MoNSooN

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Video: DoAn Forest

Music: “MoNSooN.” – a song from the alnum MeMoRieS FRoM THe FuTuRe. by mÌиdT૦UcHbE▲Ts.

made in September 2012

About this video:
I found myself fascinated by this bucket standing alone on this rooftop across the alley under the window of my Seoul apartment. There was something deeply satisfying about seeing this full bucket overflowing. The circle of the rim seemed to be a portal. The surface of the water seemed to speak a truth of the universe.
A few days previously, I’d downloaded a recent album by a beat-maker extraordinaire named MiNdToUcH. Without looking at song titles, the track “MoNSooN.” caught my attention. I saw the three ‘o’s of monsoon and thought of the circular rim of the bucket. (This almost became a very typographic-focussed video.)
The song, with its three distinct sections, called out for a completely different treatment in each section. The first part feels meditative and balanced; the middle floats; and the end comes unhinged. Im the video, I wanted to keep a sense of continuity in space; I also wanted to not make myself be limited by own footage, or, in other words, to let the song guide me into territory my own video footage wouldn’t necessarily reach. So, I began with my own cinema, my own bucket (well, technically, my neighbor’s bucket), then I looked in through the window upon the cinema of another, and finally let the cinema be invaded.
I want to give credit to some of the inspirations. First, the MiNdToUcH track; this is definitely a video that would not exist in this shape or form if it weren’t for the track. The music suggested the scenes, rather than being pinned to scenes already set. For the second part, I wanted something sexy and rainy; and, fortunately, a Korean film I’d seen fifteen years previously at the 1997 Vancouver International Film Festival came to mind: Motel Cactus, photographed by Christopher Doyle. I love how this entire film stayed in the same motel room, giving the viewer the time to also get to know the space itself. For the final part, I sampled scenes from the video game Call of Duty Black Ops, using the Kowloon map. As a non-video gamer, what led me to this? Well, just a month before at the 2012 Seoul Exis Film Festival, I saw a film by video artist Ip Yuk Yiu called “Another Day of Depression in Kowloon.” In this film, he took ambient scenes from this same game, turning it into a thoughtful, meditative exploration of space; rather than scenes of war, it was just spacey, still-camera scenes of rain filling the cracked textures of the virtual Kowloon. Seeing this film, my eyes were opened to the idea that video games could be a rich source of cinema (and, yes, I am aware that YouTube is filled with Machinima clips, so I know I’m late to this idea). Here, I didn’t actually sample the Ip Yuk Yiu film, because I wanted something more stalkerish, frenetic, and suspenseful. By the way, I went crazy with the filters in Final Cut Pro X to reinvent the look of the game.
There’s one more thing I want to mention about the first part; when the video cuts away from the roof and the bucket and shows the floating texts, “The earth reflects heavens,” this is footage of a temporary art installation that was at Sun Yat-Sen Gardens in Vancouver in Fall 2011. I filmed it on a rainy day, but it wasn’t just the rainy connection I wanted to make; to me, the wisdom the words was the wisdom of the bucket. The artist’s website is here: http://www.yoonhyungmin.com/heaven-and-earth/

… also check out a video I made two years, documenting a MiNdToUcH recording session in January 2011: http://www.doanforest.com/2011/01/mindtouch-minor-intrusion-sesson/ (or here’s the YouTube Link)

Melancholy Lights

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Melancholy Lights from DoAn Forest on Vimeo.

(EDIT MORE LATER) About the video: I juxtaposed footage from 1939 World Fair, bombings of Hiroshima/Germany, and a 1946 atomic test. The background is a projection of the earlier Melancholy edit onto an electronic junk sculpture I was making (but subsequently didn’t finish). Also, the fireworks theme. Basically, it’s about human need/love for artificial light, fire, and the destructive darkness of the light we cherish.

Sun Through

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About the Video:

Credits:

Music by: Stu Reed

50% of the shots in this video are my own; the other 50% are from the Getty archive of stock footage (most notably, the shot of the dancer comes from the stock archive). For the sake of a contest, I was given access to that huge library. Needless to say, some stellar works were created, and this particular video got lost in the shuffle. I can live with that; I was just happy to get to browse and download from that archive.

Here’s the full description of the video that went with the contest entry:

“From the earliest days of cinema until now, the image of the sun shining through trees is a much featured shot. It could indicate travel from A to B, the soul trying to escape the woods, restless longings, or the brain cutting in and out. The sun-through shot is quintessentially cinematic, with its flickering tension of light and dark. Video artist DoAn Forest has acquired a rather large collection of sun-through shots, and access to Getty Images provided the chance to smoothly link all this footage together. Here, the sun’s bursts get locked into the soaring melody, a melody which finally gave these stray shots a purpose, provided by musician Stu Reed.”

