1,968-foot Projection on Grain Silos in Quebec, in Which Location is Everything

Bigger. Brighter. More ridiculously huge. You know what you want, projectionists. And Quebec is the kind of place that will pull it off. Big budget for an absurdly-large but still very arty project? They’ll make it happen.

So, when it came time for the 400th anniversary of Quebec, Quebec City did indeed think big, projecting the work of artist/director Robert Lepage onto nearly 2000 feet of grain silos (that’s 600 meters for those of you in the civilized world). It’s the biggest architectural projection ever created.

But instead of being bombastic, it seems completely at home with its surroundings. It’s not video blown up to the monumental. It seems instead like video that’s proportional to the scale of the landscape, a natural evolution. And instead of overly patriotic cheese, the results are elegant and abstracted – genuine video art. It’s spectacle, for sure – but that’s part of the appeal. Instead of being cold or detached as some public video art has been, it’s personable.

In fact, reading the statement for the project, once you get over the size what this really suggests is the first major breakthrough in locative art:

Its geographic location, urban culture and history make Québec one of the world’s most beautiful and highly photogenic cities. Québec City has been mapped, drawn, engraved, painted, photographed and filmed, and we have invented a mill that transforms, animates, dramatizes and pays tribute to these 400 years of images. The images that the public will see are almost all drawn from archives dating back to the time when Samuel de Champlain drew Québec.

Lepage’s background, uniquely, crosses disciplines. He’s the rare artist who has been notable in three fields: as an actor, as a playwright, and as a film director. Perhaps it’s the sense of traditional theater that, paradoxically, allowed him to avoid overt narrative and let the images themselves tell the story.

The technical side of this is no less impressive. Twenty-seven 20,000-lumen projectors are combined with 238 spotlights and 329 speakers, with a radio-broadcast soundtrack by René Lussier. If you’re around Quebec City, you can go see the results for free, through August 24.

Photos above screengrabbed by pkapka, who sends us this tip. (Thanks, pekka!)

Via Ironic Sans: Canada’s 1,968 foot wide movie

The Image Mill documentation

Video

Slow Motion Inspiration of the Day: Lakai Fully Flared

By Jaymis

To distract from their intensely repetitive subject matter, skateboarding videos have used a variety of techniques, from blooper reels showing people hurting themselves, to Spike Jonze post-producing the decks to invisibility.

The latest iteration of this process I will let speak for itself:

Updated: Lakai had the video removed from Youtube. Does anybody understand why a company would do this? The video went seriously viral last week. I encountered it via Dooce (which, if you’re not in to reading about Mormonism and constipation, is one of the most popular blogs on the whole internets), and when I added it to CDMo it had well over 1 million views. The actual video was released in November, so any initial buzz has long faded. Suddenly there is a resurgence of interest in the video, and by association the company, and they respond by removing the video which is causing all of this positive publicity?

All Floria Sigismondi, a Couple of Times: Floria’s Day on No Fat Clips

By Jaymis

Fantastical video blog No Fat Clips has just concluded Floria’s Day, showcasing 3 videos from Italian director Floria Sigismondi. She of muted colours, blown out highlights, unstable camera and obsessive cutting. Floria_postmortem

DeK has hooked up 3 videos I hadn’t encountered before, but left out the more obvious ones, which you should definitely check out for the full Floria Day experience.

Old Stuff:

Sigur Ros’ untitled #1 [a.k.a. vaka] (a.k.a The Best Music Video Ever Made)

Filter and the Crystal Method: (Can’t you) trip like I do

Marylin Manson: The Beautiful People

Interpol: Obstacle 1

The Cure: End of the World

Newer Stuff:

Muse: Supermassive Black Hole

Billy Talent: Red Flag

The White Stripes: Blue Orchid

Vid of the Week: Muse’s Mixed-Up Mashed-Up Knights of Cydonia Candidate to Save Music Videos?

Director Joseph Kahn lives in one crazy world. It’s a world in which sci-fi, comics, pop culture, and movies implode on one another into an insanely mashed-up mixup of media, delivered with a strong dose of digital effects. (Holy metaculture, Batman!) If anyone could save music videos, Kahn is your man.

The Korean creative’s latest is a Western sci-fi epic, rife with movie references like Planet of the Apes, a blonde babe, cowboy laser blasters, a unicorn, robots, holographic musicians, Western action with Hong Kong kung-fu choreography, and enough style to make Tarantino look like some poor schlub with a Handycam. (Sorry, Quentin.) And that’s before the poop starts a flinging across your screen — really. Now we just need some new genres to cross-breed, like BBC costume dramas and Adam Sandler flicks, or MGM musicals and porn.

Previous outings by Kahn included directing the Toxic video that actually made Britney Spears incredibly cool (no mean feat, though choreographing a dance through a tube of lasers helps), and the Without Me video that admitted Dr. Dre is far more awesome than Eminem. (Dre, supposedly as Batman but looking a bit more like Shaft, seems genuinely bemused by the spaz that is Eminem as bat-sidekick Robin. And, really, haven’t you always wanted to watch a giant pink rabbit beat the crap out of Moby?) At other times, Kahn directs like a VJ, remixing old kung-fu classics for Chemical Brothers. But the new Muse video is probably his most virtuostic yet.

Sure, it’s eye candy, but it’s delicious. At age 34, this guy is further proof that the really cool people all drop out of NYU. Everyone together now: KAAAAAAAAAAAAAHN!!!!

MUSE Knights of Cydonia [QT Video]
Joseph Kahn Homepage [Official]
Joseph Kahn Music Videos [Official]
Joseph Kahn [Wikipedia]
Knights of Cydonia [Wikipedia]

Got a suggestion for the video inspiration of the week, to help us lighten up, face our Cinema Displays (or, erm, CRT tubes) and get to work? Don’t be shy: shout out hi.