Monday, November 30, 2009
mono
stuff white people like
Sunday, November 29, 2009
chinese beat: banana monkey
Saturday, November 28, 2009
the soliloquist
It's Saturday morning! It's cartoon morning!
Even though, I usually post animations from The Saturday Morning Cartoon Index, I have now decided to post other little jewels of animations that I find elsewhere, as well. This post was originally posted on NeochaEDGE, a wonderful site I was fortunate enough to be invited to contributed to.
"The Soliloquist" by Taiwanese illustrator and animator Ma Kuangpei (馬匡霈, aka Keats) is a modern fable about loneliness and self-deception. It tells the story of a heart broken man who receives letters and packages stating with the wrong addressee. Unable to return the letters, he starts to read them and develops a strange illusory relationship with his fictitious alter-ego.
Ma’s animated short combines Eastern and Western aesthetic concepts and is defined by a wonderful combination of collage and watercolor styles with brilliant transitions. Watch the entire six-minute film below.
Born in 1981, Ma graduated from the Tainan National University of the Arts. The Soliloquist (aka 我说啊,我说) was produced in 2008 as his graduation work. It has received amazing feedback ever since and was nominated and screened at numerous international film festivals. In 2009 it was awarded the “Little Nomad Prize“ at the Urban Nomad Filmfest in Taipei, Taiwan and it received the “Special Mention – Asian New Force“ at the Hong Kong Independent Short Film and Video Awards. Moreover, it has received the “Special Distinction Award” in the Graduation Films category at the 33rd 2009 Annecy International Animation Film Festival, becoming the first Taiwanese animated movie to receive an award at the competition. Ma’s success this year, in combination with this most-recent honor, will serve to show Chinese artists, most of whom are currently focused on the technical aspect of animation, another direction in which they can grow.
Friday, November 27, 2009
china in art
Thursday, November 26, 2009
china's creative cyberyouth
Here is a nice article I have found on censorship and how it may foster creativity. A case that emerged where creativity would be least expected? Let this article prove your preconceptions wrong!
The Flash Culture Revolution
by Duncan Rickelton (Shanghai, China)
“Jia Jun Peng, your mother wants you to come home for dinner.”
Sounds like a fairly innocuous phrase, doesn’t it? But in fact when it was posted on a Chinese internet forum last Thursday it gave rise to an unprecedented flash flood of public creativity: 300,000 responses within two days. What has transpired is fascinating not only for what it reveals about Chinese youth, but also for its wider sociological implications. It seems to indicate that the ever-quickening pace of cultural development is now moving up a gear, breaking the waters on an entirely new social trend: flash culture.
At 10:59pm last Thursday the message was posted on a forum operated by Baidu, China’s largest search engine. The first responses came within minutes, apparently from random members viewing the forum: “I’m not coming back home for dinner today. I’m eating at the internet café. Tell my mother for me, will you?”; “If you don’t come back home right now I’ll make you kneel on the washboard.” More responses began to pour in by the second, and after six hours there were more than 17,000 posts in the thread. Members had set up accounts as Jia Jun Peng’s mother, sister, grandfather, creating a humorous fictional dialogue between the characters. From Jia Jun Peng’s girlfriend: “Peng Peng, come back. Your mother has accepted we can be together. Let’s not argue.” There were soon entire stories being posted. The artists were also quick to get involved – every moment a new picture was Photoshopped and uploaded to the board, depicting President Obama entreating Jia Jun Peng to return home for dinner, or a government meeting in the Great Hall of the People to discuss “Jia Jun Peng’s dinner problem”.
Still no-one is exactly sure who Jan Jun Peng is, or whether he even exists at all. But it doesn’t really seem to matter. This is by no means the first example of mass creativity to emerge out of cyberculture. (...) But what is remarkable about the Jia Jun Peng phenomenon is the sheer volume of participation, and the rate of spread. By 1:38 pm on July 20th, four days after the initial post, the thread reached its limit of 315,649 posts. It was 10,421 pages long. (...)
However, that this has happened in China may be an eye-opener for the rest of the world. The rapidity of China’s economic development of recent years is undeniable, but there remained question marks about the capacity of the People’s Republic for creative innovation given the tendency of the education system to promote rote learning over individual creativity. The Jia Jun Peng thread, though, sends a strong message into cyberspace: there are fertile imaginations aplenty among China’s 21st century youth, and, given the right conditions, there is huge creative potential.
Whether the government will provide those conditions remains to be seen. They certainly do not seem to be loosening their grip on the internet – the recently adopted ‘Green Dam’ policy decrees that all new computers be manufactured with in-built filtering software. But Chinese netizens don’t take this kind of thing sitting down. When the government tried to clamp down on internet profanity earlier this year, the public responded by inventing ten ‘mythical creatures’ whose names were pronounced in a similar way to the banned expletives they represented (the ‘French-Croatian Squid’, for instance, pronounced in Mandarin fa ke you, actually referenced the pronunciation of a well-known English insult). There developed a whole sub-culture surrounding these mythical creatures, with images, faux-documentaries and songs being produced. Call it protest, call it ridiculous – but you can’t say it’s not creative.(...)
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
yeasayer - ambling alp
Sunday, November 22, 2009
time of the gypsies
Saturday, November 21, 2009
ida's bad luck
Ida's Luck Part 1 from Katy Towell on Vimeo.
Ida's Luck Part 2 from Katy Towell on Vimeo.
snap of the week
tim burton on wearing striped socks
snap of the week
Friday, November 20, 2009
korean office
and action!
chinese beat: women in chinese music
Thursday, November 19, 2009
days with my father
NOTHING cheers up my dad, like stories of my success. So if he's down, or obsessing about something, I'll immediately conjure up a blossoming career. I'm shooting for the New York Times. The New Yorker. Multi-million dollar advertising campaigns. Sometimes it's true, sometimes it's not. But it doesn't matter. The important thing is to fill him with as much joy as I can. His face bursts with happiness. He'll say "I have to tell ALL my friends, my son is famous!".