The Photofilm – The Idea of a Completed Future

 

Traditionally, photography as a still image takes the place of the vivid, animated nature of a movement. It captures an instant and condenses moments of life into memories. By contrast, film stands for structured time through the perception of movement. As the photofilm is based essentially on photographs, it represents an interface between both media and lays claim to a genre of its own.

Filmmakers who take photographs, photographers who make films and media artists in general, take up the traditions of this particular film form with their trans-media works, motivated by options of technological development. Concomitant perceptions in antagonistic fields such as ‘material / immaterial’ and ‘visible / invisible’ generate these artistic filmic expressions.

The idea of creating a photo film to accompany the photo book Moon Rabbit. The Chinese Journey was to focus on the aspect of „visible/invisible“: the ephemeral, the detail, the overlooked, the lost. It was also about finding out how perceptions of my work might be broadened by image, language and sound, compared with the experience of actually leafing through the pages of the book and contemplating its images.

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