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Image developed with piece of fabric on expired contrast photo paper. Used Kodak paper developer and film developer. Washed and then fixed.

Photographed by: © SAM Nasim

Email: sam.nasim99@gmail.com /

sam_nasim99@yahoo.com

1. All photographs & contents are copyrighted © 2012 by the photographer © SAM Nasim & must not be used without explicit permission. All Rights reserved worldwide by © SAM Nasim in the copyright law. Please don’t edit / alter / use these images on websites/ blogs /any other media for commercial /non-commercial purposes. Unwanted reproduction/ publication of these images are strictly prohibited which will tantamount to violation of existing copyright laws. Legal actions/ necessary steps will be taken against the violators.

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In February I renewed my FLICKR Pro account. It cleared my bank, but FLICKR sternly warned "Payup sucker or we dump your crappy snapshots". It had to be. They charged me twice, and I have not found a valid help request procedure. WAHHHHHHH !

 

My bank is going to fix this, NO THANKS TO FLUCKR !

Music performed @ CK12 Hommes Gallery, Rotterdam/NL 2011

 

Download

polymer clay over a scrap clay armature.

backfilled, sanded and buffed.

 

trying to recreate the night sky. i used a metalic blue polymer clay and glitter.

unfortunately no matter how much glitter i added the effect wasn't nearly as strong as i wanted

A German Luftwaffe Airbus A400M Atlas is seen on the ramp in Boeing Square at The 2021 Eaa Airventure The A400 is from Wunstorf Air Base in northern Germany.

Not a real space photo. Light art. Photoshop manipulations = duplicate layer created, added noise to fill in distant/dense star field, blended back to base layer. No other manipulations. Still testing effects. Included lens changes to create gas clouds using Waterworld technique. The red giant located in the "hole" in the gas field at image right is completely serendipitous.

The look on Grahams face when i said i wanted to try this in the pinhole camera was priceless XD I think i drive him up the wall with crazy experimental ideas lol Gonna try some redscaling next >:D

 

After i have put my negs in the washing machine >:P

 

Had a bit of a problem when when processing my film :( on the 5th neg it slightly overlapped boooooooooooo had much fun doing this :) Pinhole is my friend <3

Olympus XA4

Olympus Zuiko 28mm f/3,5

Kodak Ektachrome P800/1600

_____

This is Jack's gorgeous Northrop YB-35 flying wing.

FLEX– The Florida Experimental Film/Video Festival– presents Spacey Space, a selection of some of their favorite entries from past festivals. The selection of these particular works was inspired by the theme of one of the festivals most popular programs of the 2009 competitive festival. While capturing the broad scope of work submitted each year to the festival, the individual works contained in this program all manage to share a common interest in exploring the notion of space–both inner and outer.

While some of these works implore us to pull from the void in order to recognize and remember that which appears lost–be it forgotten people, memories, ideas, yet others reveal what is already there, and unseen to the naked eye– electrons, devices of control and isolation, and ghosts. By exploring the expanses of inner and outer space, the phantom zones existing beside us and within us, these pieces demand of us a closer inspection of the unseen, the in between, and the forgotten.

Energie! by Thorsten Fleisch

(Germany, 2007, 6 minutes, DVD)

 

From a more technical point of view, the TV/video screen comes alive by a controlled beam of electron in the cathode ray tube. For Energie! and uncontrolled high voltage discharge of approximately 30,000 volts exposes photographic paper which is then arranged in time to create new visual systems of electron organization.

Thorsten Fleisch’s experimentation of materials in his work results in a heightened state of awareness of unseen elements and captured ephemera. He began experimenting with super 8 film in high school. He went on to study with Peter Kubelka at the Stadelschule in Frankfurt where he began working with 16mm film.

Day/Night (Devil’s Millhopper) by Andres Arocha

(USA, 2009, 5 minutes, 16mm)

Enter a space. A one hundred feet deep hole dwarfs invaders with visions of immeasurably tall trees in an almost pristine natural setting. How do you see it? Inspired by the grandeur of nature, Day/Night (Devil’s Millhopper) limits itself to this setting and explores it through different eyes.

