movies which explored multiple aspects of water and its meaning in our lives and the lives of our communities.

Still of Bruce Ridge storm from 'Storm' animation in Signature of water exhibition, a set of interlinked, interactive websites and Shockwave movies which explores multiple aspects of water.


It ranged from short, minimalist animations, using cartoons, to hyperfiction drawing on the styles of crime novels. It was a mix of poetry, storytelling, images and sounds which was heavily influenced by the styles of popular culture and the urban and rural landscapes around us.

Before this, the piece Remembering Dresden, about wars, families, memory and the many meanings of everyday words was shortlisted for the 2004 Newcastle Poetry Prize New Media Award. Remembering Dresden drew on the intersection of family and world history and the way in which the past changes even more than the future.

Interest in digital media was initiated by State of origin, a piece produced with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, for the Goulburn Regional Art Gallery exhibition, Conversations. It developed further with the short piece, ideal companion, a love song about travelling long distances together.

Digital media continues to be an area of major interest. However, the animations were part of a series produced from 2004-2009 created in Flash software, as part of experimental work with moving images, sound and text. With the publisher withdrawing support for this software, it is now difficult to play the animations.

The simplest way to play them is to use replacement software Ruffle, which is open source software which emulates Flash. Visit my website http://people.myplace.net.au/~sccp/, then from the list displayed, right click on the animation you wish to play and save it to your own device. Then open the Ruffle demo file, https://ruffle.rs/demo/ and find the downloaded animation on your device and it will play.

For more information about the author see Writing biography.

See also

I smoke baby cigars
‘Smoking baby cigars in the dark of the backyard. Like some Cuban presidente haranguing the crowd with reminders, I proffer a list of romantic anniversaries, our May 4th movement, our July 12th uprising – our moment when everything became new’, I smoke baby cigars.

Cut back to black
‘Cut back to black, thin chill drizzle mid-winter – infinite regression on petrol’. Also called ‘Revhead heaven’, Cut back to black.

Coming back to these stones
‘Coming back to these stones – in the sandy dry reaches of the Coorong in South Australia’s South East birds flicker across the flat water like beads of run-away mercury’, Coming back to these stones.

Landscapes in a rear vision mirror
‘Heading at a moment's notice into Broken Hill, breaking several traffic laws on the Barrier Highway, in the rear vision mirror the land kept switching colours’, Landscapes in a rear vision mirror.

Stopping by Lake George
‘Lake George is a vast stretching freshwater lake, with no outlet. It is only diminished by evaporation. Many stories are told about Lake George, a still point of the turning earth, with all the quiet of the eye at the centre of a hurricane’, Stopping by Lake George.See other work from the Conversations group exhibition, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, 2004 – a collaborative exhibition of writers and visual artists.

State of origin
Multimedia piece developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, State of origin looked at where we come from, where we go next and where we truly belong. In this work the writer and visual artist combined word, image and computer technology to make visual music. Words and images moved across the computer screen, with no fixed address, State of origin.

The lost art of conversation
Installation, developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, on words, meaning, reflection and infinite (or at least, partial) regression. Three tall thin vertical mirrors stand against the wall, covered in bursts of words. Three matching paper shadows flow out from the wall along the floor. Words on the mirrors flutter and blur into shadows, The lost art of conversation.

balloon
A fictional narrative work in the form of a website, the website as writing. About the adventures of a refugee from the big city who sets up the High Country Thought Balloon Company. A series of brief vignettes about the characters, situations and stories which intersect the path of the balloons as they soar across the skies of the Southern Tablelands and Snowy region. It is about changing perspective, balloon.

Malacoota Inlet
‘Shutdown in a flat, wet land, the line beween sea and sky where grey meets grey, where stricken yachts come in’, Malacoota Inlet.

Sitting on twigs
‘Sitting on twigs in the flat lands, in a piece of country loaded with meaning, like a tightly coiled spring’, Sitting on twigs.

Signature of water
A series of artworks as part of the Waterworks exhibition at Goulburn Regional Art Gallery responding to the shared task of facing up to life on our dry continent. It ranged from short, minimalist animations, using cartoons, to hyperfiction drawing on the styles of crime novels. It was a mix of poetry, storytelling, images and sounds which were heavily influenced by the styles of popular culture and the urban and rural landscapes around us, Signature of water.

