FEEL IT.STREAM
?

Patrick Delabre

Directing

Known For

Lapse
N/A

Lapse is a research of a porous state of the cinematographic material which by "intra-photogrammic fragmentation" (Claudine Eizykman) and encrustation of grains unfolds in its crackling like a film in mesh.

Lapse

1981
No image
N/A

No description available.

Sans titre

1976
No image
N/A

No description available.

Glissements/diaphragme

1974
No image
N/A

No description available.

Discontinuité

1974
No image
N/A

No description available.

Double épaisseurs

1974
Scandés
N/A

No description available.

Scandés

1977
No image
N/A

No description available.

Distorsion

1975
No image
N/A

No description available.

Parcours

1975
No image
N/A

No description available.

Courbes

1975
No image
N/A

No description available.

Images morceiées

1974
No image
5.0

Immediately after the screening of CHANTILLY at the MBXA (Paris) on November 8, 1976, we began a new film project, continuing to explore the concomitance of several simultaneous images within the framework of the cinematographic image, but which, freed from the orthogonal grid of the previous film, would be able to move freely in space: they would collide.

Carambolages

1976
Chantilly
N/A

To construct a film in an atomic way, starting from simple elements which combined with each other will produce a whole. Taking the dot as an elementary unit is not a coincidence if we think that the notion of pixels with video images began to occupy people's minds in the 70’s, decades before the arrival of giant led screens. [...] 9, and then 16 screens within one same screen allow an impressive process of simultaneous abstract sequences. The film partition shows a combinatorial process between monochrome colours in the background and pointillist compositions in the foreground. As many sequences as screens; each one is a reflection on abstract images: pointillism, geometrism, "nuagisme" or informal abstraction , are all nods to the history of abstraction in painting: Vassili Kandinsky, Paul Klee, or Augusto Giacometti seem to have been called together within a mondrianesque grid. JMB

Chantilly

1976