A little story about the final clip (Dave Brand). Dave was an engineer working for the AiR Force before he retired to creating art. A perfectionist. I showed up for the shoot and his kiln was broken. I came back to a second try and he couldn't get the metal to melt. And then came the failure of the piece. A priceless moment in the AiR archives is Dave saying, "I guess I'll have to make Art out of this."
This one is much more concentrated on the technical aspects, I find. As a lure for getting people to see that you have a special talent for getting the artists to talk about their art, I think that the #2 sampler is much better, actually.
That's probably because there you have them talking about more aspects of themselves and their art. Does that make sense to you?
Let me know when you have one video that you are completely happy with. I'll feature you.
As I mentioned, I created these for McGraw-Hill for their college Art History text. They only wanted me to include art forms featured in the text (fairly limiting) for the first "demo." They asked for a second and I felt I had more leeway--ergo the more inclusive video. Glad you enjoyed it!
A little story about the final clip (Dave Brand). Dave was an engineer working for the AiR Force before he retired to creating art. A perfectionist. I showed up for the shoot and his kiln was broken. I came back to a second try and he couldn't get the metal to melt. And then came the failure of the piece. A priceless moment in the AiR archives is Dave saying, "I guess I'll have to make Art out of this."
canderso 5 years ago
This one is much more concentrated on the technical aspects, I find. As a lure for getting people to see that you have a special talent for getting the artists to talk about their art, I think that the #2 sampler is much better, actually.
That's probably because there you have them talking about more aspects of themselves and their art. Does that make sense to you?
Let me know when you have one video that you are completely happy with. I'll feature you.
Marihani 5 years ago
As I mentioned, I created these for McGraw-Hill for their college Art History text. They only wanted me to include art forms featured in the text (fairly limiting) for the first "demo." They asked for a second and I felt I had more leeway--ergo the more inclusive video. Glad you enjoyed it!
canderso 5 years ago