Remembering Dresden

Fearing a lack of oxygen
   a navigator on a Lancaster bomber
in a night sky over a blackened and flattened city
The firebombing of Dresden, 13 February 1944


backwards
counting

one

slicing time
everything changes
and everything

remains the same

wars thread together families
relatives and future relatives
try to kill each other

remembering Dresden

a navigator on a Lancaster bomber
in a night sky over a blackened and flattened city
the firebombing of Dresden, 13 February 1944

there is no statute of limitations
on endless memory
no limits of time
to the application of late night atrocity

a war hero
hanged
     on a wire
strung up
  on meat hooks

doing what is right
    the logic of the next step



There is no statute of limitations
on endless memory
no limits of time
to the application
of late night atrocity

two

growing up, lopsided
obsessed by a war
a father, too young,
hauled back from recruiting booths

more uncles than I could count
decorated, and honoured in spades
serious in black and white photographs
        written up in faded newspaper articles

hunkered down, in darkrooms
   of thin student newspapers
back from moratoriums,
rallies, banners and speeches
  a rush of words through a megaphone

obsessed in a different way by another war

of wars
and survivors of wars
who sidestepped death from bullets
for the sudden halt of strokes

three

what keeps us apart
brings us together

our families
between them
  have seen
too many wars

in the sudden flash of a bombsight
the emptied load
through a bomb bay door
there are old cities
there are moments closed forever

there is forever nothing

four

moments fall away
without fresh memory

repeat

predicting history
backwards
always risky
     often doomed

words reverse

a war hero becomes a criminal
an insurgent equals a terrorist
a war crime represents
an act of freedom

everything changes
and everything
remains the same

in need of a navigator
to chart
these troubled words

everything changes
and everything
remains the same

© Stephen Cassidy, 2004

This text was the basis of the animation Remembering Dresden, shortlisted for the Newcastle Poetry Prize New Media Award in 2004. The animation was one of a series produced from 2004-2009 created in Flash software, as part of experimental work with moving images, sound and text. However, with the publisher withdrawing support for this software, it is now difficult to play the animations.

The simplest way to play them is to use replacement software Ruffle, which is open source software which emulates Flash. Visit my website http://people.myplace.net.au/~sccp/, then from the list displayed, right click on the animation you wish to play, in this case ‘Remembering Dresden.swf’, and save it to your own device. Then open the Ruffle demo file, https://ruffle.rs/demo/ and find the downloaded animation on your device and it will play.

See also the 'Remembering Dresden' article.

For more information about the author see Writing biography.

See also

I smoke baby cigars
‘Smoking baby cigars in the dark of the backyard. Like some Cuban presidente haranguing the crowd with reminders, I proffer a list of romantic anniversaries, our May 4th movement, our July 12th uprising – our moment when everything became new’, I smoke baby cigars.

Cut back to black
‘Cut back to black, thin chill drizzle mid-winter – infinite regression on petrol’. Also called ‘Revhead heaven’, Cut back to black.

Coming back to these stones
‘Coming back to these stones – in the sandy dry reaches of the Coorong in South Australia’s South East birds flicker across the flat water like beads of run-away mercury’, Coming back to these stones.

Landscapes in a rear vision mirror
‘Heading at a moment's notice into Broken Hill, breaking several traffic laws on the Barrier Highway, in the rear vision mirror the land kept switching colours’, Landscapes in a rear vision mirror.

Stopping by Lake George
‘Lake George is a vast stretching freshwater lake, with no outlet. It is only diminished by evaporation. Many stories are told about Lake George, a still point of the turning earth, with all the quiet of the eye at the centre of a hurricane’, Stopping by Lake George.See other work from the Conversations group exhibition, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, 2004 – a collaborative exhibition of writers and visual artists.


State of origin
Multimedia piece developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, State of origin looked at where we come from, where we go next and where we truly belong. In this work the writer and visual artist combined word, image and computer technology to make visual music. Words and images moved across the computer screen, with no fixed address, State of origin.

The lost art of conversation
Installation, developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, on words, meaning, reflection and infinite (or at least, partial) regression. Three tall thin vertical mirrors stand against the wall, covered in bursts of words. Three matching paper shadows flow out from the wall along the floor. Words on the mirrors flutter and blur into shadows, The lost art of conversation.

balloon
A fictional narrative work in the form of a website, the website as writing. About the adventures of a refugee from the big city who sets up the High Country Thought Balloon Company. A series of brief vignettes about the characters, situations and stories which intersect the path of the balloons as they soar across the skies of the Southern Tablelands and Snowy region. It is about changing perspective, balloon.

