Tusalava

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 49

  • @iiahuuu
    @iiahuuu 13 лет назад +24

    @siosism This film took approximately two years to complete,
    since each frame was hand-painted and photographed individually.
    In a 16mm abstract film titled Free Radicals (1958), Lye scratched
    the content onto a few thousand feet of black film leader using tools
    ranging from sewing needles to Indian arrowheads.

  • @mekaneko
    @mekaneko 4 года назад +7

    Love your score. Cool film. Thanks for uploading.

  • @latorrefazionemusic
    @latorrefazionemusic Месяц назад

    The beginning reminds me of when i worked at a fruit packaging factory: those lines of round plums kept flowing in front of my eyes endlessly

  • @iiahuuu
    @iiahuuu 13 лет назад +8

    @siosism
    Living in Samoa between 1922 and 1923, Lye became
    inspired by Aboriginal motifs and produced his first animated silent
    film, Tusalava (1929), which he created to express “the beginnings of
    organic life” (1.14).

  • @Dillinify
    @Dillinify 11 лет назад +27

    The original soundtrack was composed by avant-garde composer Jack Ellitt.

  • @henryandjoes
    @henryandjoes 13 лет назад +9

    This is really amazing. Lye was a brilliant artist and an amazingly genious innovator of art film!

  • @iiahuuu
    @iiahuuu 13 лет назад +10

    @siosism
    His use of abstract, metaphorical images are a
    product of his association with Surrealism, Futurism, Constructivism,
    and Abstract Expressionism, as well as his affinity for jazz, Oceanic
    art, and calligraphy. His use of percussive music, saturated color, and
    organic forms had a major impact on a genre that later became known
    as music video.

  • @petercarruthers9353
    @petercarruthers9353 10 лет назад +12

    trippy animation for sure - excellent music, it really complements the movement of . . . whatever they are!

  • @StoneThePoet
    @StoneThePoet 5 лет назад +5

    SUPER sound design! I see you have mine on your page. THANK YOU for the praise and inspiration.

    • @pukunu1
      @pukunu1  5 лет назад +2

      Cheers Laura! Looks like I need to do a bunch of updating here, there have been a few in the last few years I have missed.

  • @johndodds3600
    @johndodds3600 Год назад +3

    Don't know if mentioned elsewhere but Len's work was often used to accompany featured music on the B.B.C's Old Grey Whistle Test. I think his sculpture of the motorised metal band was shown in The Institute of Contemporary Art's "Kinetic Art" exhibition in the late sixties. (I think that's where I saw it!).

  • @skivvy3565
    @skivvy3565 3 месяца назад +1

    The most unsettling and terrifying dots i've ever seen

  • @johnteddyJoe
    @johnteddyJoe 14 лет назад +4

    @siosism He created it to express "the beginnings of organic life" (Krasner 2008). Krasner, Jon: Motion Graphic Design; Applied History and Aesthetics. Elsevier, Oxford, 2008

  • @bea9821
    @bea9821 3 года назад +3

    I love film! I love music !

  • @benedetta7309
    @benedetta7309 5 лет назад +5

    At 7.15 it looks like the humanoid on the left is playing with the Samoan totem like a Dj with a consolle. Great! And great soundtrack

  • @AnthonyMonaghan
    @AnthonyMonaghan Год назад +1

    This works very well...the music reminds me of the John Fahey Track The Signing Bridges Of Memphis, Tennessee. Nice job. Well done.

  • @DenEColt
    @DenEColt 12 лет назад +15

    I'm pretty sure I've seen this film with a soundtrack some years ago. As for this one, I think you've done an excellent job. It suits the theme and importantly, doesn't distract from the animation. Well done.
    Len had an affinity for jazz, blues and African music so it wouldn't surprise me if the original, now lost, score contained those elements.

  • @iiahuuu
    @iiahuuu 13 лет назад +2

    @siosism - this is a passage from the book Motion Graphic Design by Jon Krasner, so I've just wrote it back here for you. I think it is a very important film and your question seems fair.
    Revolutionary New Zealand animator Len Lye, who often referred to
    himself as “an artist for the twenty-first century,” pioneered the directon-
    film technique of cameraless animation by painting and scratching
    onto 35mm celluloid.

  • @ericsanchez5763
    @ericsanchez5763 4 года назад +2

    Very beautiful!!

  • @miklosfelvideki
    @miklosfelvideki 14 лет назад +6

    @siosism
    This was an abstract experimental animation, there is no simple explanation for avangarde films like that, dude!