Spaceghost by Laurie Jo Reynolds

(USA, 2007, 26 minutes, DVD)

 

Space Ghost compares the experiences of astronauts and prisoners, using popular depictions of space travel to illustrate the physical and existential aspects of incarceration: sensory deprivation, the perception of time as chaotic and indistinguishable, the displacement of losing face-to-face contact, and the sense of existing in a different but parallel universe with family and loved ones.

Laurie Jo Reynolds is an artist, educator, and activist. In addition to being an advocate for prisoners’ rights, she is also involved with creative collaborative projects for prisoners and ex-offenders. She teaches at Columbia College and Loyola University in Chicago

Rosewell by Bill Brown

(USA, 1994, 23 minutes, 16mm)

 

A space kid borrows dad’s UFO for a joyride, but winds up crashing near Roswell, New Mexico. An amnesiac filmmaker goes looking for answers.

Bill Brown makes movies about ghosts that masquerade as movies about landscapes– or maybe it’s the other way around. He studied filmmaking at Harvard University, and received his MFA from the California Institute of the Arts.

All Through the Night by Michael Robinson

(USa, 2008, 4 minutes, DVD)

A charred visitation with an icy language of control; there is no room for love.

Since the year 2000, Michael Robinson has created a body of film, video and photography work exploring the poetics of loss and the dangers of mediated experience. Originally from upstate NY, he holds a BFA from Ithaca College, and a MFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Phantogram by Kerry Laitala

(USA, 2008, 6 minutes, 16mm)

A communication between the maker, pure light, and the shadow?graphic spirits of cinema. A telegram from the dead using the medium of film. Slippery shimmers slide across the celluloid strip, to embed themselves on the consciousness of the viewers.

Kerry Laitala is an experimental filmmaker from San Francisco whose handcrafted films are masterful, tactile, manipulations of celluloid. She studied film and photography at Massachusetts College of Art, and has a masters degree from the San Francisco Art Institution.

It Will Die Out in the Mind by Deborah Stratman

(USA, 2006, 4 minutes, DVD)

 

A short meditation on the possibility of spiritual existence and the paranormal in our information age. Texts are lifted from Andrei Tarkovsky’s film Stalker in which Stalker’s daughter redeems his otherwise doomed spiritual journey. She offers him something more expansive and less explicable than logic or technology as the conceptual pillar of the human spirit.

The title is taken from a passage about the time from Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed:

Stavrogin: …in the Apocalypse the angel swears that there’ll be no more time.

Kirillov: I know. It’s quite true, it’s said very clearly ad exactly. When the whole of man has achieved happiness, there won’t be any time, because it won’t be needed. It’s perfectly true.

Stavrogin: Where will they put it then?

Kirillov: They won’t put it anywhere. Time isn’t a thing, it’s an idea. It’ll die out in the mind.

Deborah Stratman is a Chicago-based filmmaker who leaves town a lot. Her films blur the lines between experimental and documentary genres, and she frequently works in other media including photography, sound, drawing and architectural intervention. Deborah teaches at the University of Illinois at Chicago, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Cal Arts.

FLEX–the Florida Experimental Film/Video Festival–has sought to provide a year-round home for the exhibition of experimental cinema from around the world since 2004. Our hope is that this annual event can serve as an important venue for artists to share their work, while also allowing local audiences a unique opportunity to see significant works that do not have a regular home elsewhere in the State.

Started by experimental filmmaker and University of Florida professor Roger Beebe in Gainesville, Florida, FLEX has earned itself a reputation for quality programing and events. In addition to the alternating festivals, one competitive and the other invitational, FLEX regularly presents film-centric events. These other events, like gong shows featuring industrial and educational films, Cinema Under the Stars- 16mm movie classics screened outside, and Silent Films, Loud Music- local musicians score music to silent films, all serve to promote the communal experience of film viewing.

