Archive for March, 2011

Horse Glue (2010) – and interview with – Stephen Irwin

small time inc. blog imageBack in December last year we featured a short film by Stephen Irwin called The Black Dog’s Progress. Stephen has recently released his latest film, Horse Glue which we are very pleased to be featuring on our site this week. When Stephen let me know that his new film was finished, I asked him if he would spare us some of his time to do an interview for the site and we are very happy to say that Stephen kindly said yes! So below the
film in this feature you can see the interview
which we hope you’ll find as interesting as we do!

So without further ado, here’s the film:

“When two films, Horse and Glue, unfold together within the same space, their narratives become intertwined” (small time inc.)

The Medium of… interview with Stephen Irwin

The Medium of…: We’re very excited to be featuring your new film, Horse Glue this week on The Medium of… and to be publishing an interview with you, so thanks for taking the time out to do this!

My first question is quite simply, how did you get into animation and film-making?

Stephen Irwin: I began experimenting with short film at university. Some of the work was part of the
course and other pieces I made in my own time. At first I used a mixture of live-action and animation, but at some point the animation took over and I ended up solely working as an animator.

TMO: What is your approach to a project when you start something new? Do you have a process
that you follow?

SI: I’m starting to. It’s only recently I’ve noticed that the last few projects have come together in a similar way, but they happen over long periods of time and are usually in between paid jobs so it’s hard to follow a strict plan. It usually involves playing around with ideas for a while with a basic script and a new sketch book. I’ll do rough storyboards, character designs, sketches etc, until I have enough images to start an animatic, and it grows from there.

TMO: Your most recent film is Horse Glue. Could you tell us a bit about that film?

SI: It was a long process and what I ended up with isn’t exactly what I’d planned! The basic idea was to take two separate films/stories and mix them together somehow, but at some point it just became this one “thing”. One of the stories (Glue) is loosely based on The Babes in the Wood folktale, and the other one (Horse) is a kind of war story.

TMO: We featured The Black Dog’s Progress back in December after I came across it during a screening at the Arnolfini in Bristol. It seems a very intricate film with a lot going on… How is the film put together and how long did all that take?

SI: I spent around 6 months making it plus quite a lot of time in preparation (again, in between other jobs). I was lucky enough to get commissioned by Animate Projects so once I got that I was able to devote all my time to it until it was finished. For a long time it was just a straightforward narrative/animation but when I put the application together for Animate I rethought it and came up with the flipbook element and having the whole narrative on the screen at once. Even if you don’t get the commission these things are worth applying for. I find the process of putting a pitch together a useful way of getting to the bottom of what you want to achieve with the film.

TMO: Staying with The Black Dog’s Progress for a little longer, “black dog” has been used as a metaphor for depression, notably by Winston Churchill. Is depression a motif within this film?

SI: Yes, that was a starting point along with The Rake’s Progress and a news story I read about a woman who set her dog on fire. The way in which the story and visuals start small and grow into something chaotic relates to the black dog/depression motif, but I was also interested in telling this sad tale about cruelty.

TMO: And leading on from that, your films can be seen as quite disturbing and create dark emotions
for the viewer. How do you feel about it being described in that way?

SI: It’s not what I necessarily set out to do. I don’t think it’s a good idea to set out to make something dark or surreal, it should just come out that way. That way it feels natural and unforced.

TMO: Do you ever see yourself creating a joyful/happy/lighter piece, or is the darkness a signature of your work?

SI: I quite often start out with something more light-hearted but as the films develop they often get darker. I’m not sure why that is because I’m interested in all kinds of work, not just the sad stuff, but so far that’s the way the films have gone. Maybe that will change with future projects!

TMO: Both Horse Glue and The Black Dog’s Progress seem to use interwoven elements of narratives, whether it be of the same narrative, as in The Black Dog’s Progress, or different narratives as with Horse Glue. Is that approach central to your work in general, or just something that these two films share in common?

SI: I like having a problem to solve. With Horse Glue it was to find a way of mixing two films together while still telling some sort of story. With The Black Dog it was to contain the whole narrative, including all the scenes, within the frame all at once. I didn’t know exactly how it would work when I started, and having some sort of concept helps keep me interested for the long periods of time it takes to make the films.

TMO: Sorenious Bonk scored the sound and music for both The Black Dog’s Progress and Horse Glue. How do you work together – do you finish the film and then hand it over to Sorenious for scoring, or do you work together in a more organic way?

