Chance composition: RAIN

This experimental film might also be referred to as a contemplative film.  And it could just as easily be called a chance composition.  My friend and fellow Goddard alum, Brenda Bowyer, conceived of a chance methodology for the creation of new art work, using special dice such as those used in Dungeons and Dragons.  She asked me if I would like to play the chance game and I didn’t miss a beat in my “hell, yes!”

On March 3, I was given six weeks to make a work based on my unique results coming from the tossing of six dice.  It will not surprise anyone who knows me that it took me eight weeks to complete the project.  I stewed over possible ideas for seven and a half weeks and then had my aha moment this past weekend.  All footage was gathered on Saturday and I finished the editing of the film, complete with credits this evening.

The film is 22 minutes long.  I decided I didn’t want the criteria to create expectations in the viewer’s mind – I really wanted the viewer to have a “pure” experience of the film, so I wait until the end of the film to share with you the six elements that guided the creation of this work.

I will tell you one thing, though:  I did a lot of research on non-narrative film for this project.  what I learned became a primary driver for me in the creation of this work.

I welcome your feedback.  Here is the link to RAIN

Published by JulieV

I write, I photograph, I sing, I create, I muse, I meditate, I contemplate, I wonder, I communicate, I improvise, I collaborate and I synthesize. I am an interdisciplinary artist that is exploring the world through the various sensibilities and intersecting forms of image, word, symbol, spirituality, nature, 2-D and 3-D art, sound and music. In my encounters with whatever and whomever life brings my way, I engage and respond with my art so as to question, examine-ate, elevate, re-purpose and transform. I am currently in the process of developing socially engaged installation works in the hopes of enriching, challenging, sustaining and transforming through the human art encounter.

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