Malacoota Inlet
‘Shutdown in a flat, wet land, the line beween sea and sky where grey meets grey, where stricken yachts come in’, Malacoota Inlet.

Sitting on twigs
‘Sitting on twigs in the flat lands, in a piece of country loaded with meaning, like a tightly coiled spring’, Sitting on twigs.

Signature of water
A series of artworks as part of the Waterworks exhibition at Goulburn Regional Art Gallery responding to the shared task of facing up to life on our dry continent. It ranged from short, minimalist animations, using cartoons, to hyperfiction drawing on the styles of crime novels. It was a mix of poetry, storytelling, images and sounds which were heavily influenced by the styles of popular culture and the urban and rural landscapes around us, Signature of water.

Lapped by water

The year my father began dying
I began dying as well


  Like a child rising before dawn
     in the hot days of promise ahead of Christmas
searching out unearthly gifts

© Stephen Cassidy 2011

This text became the basis for the animation, Lapped by water. The animation was one of a series produced from 2004-2009 created in Flash software, as part of experimental work with moving images, sound and text. With the publisher withdrawing support for this software, it is now difficult to play the animations

The simplest way to play them is to use replacement software Ruffle, which is open source software which emulates Flash. Visit my website http://people.myplace.net.au/~sccp/, then from the list displayed, right click on the animation you wish to play, in this case ‘Lapped by water.swf’, and save it to your own device. Then open the Ruffle demo file, https://ruffle.rs/demo/ and find the downloaded animation on your device and it will play.

For more information about the author see Writing biography.

See also

I smoke baby cigars
‘Smoking baby cigars in the dark of the backyard. Like some Cuban presidente haranguing the crowd with reminders, I proffer a list of romantic anniversaries, our May 4th movement, our July 12th uprising – our moment when everything became new’, I smoke baby cigars.

Cut back to black
‘Cut back to black, thin chill drizzle mid-winter – infinite regression on petrol’. Also called ‘Revhead heaven’, Cut back to black.

Coming back to these stones
‘Coming back to these stones – in the sandy dry reaches of the Coorong in South Australia’s South East birds flicker across the flat water like beads of run-away mercury’, Coming back to these stones.

Landscapes in a rear vision mirror
‘Heading at a moment's notice into Broken Hill, breaking several traffic laws on the Barrier Highway, in the rear vision mirror the land kept switching colours’, Landscapes in a rear vision mirror.

Stopping by Lake George
‘Lake George is a vast stretching freshwater lake, with no outlet. It is only diminished by evaporation. Many stories are told about Lake George, a still point of the turning earth, with all the quiet of the eye at the centre of a hurricane’, Stopping by Lake George.See other work from the Conversations group exhibition, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, 2004 – a collaborative exhibition of writers and visual artists.

State of origin
Multimedia piece developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, State of origin looked at where we come from, where we go next and where we truly belong. In this work the writer and visual artist combined word, image and computer technology to make visual music. Words and images moved across the computer screen, with no fixed address, State of origin.

The lost art of conversation
Installation, developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, on words, meaning, reflection and infinite (or at least, partial) regression. Three tall thin vertical mirrors stand against the wall, covered in bursts of words. Three matching paper shadows flow out from the wall along the floor. Words on the mirrors flutter and blur into shadows, The lost art of conversation.

balloon
A fictional narrative work in the form of a website, the website as writing. About the adventures of a refugee from the big city who sets up the High Country Thought Balloon Company. A series of brief vignettes about the characters, situations and stories which intersect the path of the balloons as they soar across the skies of the Southern Tablelands and Snowy region. It is about changing perspective, balloon.

Malacoota Inlet
‘Shutdown in a flat, wet land, the line beween sea and sky where grey meets grey, where stricken yachts come in’, Malacoota Inlet.

Sitting on twigs
‘Sitting on twigs in the flat lands, in a piece of country loaded with meaning, like a tightly coiled spring’, Sitting on twigs.

Signature of water
A series of artworks as part of the Waterworks exhibition at Goulburn Regional Art Gallery responding to the shared task of facing up to life on our dry continent. It ranged from short, minimalist animations, using cartoons, to hyperfiction drawing on the styles of crime novels. It was a mix of poetry, storytelling, images and sounds which were heavily influenced by the styles of popular culture and the urban and rural landscapes around us, Signature of water.