SI: With The Black Dog’s Progress I had a rough version of the music right from the start so I was working with it from the earliest version of the animatic. With Horse Glue I would send him the current work-in-progress and he’d write some pieces and experiment and send stuff back. We kept passing it back and forth like this until it was finished.

TMO: As I said earlier, I first came across your work during a screening at the Arnolfini in Bristol. Do you find there are many opportunities to get your work “out there” and for non-mainstream film and animation to find an audience currently?

SI: There are some great film festivals that get your work seen and they can have quite big audiences. I’m lucky to have had my work screened at festivals all over the world, so other than the internet there is an audience out there for this kind of work. I’m always impressed at how enthusiastic the audiences are at film festivals. For me the main place I watch shorts is online but it’s always good when I get to see work on the big screen.

TMO: Finally, what are you working on at the moment – what’s next?

SI: A new short about a pyromaniac bear who misses his mother.

TMO: Wow! Can’t wait to see that! So that’s it. Thanks again Stephen for taking the time out to answer some of our questions and we look forward to seeing much more of your work in the future!

To find out more about Stephen Irwin on this site, visit: Irwin, Stephen – Info

To see more of Stephen’s work and to find out about his news and latest projects, visit: www.smalltimeinc.com

Ether Festival – Rebonds B (1988) – Iannis Xenakis, Fitkin Band Live (2010)

Ether festivalThis Thursday the Ether Festival opens at the Southbank Centre. Ether is an annual music festival, “of innovation, art, technology and cross-arts experimentation” (Southbank Centre website).

Iannis Xenakis
This year there is a strong focus on the work of the French composer, Iannis Xenakis. This includes an International conference comprising several talks, workshops and performances of the composer’s work. Xenakis is known for his use of processes and the application of mathematical theories as compositional tools. As well as writing instrumental and vocal music, Xenakis also wrote electronic music and devised a computerised musical composition tool called UPIC which he used for the composition of some of his electronic work. The festival is running a series of workshops on the use of UPIC.

One of Xenakis’ pieces that is to be performed is Rebonds which is for solo percussionist. Here is a taste of what could be expected at the festival concert on 3rd April:

The Fitkin Band
On the opening day of the festival (24th March) there is a performance by the Fitkin Band. This is the British composer Graham Fitkin’s nine-piece band, formed in 2009. They are joined by musicians and dancers from Trinity Laban Conservatoire in creating a site-specific event. Below is an extract from a live performance by the Fitkin Band:

Fitkin Band live in Nottingham from Fitkin Band on Vimeo.

Another event worthy of note is the world premiere of Will Gregory’s (of Goldfrapp fame) opera, Piccard in Space. For more details on this and plenty of other events, visit the Ether programme which is linked below.

Ether runs from 24th March to 28th April at the Southbank Centre. For full details about the festival, visit the Southbank Centre website: www.southbankcentre.co.uk/find/festivals-series/ether

For more information about Iannis Xenakis on this website, visit: Xenakis, Iannis – Info
To see and hear more of Xenakis’ work, visit YouTube and type his name – you’ll get plenty of hits.

For more information about the Fitkin Band on this website, visit: Fitkin Band – Info
To see and hear more of the Fitkin Band, visit: www.vimeo.com/fitkin

Fitkin Band – Info

Graham FitkinComposer Graham Fitkin’s work is known internationally. Performances by companies such as Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, New York City Ballet, Random, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, San Francisco Ballet, London Chamber Orchestra etc and collaborations with Yo-Yo Ma, Kathryn Stott, Shobana Jeyasingh, Will Gregory, Wayne McGregor, The Wilson Sisters, Ruth Wall etc are a few examples of Graham’s projects. His music has been recorded by Decca, Factory, Sony BMG, Sanctuary and other labels and performances have taken place at venues such as Aula Magna Rome, Lincoln Center New York, Suntory Hall Tokyo, South Bank Centre and Barbican London etc.

Graham’s work is known for its energy, directness and inventiveness, and whilst it is regularly performed in traditional concert halls, he is increasingly involved in disseminating music through new environments e.g. co-commissioning from three international orchestras – Tokyo Symphony, Athens Camerata, London Chamber Orch. or the 12 simultaneous worldwide performances of a solo saxophone commission, site specific performances in the biomes of the Eden Project, GPS accessed musical work, live video collaborations etc.

Graham has always been closely integrated in the performance of his music, whether conducting New York City Ballet, running his own ensembles, producing or performing solo. This ensemble brings together some of the finest musicians from projects that Graham has directed in the past into one focused unit.