Between splitting her time mining the internet for the most gruesome pics for her psychology lab job and working at Gainesville’s finest independent video store, Alisson Bittiker, once the FLEX chair wrangler, is now the Managing Director of FLEX. Dreams, of constant stress, work, and no pay, really do come true. She studied photography and video at the University of Florida.

trying to recreate the night sky. i used a metalic blue polymer clay and glitter.

unfortunately no matter how much glitter i added the effect wasn't nearly as strong as i wanted

FLEX– The Florida Experimental Film/Video Festival– presents Spacey Space, a selection of some of their favorite entries from past festivals. The selection of these particular works was inspired by the theme of one of the festivals most popular programs of the 2009 competitive festival. While capturing the broad scope of work submitted each year to the festival, the individual works contained in this program all manage to share a common interest in exploring the notion of space–both inner and outer.

While some of these works implore us to pull from the void in order to recognize and remember that which appears lost–be it forgotten people, memories, ideas, yet others reveal what is already there, and unseen to the naked eye– electrons, devices of control and isolation, and ghosts. By exploring the expanses of inner and outer space, the phantom zones existing beside us and within us, these pieces demand of us a closer inspection of the unseen, the in between, and the forgotten.

Energie! by Thorsten Fleisch

(Germany, 2007, 6 minutes, DVD)

 

From a more technical point of view, the TV/video screen comes alive by a controlled beam of electron in the cathode ray tube. For Energie! and uncontrolled high voltage discharge of approximately 30,000 volts exposes photographic paper which is then arranged in time to create new visual systems of electron organization.

Thorsten Fleisch’s experimentation of materials in his work results in a heightened state of awareness of unseen elements and captured ephemera. He began experimenting with super 8 film in high school. He went on to study with Peter Kubelka at the Stadelschule in Frankfurt where he began working with 16mm film.

Day/Night (Devil’s Millhopper) by Andres Arocha

(USA, 2009, 5 minutes, 16mm)

Enter a space. A one hundred feet deep hole dwarfs invaders with visions of immeasurably tall trees in an almost pristine natural setting. How do you see it? Inspired by the grandeur of nature, Day/Night (Devil’s Millhopper) limits itself to this setting and explores it through different eyes.

Spaceghost by Laurie Jo Reynolds

(USA, 2007, 26 minutes, DVD)

 

Space Ghost compares the experiences of astronauts and prisoners, using popular depictions of space travel to illustrate the physical and existential aspects of incarceration: sensory deprivation, the perception of time as chaotic and indistinguishable, the displacement of losing face-to-face contact, and the sense of existing in a different but parallel universe with family and loved ones.

Laurie Jo Reynolds is an artist, educator, and activist. In addition to being an advocate for prisoners’ rights, she is also involved with creative collaborative projects for prisoners and ex-offenders. She teaches at Columbia College and Loyola University in Chicago

Rosewell by Bill Brown

(USA, 1994, 23 minutes, 16mm)

 

A space kid borrows dad’s UFO for a joyride, but winds up crashing near Roswell, New Mexico. An amnesiac filmmaker goes looking for answers.

Bill Brown makes movies about ghosts that masquerade as movies about landscapes– or maybe it’s the other way around. He studied filmmaking at Harvard University, and received his MFA from the California Institute of the Arts.

All Through the Night by Michael Robinson

(USa, 2008, 4 minutes, DVD)

A charred visitation with an icy language of control; there is no room for love.

Since the year 2000, Michael Robinson has created a body of film, video and photography work exploring the poetics of loss and the dangers of mediated experience. Originally from upstate NY, he holds a BFA from Ithaca College, and a MFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Phantogram by Kerry Laitala

(USA, 2008, 6 minutes, 16mm)

A communication between the maker, pure light, and the shadow?graphic spirits of cinema. A telegram from the dead using the medium of film. Slippery shimmers slide across the celluloid strip, to embed themselves on the consciousness of the viewers.

Kerry Laitala is an experimental filmmaker from San Francisco whose handcrafted films are masterful, tactile, manipulations of celluloid. She studied film and photography at Massachusetts College of Art, and has a masters degree from the San Francisco Art Institution.

It Will Die Out in the Mind by Deborah Stratman

(USA, 2006, 4 minutes, DVD)

 

A short meditation on the possibility of spiritual existence and the paranormal in our information age. Texts are lifted from Andrei Tarkovsky’s film Stalker in which Stalker’s daughter redeems his otherwise doomed spiritual journey. She offers him something more expansive and less explicable than logic or technology as the conceptual pillar of the human spirit.

