Instructor Art Grant discusses SF’s role throughout his career in air conditioning.
Interview Video: Aaron Daye
B-Roll Video, Editor: Brenton Richardson
December 2012
Instructor Art Grant discusses SF’s role throughout his career in air conditioning.
Interview Video: Aaron Daye
B-Roll Video, Editor: Brenton Richardson
December 2012
Abscission is a four channel, non-fiction video art installation. Filmed in Winston-Salem, NC and on the campus of Wake Forest University, Fall 2012.
Description
Every Autumn people appreciate the natural beauty of the leaves changing color and falling from the trees. However as soon as the leaves hit the ground, they create a mess that takes a massive amount of work to clean up.
Installation
The film was exhibited in an empty room off of the basement garage of Albert Hall, a former manufacturing plant for Prince Albert Tobacco in Winston-Salem, NC on the evening of December 1st, 2012.
START Gallery
Abscission was selected to be a part of the Wake Forest student art gallery’s year end STARTist Selections exhibit, “Let it Show! Let it Show! Let it Show!” The film will be displayed in a two-channel format at START Gallery in Reynolda Village (Winston-Salem, NC) from December 6th, 2012 through January 19th, 2013.
Related Links
Why Do Leaves Really Fall Off Trees? from NPR
The City of Winston-Salem Sanitation Department’s Guide to Leaf Collection
“Pizza, Power, and Provocation” is a two-channel video art project produced, directed, shot, and edited by Brenton Richardson.
Description
Jim Moury uses the electronic sign in front of his business to promote his pizza restaurant and air his grievances with city hall in defiance of the local government’s sign ordinance.
Backstory
Free speech debates emerge as digital technologies offer new and modern means of making your opinion known. Arguments occur over how devices should be used and if electronic self-expression can or should be regulated. How does the First Amendment apply to new technology?
I’ve been interested in the variable-message sign in front of Upper Crust Pizza along busy Silas Creek Parkway since I moved to Winston-Salem in 2010. In between the standard advertising you’d expect from a pizzeria (announcements of deals, “we match competitors coupons,” etc.), the sign was used by the owner to air his grievances with the local government using a combination of crass language and the advanced LED’s flashy effects and transitions. I learned the small business owner, Jim Moury was being confrontational with his sign in protest of the City of Winston-Salem’s sign ordinance. The history of the sign goes back further and Jim’s issues with City Hall are more complex than I could have anticipated. Driver safety is the city’s stated reason for banning motion graphics on this type of sign, while Mr. Moury says that restricting what he can do with his $53,000 sign is a violation of his civil rights.
Installation
The film was on exhibit the evening of October 14th, 2012 from 6:00 – 8:00 P.M., displayed digitally at the base of the roadside sign.
Related links
Checking out the desert while visiting family in Safford, AZ
Provincetown, MA from the top of the Pilgrim Monument.
The stairs spiraling up to the top of the monument.
Chloe running to avoid the cold water of the North Atlantic.
Standing by the remains of the Marconi wireless telegraph station, site of the first transatlantic radio transmission.
Mayflower II, Historic Replica
The site of The National Day of Mourning, an protest by Native American every year on Thanksgiving.
Plimoth Plantation living history museum
Heritage bull at Plimoth Plantation
A quick trip into Boston while in Massachusetts for the wedding of one of Chloe’s cousins.
Boston Traffic, shot out of the window from the back seat
Bronze baby head statue by Antonio Lopez Garcia outside of the Museum of Fine Arts
Chloe and I visited Battleship Cove, a maritime museum with the world’s largest collection of US naval ships, in Fall River, MA.
Out at farm in North Carolina for my friend Joe’s wedding.
Corn hole on the farm with our friends.
In sunny Myrtle Beach for the production of Always On.