Manual Transmission I was a group exhibition and rooftop event presented on July 31, 2010 in Brooklyn, NY where curators Joy Drury Cox, Nathaniel Ward and Patrick Amsellem commissioned 10 artists to each create a unique artwork comprised of 36 exposures from one roll of 35 mm
color slide film.
Shot with
color slide film — and more evocative in their artifice than your average Cindy Sherman — they're the work of Josef Albers; I assume their evocative red - and - brown tonality is a result of deterioration of the original Kodachrome slides (the cyan dye would have faded at a faster rate than the magenta), but it only adds to the pictures» atmosphere.
A self - described «emotional science project,» Bernadette Mayer's Memory — 1,100 - odd photographs made by shooting a thirty - six - exposure roll of 35 - mm
color slide film on each of the thirty - one days of July 1971, accompanied by six - plus hours of diaristic narration that the artist later revised into a book — is one of those conceptual pieces from the 1960s and»70s that have been better known as anecdote than as physical fact.
To limit the amount of B&W film I was developing and printing every day, I started carrying a 35 mm camera with
color slide film to the clubs.
Not exact matches
Using a specially modified camera I shoot directly onto long rolls of
color slide -
film.
Culled from the artist's archive of hundreds of
color slides originally shot using Ektachrome
film (which Kodak discontinued in 2013), Harris initially presented selections from his archive publicly as digital projections at Yale University, as well as in conjunction with the exhibition Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at New York University's Grey Art Gallery and the Studio Museum in Harlem in 2013 - 14.
Made using black & white
slide film, these images are drained of the bright
colors typical to the fairground painting vernacular, changing the way in which the original paintings were read.
Nha Trang About Blog Shooting
Film is a daily blog for all things analogue: from 35 mm, medium format to large format,
color to black and white, negative to
slide films, and even instant
film.
Load
slides, 35 mm
color film, black - and - white negatives, and Advanced Photo System (APS)
film into your computer with Konica's Qscan QS - 1202U
Film Scanner.