The title is taken from a passage about the time from Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed:

Stavrogin: …in the Apocalypse the angel swears that there’ll be no more time.

Kirillov: I know. It’s quite true, it’s said very clearly ad exactly. When the whole of man has achieved happiness, there won’t be any time, because it won’t be needed. It’s perfectly true.

Stavrogin: Where will they put it then?

Kirillov: They won’t put it anywhere. Time isn’t a thing, it’s an idea. It’ll die out in the mind.

Deborah Stratman is a Chicago-based filmmaker who leaves town a lot. Her films blur the lines between experimental and documentary genres, and she frequently works in other media including photography, sound, drawing and architectural intervention. Deborah teaches at the University of Illinois at Chicago, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Cal Arts.

FLEX–the Florida Experimental Film/Video Festival–has sought to provide a year-round home for the exhibition of experimental cinema from around the world since 2004. Our hope is that this annual event can serve as an important venue for artists to share their work, while also allowing local audiences a unique opportunity to see significant works that do not have a regular home elsewhere in the State.

Started by experimental filmmaker and University of Florida professor Roger Beebe in Gainesville, Florida, FLEX has earned itself a reputation for quality programing and events. In addition to the alternating festivals, one competitive and the other invitational, FLEX regularly presents film-centric events. These other events, like gong shows featuring industrial and educational films, Cinema Under the Stars- 16mm movie classics screened outside, and Silent Films, Loud Music- local musicians score music to silent films, all serve to promote the communal experience of film viewing.

Between splitting her time mining the internet for the most gruesome pics for her psychology lab job and working at Gainesville’s finest independent video store, Alisson Bittiker, once the FLEX chair wrangler, is now the Managing Director of FLEX. Dreams, of constant stress, work, and no pay, really do come true. She studied photography and video at the University of Florida.

This is a photograph - camera toss. No Photoshop manipulations - other than to resize.

I'm conducting iPhone app experiments... I'll get back to you with specific apps since I don't remember all their names (so don't judge me too harshly)! :P

If you thought Llwyngwril Systems design some strange contraptions look at these real-life ones. Top left: Fairey Delta, top right: Prone position Meteor, bottom left: I've forgotten (a stainless steel supersonic aircraft too heavy to succeed), bottom right: experimental high lift aircraft with "blown" surfaces.

 

A pleasant afternoon looking at the exhibits at RAF Cosford on my way home to Wales from Switzerland. Fascinating history and inspiration for Lego spaceships combined.

papelera en la esquina

Not the end product, still trying to get the timing for dropping the stars...

strobist info:

Exposure - 0.04 sec (1/25)

Aperture - f/2.8

ISO Speed - 200

Flash - Sb 800 45 deg to the right of bottle @ 1/64

Reflector - front left

LA EXPERIMENTAL EXPERIENCE

Julio 2008

 

En Vivo:

CHILENO MEDIO

EL BANCO MUNDIAL

MONTAÑA EXTENDIDA

LA GOLDEN ACAPULCO

LA BANDAS

ASAMBLEA POR LA LIBERACION DEL YUGO

  

Visuales:

POR ERROR

ELEFANTE Y GONORREA

EL BIEN Y EL MAL

FELIPE VISOR

HOMLESS

 

Feria:

JACOBINO DISCOS

PRODUCTORA MUTANTE

PASTA BASE

ANTONIO SEPULVEDA

  

Domingo 6 de Julio. 2008. 16:00

Bar Opium.

Bombero Nuñez 359, subiendo al Cerro.

Adhesion: $ 1500.-

 

How unsharp becomes sharp when one looks up close.

 

These twelve photos were done with an old, 6x6 Ikonta folder, handheld, with roughly 2s shutter time.

 

I took this picture on my way home from Queens late at night in my car as i was driving

Experimental Color gradients generated using cosine waves for Red, Green and Blue color components.

 

Parameters for cosine wave Offset, Amplitude, Frequency and Phase have been animated for every RGB component.

Brincando com luzes, cores e formas, deu nisso... ócio.

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