Of additional note, in case it is not totally obvious, I was really trying to make the sun bursts time with the music – not an easy task, and I became increasingly less careful about this as the editing went on. But, here I’ll embed the first test sequence of this idea:

Birds in a Harbor

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A photo remix by DoAn Forest. A friend, Youki Cropas, had taken a series of photos of birds in a harbor in Istanbul. Played in a slideshow, the photo sequence was hypnotizing. I asked for permission to remix them, and this is the result. My concept was of a lonely merchant sailor watching TV in a Korean harbor, different thoughts going through his head. The music was made by remixing and filtering Billie Holiday’s “I’m A Fool To Want You.”

Search

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I submitted this video for the KISS Contest, the Kamloops Independent Short Short film competition on May 15, 2008. It is the most recent example of my experiments with my portable projector connected to my video iPod. The video shows images of animals that used to live where I now live projected into different spaces of the house. Then, projected videos of youtube into nature, hoping the animals in the shadows might enjoy them.

Kamloops Arrival

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I made this in late February 2007, three weeks after beginning life in Kamloops, BC, Canada. The video has been submitted into a video contest at the Kamloops Art Gallery with the theme, “The Place Where I Live.”

UPDATE: Happily, I ended up winning the contest that I submitted this video to (Mar. 18th, 2007). I also met some really good people at the event, including a few fine arts professors at the local university and various art gallery staff. A very good experience. Perhaps, it’s the first thing I’ve ever won since I won a drawing contest at a Cornwall seaside hotel resort when I was eight years old. I love the handmade, one-of-a-kind wall-plaque I got as a prize.

Vancouver Slow Chase

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This was filmed in 1999 and edited in the early 2000s. I’d written a film script for a movie to take place in Vancouver. A lot of the abandoned material of the script made it into this. The film is basically location shooting from bus windows, train windows, apartment balconies, etc … with a commentary that drifts between jilted lover and detached urban critic.
I’d still like to do a shorter version (this one is 16 minutes), but not sure when/if I’ll ever get around to it.

Emotional Content (Han of K-Pop Remix)

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This video concept was born when I bought a 6-DVD of Korean pop music videos around 2001. In almost these videos, it seems that someone meets a tragic end — it could be a disease, a crash, a suicide, a gunshot wound, or just of heartbreak. Living in Korea for a long time, I find this tragic appetite of their pop culture to be almost tragicomic.
The video was cut to a song which was a collaborate between Jet Echo (myspace.com/jetecho) and MakBak (myspace.com/makbak) … two bands who lived in Seoul in the mid 2000s.

Tracks of a Cowboy

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In October 2008, my Grandpa and I traveled from Glentworth, Saskatchewan to New York City. This film documents the places and some of the many stories my Grandpa told throughout the journey.

Cast Away In The Plastific Ocean

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If you were to find yourself on a desert island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, you’re more likely to find a beach strewn with garbage than a pristeen paradise. Here, the movie Cast Away is re-edited to reflect the reality of the great garbage patch of the Pacific Ocean.

Fill The Screen With Screens

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Tried to fill the screen of my video camera with as many screens as I could fit in. Managed to squeeze in 12 screens – an old rear-projection TV, another cathode-ray TV, three computers, an extra monitor connected to a computer, a portable DVD player, an iphone, an ipod video, a mini-TV and two projectors projecting onto screens. Filmed from three cameras. Plus, a few extra DVD players were needed to feed signals.
Our household happened to have a lot more electronics than the average one, but what with the proliferation of new TVs, mobile phones, MP3 players, and digital cameras – I’m sure many North American households have their own fair share of screens.
As to why I selected certain images to be on the screens, I’ll leave that to the viewer’s imagination … but I will say more of my energy simply went into setting up the room, and we were in the process of moving out, so there wasn’t time to really work develop the images or create the kind of dialogue between the screens that would have been worth exploring.

Art for Wasps

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I’d had these freeze-pops in the freezer for ages with no intention of eating them and an empty frame, which I’d been intending for ages to try to make a random, melting painting. With one week to go before moving from Kamloops, I finally got it together to put it all together. At first, some promising patterns and colors started to develop, but the syrupy colored liquid was quickly absorbed into the cardboard, and the final piece ended up looking like lightly-stained paper.
I derived many of the sounds in the soundtrack by playing the free “bees” sound-pack, put out by Tonehammer, and available at: www.tonehammer.com

What I’m working on now …

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I’ll be putting in sessions this fall to get a bunch of sites-in-progress going. First of all, I’ll do a big push for www.vidtionary.com — this is a video dictionary website I’ve been making for English language learners. I’ve also finally gotten around to do some work on the archive for the magazine Space Age Bachelor which I used to write and edit. I am also generating some new writing for efeele, a magazine/website devoted to the audio and the visual.

Seoul Wizard Sunset

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Sunset in Seoul, five or six days ago … been brushed by a typhoon since then … living at the moment in Cheonho-dong, Seoul, walking distance from where this panorama photo was taken …