Catch SEAT shorts on the big screen at Local Sightings

 Installations/Screenings, SEAT, Tess Martin - The Whale Story, Upcoming  Comments Off on Catch SEAT shorts on the big screen at Local Sightings
Sep 252012
 

The Local Sightings Film Festival is the best film festival in Seattle – at least according to the Seattle Weekly. And yes, it’s hosted by the NW Film Forum, and yes, I (Tess Martin) been volunteering in their office for the past two years. But still, this festival rocks, and I’m super happy that two of my recent shorts are screening in the Experimental Shorts program. It’s on Tuesday, October 2nd at 9PM.
The two shorts screening are The Whale Story, created with the help of around 20 volunteers in Cal Anderson Park, just a few blocks away from the NW Film Forum. The other film is Hula Hoop, a 1.5 minute short originally conceived as part of a collective film by the Seattle Experimental Animation Team, which also rocks. Both are great to see on the big screen – The Whale Story because the whale looks really BIG, and Hula Hoop because the sand looks really TINY.

Another pretty awesome short from a SEAT animator is Britta Johnson’s video for Laura Veirs’ song ‘King Kong Kitchie Kitchi Ki Me O‘, also playing in the Experimental Shorts program on Tuesday the 2nd.

And when you arrive at the NW Film Forum, look up! You will see an installation of animation projected onto kites! This is an iteration of Flying Cinema, an ambitious SEAT project spearheaded by Webster Crowell. And if you like animation, you must of course also attend SEAT animator Drew Christie’s program he has all to himself, The Drew Christie Show, this Saturday, Sept 29th at 9PM.

Stop-Framing Me show – catch it before it leaves!

 Installations/Screenings, SEAT, Stop-Framing Me Steele Gallery, Upcoming  Comments Off on Stop-Framing Me show – catch it before it leaves!
Aug 222012
 

Check out these gorgeous photographs of the gallery show currently up at the Gage Academy, called Stop-Framing Me, and featuring work from nine SEAT animators. The Gage Academy’s Steele gallery is on the third floor (1501 10th Avenue E) and is open Monday to Friday 10AM to 6PM. The show is up until September 1st.

Photos by TinyBox Media

The Long Drawn Walk by Salise Hughes

Drawing from Chronicles of a Professional Eulogist, by Sarah Jane Lapp

Birdhouse by Clyde Petersen, with Bird by Britta Johnson

Kite installation by Webster Crowell, with videos by Davis Limbach and Salise Hughes

Aug 082012
 

Thank you to everyone who came out to the reception and lecture last Friday, celebrating the opening of the first Seattle Experimental Animation Team gallery show, Stop-Framing Me. Here are a few photos of the show to get your juices flowing, but they really don’t do justice to the exhibit, so you should come see it in person! The Steele gallery is on the third floor of the Gage Academy (1501 10th Avenue E) and is open Monday to Friday 10AM to 6PM.

Book by Drew Christie, used in the animated short ‘The Man Who Shot The Man Who Shot Lincoln’

Cut-outs by Tess Martin, used in the animated short ‘Plain Face’

Projection showing Webster Crowell’s animated short ‘Parasol’, and one of Webster’s kite installations, showing an excerpt of Davis Limbach’s animated short ‘Loopforms’

Three parasols by Webster Crowell, used in the making of the animated short ‘Parasol’

 

Jul 272012
 

Check out this nice little trailer for the SEAT gallery show at the Gage Academy, Stop-Framing Me:

All these films will be screened as well as artifacts used in the making of the films, as well as, of course, animation on kites! Also remember the opening reception is on August 3rd at 6pm, and the lecture starts that same evening at 7pm!

SEAT Gallery show at Gage Academy: Stop-Framing Me

 Installations/Screenings, SEAT, Stop-Framing Me Steele Gallery, Upcoming  Comments Off on SEAT Gallery show at Gage Academy: Stop-Framing Me
Jul 192012
 

The Seattle Experimental Animation Team is happy to announce their first collective gallery show at the Gage Academy, opening August 3rd, 2012 and up until September 1st (the Steele Gallery is open daily 10AM-6PM). That evening there will also be an artist lecture with co-curators by Tess Martin and Webster Crowell. Deatils above – don’t miss it!

SEAT at HuskyFest ’12!

 Exquisite Corpse, HuskyFest, SEAT, Upcoming  Comments Off on SEAT at HuskyFest ’12!
Apr 102012
 

Come to the UW campus for HuskyFest April 19-21st! This fair will take over the main Pavilion on the UW campus (the big square near the Henry Art Gallery) and there are a crazy number of events and installations planned. The Seattle Experimental Animation Team will be set up in a portion of the grand tent screening some looped clips and the Exquisite Corpse collective film we premiered at Zeitgeist on March 1st. It’s free! Find all the info here: http://www.washington.edu/huskyfest/event/looped-animation-zone/

Exquisite Corpse: 2012 Re-Animated

 Exquisite Corpse, Re-Animated!, SEAT  Comments Off on Exquisite Corpse: 2012 Re-Animated
Mar 112012
 

The Seattle Experimental Animation Team hosted an amazing screening on March 1st at Zeitgeist Coffee to premier this group film. Originally created for the event as part of the March 2012 Seattle Art Walk, this film was animated by Otto Bulut, Tess Martin, Eric Ostrowski, Stefan Gruber, Salise Hughes, Clyde Petersen and Webster Crowell. Each animator selected a slip of a paper from a hat, designating the start and end images of their segment of the piece. From there, they had one month to animate a short film. They were then compiled and projected at Art Walk. Music has been added to this online version, though the original version is silent. Music is “The School for Scandal” by Samuel Barber. Performed by the Garfield High School Orchestra in 1997.

