Gelene

Gelene
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  • Tag: documentary

    • Schitz – Zero Infinity

      Posted at 2:45 pm by Gelene Celis, on September 25, 2019

      I’ve always liked mathematics and art. As long as it’s not like calculus or something (sorry but I don’t speak alien): math and art were therapeutic to me.

      With regards to math:

      I liked geometry because I thought being able to form things out of numbers and calculations was pretty cool.

      Unlike sociology or psychology – subjects I have come to appreciate, informally, later in life – math, to me, was simple. Since there are finite answers that have nothing to do with humanities or behavior, you’re either right or wrong. You get the mark or you don’t. Simple.

      The tangible applications of mathematics in everyday life never really occurred to me up until my Grade 11 teacher talked about some sort of formula within the Cartesian Plane. It was one of those formulas that produced coordinates that will never equate to zero and if you change the variables and plot the lines, you end up with a curve formed by lines.

      curvestitch1

      Parabolic Star

      I just kinda kept solving the equations. It was Grade 11 math, who cares?
      I just wanted that A so I can have a bling-bling report card.

      During a given exercise, one of the students got annoyed after all the equations we had to solve, “It’s like.0000000572 (or some ridiculous number/fraction)! Why can’t I just plot the point to zero?!?”

      To which the teacher replied (equally frustrated), “Because it will never be zero! It’s like my hand and this board! If it’s one inch away from it, then the point is “1,” but even if I place my hand to the board, no matter how hard I press, it will never be part of the board!”

      …you know those moments when something is said or done and you can’t help but be speechless and/or you end up looking like a moron due to your jaws dropping because it feels like time just stopped when you have a moment of great awe?

      Matter was still the same: The table was still green. The windows were still open and the cool breeze from outside continued to enter the room. The boy beside me still smelled funny…but I have gained this new awareness of the incalculable mysteries underneath everything that is tangible.

      That night, I stared at my hands as I laid in bed. Memories of my childhood emerged. Both sides of my family were pretty superstitious: ghost stories, pranic healing, tarot cards, palmistry and such.
      When I stared at my hands, memories of my grandmother showing me a palmistry book along with its illustrations came. I wondered about what kinds of equations were involved in the orchestration of my life.
      I thought about the biological equations involved in my parents’ copulation. I wondered about the history of their families, the centuries that went on, the places they’ve been, the trials & tribulations they’ve gone through, the in-betweens among the leaves, branches, and the many rings on our family tree and how it extends to others at many points, in many ways.

      Then it came to me: with each passing moment, in many places all over the world, a vast scope of human experiences are occurring, simultaneously.
      Life, in an infinite array of a spectrum, is happening in places where we may not even be aware of yet, that exists… that people after us may discover in the future.

      With regards to art:

      I like making art because when I do, everything just goes away: time stops and nothing else matters but those moments of magic when pieces of my abstractions are manifested into something tangible that can turn into ideas, forms, paradigms… different types and planes of existence.

      My film school mentor used to say that art is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.
      If we apply the metaphor of art to life then moments like these… make up the 1% for me.

      But now I wonder… what kind of mathematics occur, within us and in the Universe, for our creations to turn out the way they do?

      =============

      (Spoilers)

      Apparently, Cantor’s work is now a part of the foundation of mathematics, which probably means that it has contributed to all sorts of impacts on civilization.
      He did not find a/the formula for infinity but the continuum hypothesis, to this day, is where a lot of mathematicians start, should they choose to take on the challenge… that will probably never end.
      Michelangelo, on the other hand, whose approach was the only concept I was able to grasp in the doc (I repeat: I don’t speak alien) went the geometry way. He started off with a circle with lines running from the center point that kept expanding from each other, which they were able to calculate formulas for and when it kept going, more and bigger circles were forming and more spaces in between the lines kept happening, which they were able to, again, come up with formulas for… up to a certain extent, to which Michelangelo said, “This doesn’t make any sense. Maybe God can understand this but our finite minds can’t.” So he let it go and carried on painting the Sistine Chapel.

      I continued to work on the equations.
      I still rooted for that bling-bling report card.
      This time around, I did it with a renewed sense of… being.

      I continue to chase moments like these, which I know is silly because you don’t find these things, it just kinda happens… but you can’t blame me.

      img courtesy of Gaines County Library

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      Posted in Arts & Culture, Schitz | 0 Comments | Tagged art, documentary, geometry, math
    • Hazem El Etre

      Posted at 3:07 pm by Gelene Celis, on December 21, 2018

      …is a Cinematographer / Director of Photography / Director from Cairo, Egypt

      =================

      Check out his Youtube here
      And his Vimeo here

      screen-shot-2017-01-04-at-2-05-36-pm

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 0 Comments | Tagged art, cairo, documentary, egypt, film, middle east, photography
    • Ryan

      Posted at 10:41 pm by Gelene Celis, on August 16, 2018

      … by Chris Landreth (American based in Canada who worked with the National Film Board of Canada)

      “This Oscar®-winning animated short from Chris Landreth is based on the life of Ryan Larkin, a Canadian animator who produced some of the most influential animated films of his time. Ryan is living every artist’s worst nightmare – succumbing to addiction, panhandling on the streets to make ends meet. Through computer-generated characters, Landreth interviews his friend to shed light on his downward spiral. Some strong language. Viewer discretion is advised.”