Other work for 2010 and 2011 includes a Proms commission, a new cello concerto for Yo-Yo Ma and a new ballet for the Royal Opera House.

Graham has also recently collaborated with Yugo Nakamura on the new Uniqlo Jeans advertising campaign.

(from http://www.vimeo.com/fitkin)

Xenakis, Iannis – Info

Iannis XenakisIannis Xenakis (Greek: Γιάννης Ξενάκης) (May 29, 1922 – February 4, 2001) was an ethnic Greek, naturalized French composer, music theorist, and architect-engineer. He is commonly recognized as one of the most important post-war avant-garde composers. Xenakis pioneered the use of mathematical models such as applications of set theory, varied use of stochastic processes, game theory, etc., in music, and was also an important influence on the development of electronic music.

Among his most important works are Metastaseis (1953–4) for orchestra, which introduced independent parts for every musician of the orchestra; percussion works such as Psappha (1975) and Pléïades (1979); compositions that introduced spatialization by dispersing musicians among the audience, such as Terretektorh (1966); electronic works created using Xenakis’s UPIC system; and the massive multimedia performances Xenakis called polytopes. Among the numerous theoretical writings he authored, the book Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition (1971) is regarded as one of his most important. As an architect, Xenakis is primarily known for his early work under Le Corbusier: the Sainte Marie de La Tourette, on which the two architects collaborated, and the Philips Pavilion at Expo 58, which Xenakis designed alone.

(from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iannis_Xenakis. Follow the link for full entry)

Frontman (2010), Watch Me Fall (2010) – Action Hero

Next week sees the start of Fierce Festival, an annual festival of live art over six days in Birmingham. Action Hero, a live performance art duo from Bristol, will be performing their work, Frontman at the festival on Thursday 24th March. The Fierce Festival website describes Frontman as follows:

“In a half-cut lament for a faded fantasy, your Frontman performs a defiant, brazen, raucous reproduction of lip syncs and all night gigs through a fog of dry-ice and furious noise.

Backed by an analogue synth and a tambourine, the frontman transmits hazy replicas of rhetoric, love and noise. She re-masters, re-works and re-releases her back catalogue with vacant gaze, drifting off into an endless reverie of b-sides and noisy echoes that could replay all night…”

Here are some audio clips from a performance of Frontman with some accompanying photo images:

Frontman was first performed in 2010 at the Inbetween Time festival in Bristol and is one part of a trilogy of works focusing on the cult of “the hero” in different ways. The other two works in the trilogy are A Western which considers the visual language of Westerns and Watch Me Fall which examines the concept of daredevils such as Evel Knievel. Below is an after show interview with Action Hero about Watch Me Fall which includes some footage from the show:

Daily Podcast Sat_7th Pt.2 from Wunderbar Festival on Vimeo.

For further details about Action Hero’s performance next week at Fierce Festival, visit: http://www.wearefierce.org/fierce-festival/whats-on/frontman-action-hero

For more information about Action Hero on this site, visit: Hero, Action – Info

To see more of Action Hero’s work and keep up to date with their events, please visit: www.actionhero.org.uk

Fierce Festival runs from 22nd March to 27th March. For details about the festival, visit: www.wearefierce.org

Hero, Action – Info

Action HeroAction Hero make live art and performance that seeks to use audiences as collaborators and co-conspirators. We are interested in creating work that links audiences together and unifies them as part of the live event, building a temporary community. Our process has been defined by necessity: a raw aesthetic has become central to our work. Whilst exploring the epic, we create performance that is intimate, distinctive and invigorating.

Action Hero is the collaboration between artists Gemma Paintin and James Stenhouse. We’ve been making performance together as Action Hero since 2005 and we live and work in Bristol where we’re Arnolfini Associate Artists and members of Residence.

from the Action Hero website, www.actionhero.org.uk/about


For more information about Action Hero and for news about their current work, visit: www.actionhero.org.uk

Aim & Together Again (2010) – Katie Surridge

Guest feature by Henry Fry – to see Henry’s blog, visit: http://scrawleddownpaperedges.blogspot.com

I first came across Katie’s art at the 2010 Slade Summer Show, when I was drawn to it not only because it was primarily made of animal parts and strip lights arranged in almost totemic configurations, but also because of the smell, which was fairly, how shall I say – visceral?