  • @enistoja
    @enistoja 13 лет назад +1

    It made me think of some manner of cell and virus at the start, until it turned into a humanoid drawing on the right and the two-armed thing on the left. Then I just stood there wondering.
    Interesting sound choice you had for this.

  • @monokong
    @monokong 8 лет назад +4

    you did a great job, andrew!

  • @ElisabetMabres
    @ElisabetMabres Год назад

    Como dice @juanitaDeharo, aquí el vídeo está volteado, al menos también respecto a la exposición de CaixaForum Barcelona en LA IMAGEN HUMANA. Muy interesante por ser una obra de los años 20.

  • @miningpixel6724
    @miningpixel6724 9 лет назад +4

    Trippy

  • @esmeephillips5888
    @esmeephillips5888 3 года назад

    'I don't know much about psychoanalysis, but I'd say this is a dirty picture'. (Mel Brooks, 'The Critic (1963))
    Spotted numbers 5 to 9 around halfway through, but waited in vain for 10.

  • @blakebreakmirrorsmills8174
    @blakebreakmirrorsmills8174 Год назад +2

    sounds like an alien tryna seduce a rain gutter

  • @georgesiosi
    @georgesiosi 14 лет назад +1

    lol fair enough man - I guess that's why it's "abstract!"

  • @JordanFive
    @JordanFive 15 лет назад +2

    Does anyone know if this can be found on DVD?

  • @cablecar3683
    @cablecar3683 Год назад +1

    Very creepy and weird, the music doesn't help that much either, and the weird cell organism with a head looks very disturbing, it is very advanced for it's time as it used traditional art from Australia and New Zealand however, which probably makes it one of the first films that uses art from other places as inspiration, which is amazing.

  • @georgesiosi
    @georgesiosi 13 лет назад

    @iiahuuu wow, didn't know he lived in Samoa!

  • @limitbashrnoreflection
    @limitbashrnoreflection 10 лет назад +2

    @ everyone, I urge you to visit www.govettbrewster.com/Len-Lye/Centre for more len lye info - if you enjoyed Tusalava you will love his later works as he was an experimenter and creative until he died in 1980.

    • @LP-du8ce
      @LP-du8ce 8 лет назад

      +WHALERZ BIGGINZ dead link

  • @melodywang1975
    @melodywang1975 2 года назад

    i wonder how to make it

  • @georgesiosi
    @georgesiosi 14 лет назад +3

    could anyone give a simple explanation of this film?

    • @heinzblassen4446
      @heinzblassen4446 5 лет назад +4

      For me it looks like an evolution of a primitive lifeform (the worm) to the robot-like thing at the end, that seems to use fuel and electricity

  • @JuanitaDeharo
    @JuanitaDeharo 10 лет назад +7

    This is so wrong. The film is inverted in this clip. I saw this film at the Georges Pomidou in Paris recently so i know how it is supposed to look.

    • @mikafrance1063
      @mikafrance1063 8 лет назад +2

      I saw it today in Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin in the exposition "Kapital". Same like this version.

    • @Phreekoid
      @Phreekoid 8 лет назад +4

      This is the version done in anti matter, the question is, is your perception reality?

    • @JuanitaDeharo
      @JuanitaDeharo 8 лет назад +8

      Interesting. I saw this film again more recently at the Asia Pacific Triennial in Brisbane, Australia and it was as it is here. I have looked back at the video I captured at the Pompidou - and it's definitely inverted. I think this above is the right version...and perhaps the Pompidou one is the ani-matter version.

    • @ElisabetMabres
      @ElisabetMabres Год назад

      En la exposición actual de CaixaForum la IMAGEN HUMANA también está invertido respecto a lo que vemos aquí. @@JuanitaDeharo

  • @mcedrickmiti-fp8yd
    @mcedrickmiti-fp8yd Год назад

    What did I just witness?

  • @MistyReed-w1k
    @MistyReed-w1k Год назад

    It looks like a hopi kachina doll

  • @markhunter1993
    @markhunter1993 4 года назад +1

    what the france am i watching,,,,

  • @lvvry1855
    @lvvry1855 10 месяцев назад +1

    So this is where taxpayers' money goes.

  • @InsanePsychoRabbit
    @InsanePsychoRabbit 7 месяцев назад

    wtf did i just watch

  • @lenapas3652
    @lenapas3652 Год назад

    -- es +