      ==================================

      Check out Chris Landreth’s site here

      Discovered it via TIFF at one of the animated shorts.  It was our very assignment for film school (summer before the year began).

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 0 Comments | Tagged animation, avant-garde, documentary, nfb, north america
    • Favela on Blast

      Posted at 11:40 pm by Gelene Celis, on July 24, 2017

      …directed by Diplo, as Wesley Pentz (USA) and Leandro HBL (Brazil)

      “For 20 years, a subculture has emerged in Brazil under society’s radar.  It is the culture surrounding ‘funk carioca’, a musical rhythm which mixes the American electronic funk of the 1980’s with the most diverse influences of Brazilian music.  ‘Baile funk’ is one of the most interesting musical movements in the world, but it comes from what is at times, one of the most violent and poorest places in the world: the slums of Rio de Janeiro (favelas).  this music is the personalization of the raw element.  Bombastic rhythms coming from the American Miami Bass and samples are fused with powerful rap vocals using Brazilian slang.  This documentary tells stories of sex, love, poverty, and pride among Rio’s marginalized people.  They have their own language, style, and heroes.  It’s a film that’s fast, heavy, and violent like the city itself.”
      – Written by Mad Decent 

      favela on blast – us version – with english subtitles from joonspoon on Vimeo.

      =================

      Check out Mad Decent’s (Diplo) site here
      And Mosquito Project (Leandro HBL) here

      And check out the flick’s IMDB page here

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 0 Comments | Tagged baile funk, brazil, documentary, favela, film, music, north america, rio de janeiro, south america, usa
    • Blow Your Head

      Posted at 12:34 pm by Gelene Celis, on July 24, 2017

      …a documentary series by Diplo (Tupelo, Mississippi, USA based in Los Angeles, California) and Shane McCauley (New York City, USA)

      =============

      You can watch it on Major Lazer’s Youtube Channel here

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 0 Comments | Tagged africa, art, culture, documentary, los angeles, music, north america, NYC, tupelo, usa
    • Exit Through the Gift Shop

      Posted at 4:53 pm by Gelene Celis, on September 19, 2014

      … a film by Banksy (United Kingdom)

      “Los Angeles based Frenchman ‘Thierry Guetta’ gets the idea that he would like to film street artists in the process of creating their work.  He tells them that he is making a documentary, when in reality he has no intention of editing the footage into one cohesive movie.  Unaware of this latter fact, many street artists from around the world agree to participate.  Thierry even gets into the act by assisting them in creating the art.  One of the artists that participates is the camera-shy Brit Banksy, who refuses to be shown on screen unless he is blacked out. Banksy does convince Thierry to use the footage to make a movie.  In Thierry doing so, Banksy comes to the realization that Thierry is a lousy filmmaker, but he is an interesting character in an odd yet appealing way.  So Banksy decides to use the footage and add additional material to make his own movie about Thierry’s journey in this project.  Since Thierry spent so much time involved in the process of street art, Banksy also convinces Thierry to become a street artist himself.  Thierry reinvents himself as street artist MBW, an acronym for “Mr. Brainwash”.  Banksy, in the end, may regret this suggestion.”
      – IMDB

      =============================

      This had limited release but was showing at Yonge/Dundas cinemas for a while.

      Check out the film’s site here
      And the IMDB page here

      Also, Mr. Brainwash made it (he’s exhibiting shows and got his own shop etc in LA, California)

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 0 Comments | Tagged documentary, film, graffiti, street art, uk
    • Steve Sanguedolce

      Posted at 11:36 pm by Gelene Celis, on August 13, 2012

      …is an avant-garde filmmaker based in Toronto, ON

      Here’s his latest film

      “…For me its more like assembling a jigsaw puzzle that hasn’t been made yet. I don’t have all the pieces and I’m trying to build these pieces, and the pieces come out of some interest, or desire, or willingness to explore these particular areas.

      Some people would say they never want to make a film like that. It’s like I never have a clear idea what I’m doing until I’m half way through it, and I really don’t know what my films are about until they’re pretty well half done, because they’re just collections of stories or images. It’s probably not the smoothest way to proceed, but I always like the explorative element of that. I always like the discovery element of it, because I feel like I’m not predisposed to writing an idea that I think I can work with throughout. I think I might start writing about red and end up with green, or I might start writing about wood and end up with steel. I’ve always tried to follow that. I’ve always tried to follow certain things that are important and through that I’ve tried to decipher some kind of code…”

      – Steve Sanguedolce

      =============

      His films talk about really heavy stuff: depression, suicide, addiction, crime, inequality… along with the social and psychological effects and factors that play in the equation.  He would interview people, get them to tell their stories and weave them together as if they were related or he would find connections.  He already has a ton of footage but he randomly just shoots when it feels right type thing or sometimes he goes out to shoot for specific scenes on purpose but before the video is cut, the audio comes in first: he would weave the story together and form a composition out of it.  

      The weird-looking footages are processed in a really trippy way: he shoots stuff, takes the negatives, soaks them in toner and then develops it.  His works are visually stunning but the way the stories unfold… are not for the faint of heart. 

      Having said that, he usually reveals redeeming qualities from the anguish.

      I guess that quote by Carl Jung really applies to his works, “One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.”

      Check out Steve’s site here

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      Posted in Arts & Culture | 1 Comment | Tagged art, avant-garde, culture, documentary, film, italy, toronto
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