Project - Daniel Crooks
Crooks' is best known for his work that explores time and the re-presentation of recorded moments. After the capture of footage, his process involves slicing each frame into thin strips of footage, maybe only a few pixels wide, then with each slice of the frame, stepping back or forward in time. The image is reconstructed by using these slices to put together one frame of footage. A single frame is made up of perhaps hundreds of separate moments of an event. In this way, when viewing his video works you are at any moment seeing the present, future and past all melded together in a familiar but strangely organic and uncontainable world.
Static No 12. takes footage of a man performing tai chi exercise in a Shanghai park. The image is stretched across the screen and the man soon becomes a molten image of movements, body parts, familiar yet unrecognisable, graceful but eerie and uncomfortable. The use of tai chi is especially poignant. Tai chi uses slow movements to train the body and the mind; it is about a sequence of movements in relation to the energy and focus of the individual. The aim is to slow down the movements and be present in the moment. Static No.12 (seek stillness in movement) is perhaps an insight into the aims of the tai chi practitioner but is also a meditation on the movements themselves.
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Crooks' is best known for his work that explores time and the re-presentation of recorded moments. After the capture of footage, his process involves slicing each frame into thin strips of footage, maybe only a few pixels wide, then with each slice of the frame, stepping back or forward in time. The image is reconstructed by using these slices to put together one frame of footage. A single frame is made up of perhaps hundreds of separate moments of an event. In this way, when viewing his video works you are at any moment seeing the present, future and past all melded together in a familiar but strangely organic and uncontainable world.
Static No 12. takes footage of a man performing tai chi exercise in a Shanghai park. The image is stretched across the screen and the man soon becomes a molten image of movements, body parts, familiar yet unrecognisable, graceful but eerie and uncomfortable. The use of tai chi is especially poignant. Tai chi uses slow movements to train the body and the mind; it is about a sequence of movements in relation to the energy and focus of the individual. The aim is to slow down the movements and be present in the moment. Static No.12 (seek stillness in movement) is perhaps an insight into the aims of the tai chi practitioner but is also a meditation on the movements themselves.
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