Aim by Katie Surridge

Aim by Katie Surridge - Mixed Media (wood, strip lighting, basket ball hoops, drift wood, bones, MDF shields, straw matting, string, white gloss paint). Image courtesy of Saatchi Online

Katie encourages you to discover her sculptures – partly through their layout, often forcing you to walk around or between them, and partly through their utilisation of found or dismembered objects. She sources many of the pieces of junk metal and driftwood on the banks of the Thames, pairing them with antlers, horns or stuffed pheasants.

Together Again

Together Again by Katie Surridge - Mixed media. (Reclaimed wood, railway sleeper, carved log, Thames river finds, strip lighting, wire, drift wood, old bathroom fittings, straw, eggs, string, fur, test tubes, chain). Image courtesy of Saatchi Online

In her own words: “I find pleasure in decorative embellished bricolage, which I carefully combine so that often repulsive soiled items, or items with a deathly aura take on a utopian or mystical feel.”

Katie’s exhibition, Skins, has just closed at Riverside Studios in Hammersmith. She was also recently featured as one of four young artists in Channel 4’s New Sensations, an award for Saatchi Online 2010 UK Graduates. The subsequent Three Minute Wonder film made about her by Channel 4, is below:

Katie Louise Surridge from Gramafilm on Vimeo.

To find out more about Katie on this site, please visit: Surridge, Katie – Info

To see more of Katie’s work, please visit:

Katie Surridge’s Slade School of Art Profile

Katie Surridge’s Saatchi Gallery Profile

Surridge, Katie – Info

Katie Surridge Profile Picture I am primarily interested in sculpture. My work more often than not includes some if not all found materials. Travelling is a huge passion of mine, be it round London, or further a field, it is these trips which provide me with exciting structural ideas and the chance to collect disowned, often overlooked objects. These found objects are later rearranged to construct large structural forms, embellished with mini narratives. Hence the work often involves some activity outside to obtain material or to make-work, and so the sculptures I make become reflective of my lifestyle and environment around me.

I enjoy focusing on discarded materials caught between production and decomposition. Finding an aesthetic in these disposed of unloved items, is important to me. The proximity of unexpected items next to one another and the exciting relationships and juxtapositions of these new orders is something integral to my work. I have a child like wonder for the things I find, and freely collect, organise and meticulously sort through my finds till assemblages come together and feel intuitively right. Assemblages of found and manufactured miscellanea develop narrative relations. Parts collected or made are also reused in new works and take on new meanings.

The washing up and in of objects and the new connections I make between things that don’t necessary have one is something I have a passion for. I find pleasure in decorative embellished bricolage, which I carefully combine so that often-repulsive soiled items, or ones with a deathly aura take on a utopian feel. There is a strong sense of my interest in the boundaries between function and dysfunction.

It is more habit and obsession with different materials found on my scavenging missions than overtly strong environmental and recycling views that drives me. Sometimes I have to take on a somewhat performative role to animate my works, carefully tending to them and maintaining their upkeep, a caretaker of sorts.

I also enjoy working with elements of the animal and botanical. Work often consists of pelts, leather, bones or animals which I preserve or taxidermy myself. There is an element of the shamanistic and the transgressive, a kind of simultaneous veneration and abjection of the animal.

The most recent pieces, and what I intend to develop further, are structures from which limbs and haunches hang creating hanging platforms for the smaller sculpted areas. Off these geometric string circles, which rise from the floor to a certain point, suspend objects such as bees, feathers or shooting plants. They create interesting internal spaces on the sculptures. The delicacy of these against the found materials gives a comforting feeling of order, a calm amongst the chaos. This turns small works in to a constellations without imposing too much of a closed loop or narrative on the work.

My aesthetic is not usually clinical or overly concerned with high gloss or expensive looking finishes, but seems to come about and evolve quite naturally through my innate passion for materiality. As my assemblages are large and tend to grow to fit a space. I am also interested in developing different methods of linking islands of work successfully to make the piece come together as a whole.

from http://www.saatchionline.com

To see Katie’s work, visit: www.saatchionline.com/profiles/index/id/154072

Never Better [extract] (2009) – Marcus Orlandi

Never Better was brought to our attention through a call for works with the Live Art Development Agency. This is an extract from a live performance with audio track, which was developed for short film. The work has previously been performed at Camden People’s Theatre, Corsica Studios and The Basement in Brighton.

In Marcus’ own words, Never Better is, “A new media production inspired by Endgame by Samuel Beckett, with a focus on wordplay and choreography”.

To see more of Marcus’ work, visit:
Marcus’ YouTube channel, www.youtube.com/user/lostmyshoes80
Marcus’ Ideas Tap page.