Announcing Re-Animated: An Exquisite Corpse Animated Event

 Exquisite Corpse, Installations/Screenings, Re-Animated!, SEAT, Upcoming  Comments Off on Announcing Re-Animated: An Exquisite Corpse Animated Event
Jan 292012
 

Exquisite poster design by Stefan Gruber!

 

The Seattle Experimental Animation Team presents ‘Re-Animated: An Exquisite Corpse Animated Event’, part of the March Pioneer Square Art Walk. Starting from 8PM, the Zeitgeist Coffee space will be sparkling with multiple projections on windows, screens and the exclusive Flying Cinema kites, displaying clips from recent animated shorts as well as a specially created collective film: seven clips forming a continuous Exquisite Corpse loop. This event is free and open to the public.

Thursday, March 1, 2012 8:00PM – FREE
Zeitgeist Coffee
171 S. Jackson, Seattle WA 98101

ABOUT THE EVENT

Two years ago the Seattle Experimental Animation Team held a mobbed event at Zeitgeist Coffee with four projection screens featuring twelve local artists. Re-Animated ups the ante by featuring the world premiere of an endless animated loop, specifically drawn, sculpted, pixalated or otherwise animated for the night’s events by seven Seattle animators, forming an exquisite corpse film.

Seven animators (Salise Hughes, Tess Martin, Webster Crowell, Stefan Gruber, Otto Bulut, Eric Ostrowski and Clyde Petersen), pulled slips of paper out of a hat – these contained two images (‘Girl on a bike’ or ‘dog barking’, for example) that were to be the beginning and ending images of their short. The prompts had been predetermined by filmmaker Salise Hughes so that, once edited together, the seven clips would form a continuous loop.

The animators are still unaware of one anothers’ prompts, ensuring that Re-Animated will be an exciting evening for all involved. The informal setting will also host recent work by other local animators projected onto screens, windows and flying cinema kites suspended from the ceiling.

This event hopes to expand the public’s awareness of animation as a medium of personal expression by bringing it to the Pioneer Square Art Walk, an evening traditionally centered around painting and sculpture. At the same time it encourages animation lovers, who have normally only experienced the medium at sit-down screenings, to enjoy animation in a gallery-reception environment, giving them an opportunity to interact with the artists. On a simpler note it is a party atmosphere for animation lovers to meet art patrons over a beer or coffee at the close of Art walk.

ABOUT SEAT

Seattle Experimental Animation Team (SEAT) is a collective of animator/filmmakers who use a wide range of techniques to make films frame by frame. SEAT uses nearly every technique from classical hand-drawn to computer animation. SEAT’s members make films independently, but group endeavors involve bringing animation to non-film locations, and these have been some of our most exciting activities. Outside our globally touring animation program (Inter-Action), we’ve created animation installations at Susan Robb’s Long Walk (2011), Arabica Coffee (2011), Zeitgeist (2009) and we’re embarked on a commission in Cal Anderson park to animate a wall mural for Sound Transit over the course of four years. Our growing collective of award-winning animators includes Webster Crowell, Stefan Gruber, Britta Johnson, Drew Christie, Clyde Petersen and Tess Martin.

The SEAT website is www.experimentalanimation.org, and the Facebook page is http://www.facebook.com/experimentalanimation.

Phobias in trees – The flying cinema puts monster animation into Troll-o-ween

 Installations/Screenings, Upcoming  Comments Off on Phobias in trees – The flying cinema puts monster animation into Troll-o-ween
Oct 302011
 

The annual costume parade through Fremont on Halloween includes SEAT animators Drew Christie, Webster Crowell, Stefan Gruber and Clyde Petersen, screening short loops of film on kites caught in trees, around the corner from the Lenin Statue.  Festivities begin at the Troll Sculpture below the Aurora Bridge at 6:30pm, kites will illuminate as the parade moves into downtown Fremont between 7-8pm.

The flying cinema screens mini-films on kites, it has previously appeared at the Arabica Lounge and Susan Robb’s Long Walk project.  Troll-o-ween is a historic costumed parade through Fremont featuring performance, music and a dance below the Fremont bridge.   This October 31st, The flying cinema is lining the route on one particularly dark street with kites featuring monsters, crashing airplanes, and other fear-inducing cinema by SEAT artists.

The flying cinema is an ongoing project by SEAT to screen material in unusual locations, and was made possible with help from the Seattle office of Arts & Culture, Emutt productions, and A.J. Epstein.  Flying cinema kite