Signature of water

Signature of water was an electronic and online work which was produced for the Waterworks exhibition at Goulburn Regional Gallery as a joint project by Stephen Cassidy and visual artist Deborah Faeyrglenn.

This work was a multi-arts project, applying writing, visual and design skills to produce electronic creative media, such as websites, hyper-fiction and animations. It was a small part of the shared task of facing up to life on our dry continent.

and liquid barely licks the ground

It was a set of interlinked, interactive websites and Shockwave movies which explored multiple aspects of water and the meaning it has in our lives and the lives of our communities. It ranged from short, minimalist animations, using cartoons, to hyperfiction drawing on the styles of crime novels. It was a mix of poetry, storytelling, images and sounds which was heavily influenced by the styles of popular culture and the urban and rural landscapes around us.

The animations were part of a series produced from 2004-2009 created in Flash software, as part of experimental work with moving images, sound and text. With the publisher withdrawing support for this software, it is now difficult to play the animations. 

The simplest way to play them is to use replacement software Ruffle, which is open source software which emulates Flash. Visit my website http://people.myplace.net.au/~sccp/, then from the list displayed, right click on the animation you wish to play and save it to your own device. Then open the Ruffle demo file, https://ruffle.rs/demo/ and find the downloaded animation on your device and it will play.

Signature of water includes many different animations contributing to the overall work:

Brown mud.swf
Civilisation.swf
Downtrodden.swf
Flashing words.swf
Ghost.swf
Green water.swf
H2O.swf
Marsh.swf
Moving clouds.swf
Moving lines.swf
Sink.swf
Small planet.swf
Storm.swf
Swirling grass.swf
Transition.swf
Unstill water.swf
Water and shadows.swf

© Stephen Cassidy and Deborah Faeyrglenn, 2005

See work from other exhibitions at Goulburn Regional Art Gallery:

Conversations group exhibition, 2004
A collaborative exhibition of writers and visual artists

State of origin
Multimedia piece developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, State of origin looked at where we come from, where we go next and where we truly belong. In this work the writer and visual artist combined word, image and computer technology to make visual music. Words and images moved across the computer screen, with no fixed address, State of origin.

The lost art of conversation
Installation, developed with visual artist, Deborah Faeyrglenn, on words, meaning, reflection and infinite (or at least, partial) regression. Three tall thin vertical mirrors stand against the wall, covered in bursts of words. Three matching paper shadows flow out from the wall along the floor. Words on the mirrors flutter and blur into shadows, The lost art of conversation.

balloon
A fictional narrative work in the form of a website, the website as writing. About the adventures of a refugee from the big city who sets up the High Country Thought Balloon Company. A series of brief vignettes about the characters, situations and stories which intersect the path of the balloons as they soar across the skies of the Southern Tablelands and Snowy region. It is about changing perspective, balloon.

Malacoota Inlet
‘Shutdown in a flat, wet land, the line beween sea and sky where grey meets grey, where stricken yachts come in’, Malacoota Inlet.

Sitting on twigs
‘Sitting on twigs in the flat lands, in a piece of country loaded with meaning, like a tightly coiled spring’, Sitting on twigs.

Word wall
An installation, featuring a series of mixed images and text about life in the corners of Australia, Word wall. Word wall included:

I smoke baby cigars
‘Smoking baby cigars in the dark of the backyard. Like some Cuban presidente haranguing the crowd with reminders, I proffer a list of romantic anniversaries, our May 4th movement, our July 12th uprising – our moment when everything became new’, I smoke baby cigars.

Cut back to black
‘Cut back to black, thin chill drizzle mid-winter – infinite regression on petrol’. Also called ‘Revhead heaven’, Cut back to black.

Coming back to these stones
‘Coming back to these stones – in the sandy dry reaches of the Coorong in South Australia’s South East birds flicker across the flat water like beads of run-away mercury’, Coming back to these stones.

Landscapes in a rear vision mirror
‘Heading at a moment's notice into Broken Hill, breaking several traffic laws on the Barrier Highway, in the rear vision mirror the land kept switching colours’, Landscapes in a rear vision mirror.

Stopping by Lake George
‘Lake George is a vast stretching freshwater lake, with no outlet. It is only diminished by evaporation. Many stories are told about Lake George, a still point of the turning earth, with all the quiet of the eye at the centre of a hurricane’, Stopping by Lake George.