Phonotrope

Still of the Phonotrope 'Squirrels' made by Jim Le Fevre in 2009

The Phonotrope is a technique to create animation in a 'live' environment using the confluence of the frame-rate of a live action camera and the revolutions of a constantly rotating disc, predominantly (but not exclusively) using a record-player.

It is a contemporary reworking of the Zoetrope, one of several pre-film animation devices that produce the illusion of motion by displaying a sequence of drawings or photographs showing progressive phases of that motion.

The crucial difference of the Phonotrope technique is that it is specifically an in-camera technique using the frame-rate of a live-action camera set to a high shutter speed in confluence with a constantly rotating disc to create the illusion of movement as opposed to the vertical slits in a Zoetrope or the flashes of a stroboscope to create the 'interruptions' needed to create the illusion of movement. As such it can only be seen through either the camera's viewfinder, a connected monitor or projector or viewed as footage after the event.

From its inception the most commonly used methods of rotating the disc have been using a record-player however the technique of using the confluence of frame-rate and revolutions has been applied to a variety of spinning objects from bicycles[1][2] to pottery wheels.[3]

Although the technique uses the live-action camera to 'parse' or interpret the animation it does not necessarily mean that it is solely a 'film' based process watched remotely on a screen as many iterations of it have formed the heart of installations[4] and performance pieces.[5]

Early examples

The Phonotropic technique appears to have been discovered independently at different times around the world with a variety of different creators only posting their efforts at later dates.

Chuuu, a Japanese painter and VJ, posted his Guruguru Kun Turntable Animation (2005)[6] in 2010.

The artist and filmmaker Eric Dyer's "Copenhagen Cycles" (2006)[7] posted on Vimeo in 2010.

Jim Le Fevre's talk at the Victoria and Albert Museum (2007)[8] posted on YouTube in 2008.

DJ and VJ duo Sculpture's performance at the Elevator Gallery, London, July 18, 2008 part one[9] & part two.[10]

Creative house Legs created a 12 foot high Phonotropic tower for the fashion house Temperley in 2009[11]

Clemens Kogler created the film "Stuck In The Groove"[12] around 2010, an entirely live performance with all video effects performed using a video mixing desk mixing between two record decks.

Film maker and food specialist Alexandre Dubosc created the film "Alimation" in 2011 using Phonotropic sculptures made almost entirely out of food.[13]

Naming

The term Phonotrope was coined in 2010 by Jim Le Fevre having previously termed his version of the technique the Phonographanstasmascope as a nod to the convoluted names of other early forms of pre-film animation such as its ancestor the Zoetrope, the Praxinoscope and the Zoopraxiscope and realised it was too cumbersome to use.[14]

Other terms for the technique have been used throughout its history including Clemens Koglers Phonovideo.[15]

The Phonotrope as a live event

Eric Dyer is an artist, filmmaker, experimental animator, and educator.[16] Although grounded in screen based animation he started to make his phonotropic discs (or 'zoetropic sculptures') to specifically make films but began to show the discs almost as a "work in progress/presentation, behind the scenes".[17] In 2007 he exhibited a series of paper Phonotropic discs as an installation at the Sundance New Frontier Artist Exhibition, Park City, UT.[18] In 2008 he exhibited more complex 3D printed phonotropic discs in an installation called "Bellows" at SIGGRAPH in Los Angeles, CA, a precursor to his later film "The Bellows March".

Sculpture are an " an opto-musical agglomerate".[19] They are Dan Hayhurst (music) and Reuben Sutherland (visuals) and have been performing as early as 2007. Performance is central to their work as Hayhurst creates a soundscape using a variety of analogue and digital sources Sutherland performs accompanying visuals using numerous Phonotropic discs introducing them whilst changing the revolutions of the turntable and position of the decks under the camera and camera view in reaction to the unfolding soundscape.[20] Sutherland has been evolving the Phonotropic technique to harness the revolutions of a reel-to-reel tape recorder which interestingly adds an extra element to the performance by both using the audio from the device as part of the soundscape as well as having the both reels rotating at gradually increasing and decreasing speeds as the length of tape changes.[21]

Katie Turnbull is an Australian visual artist, based in Sydney.[22] In her show at her exhibition "Modern Vantias" in 2012[23] she used multi-layered Phonotropes, created using printed clear perspex discs, thus managing to give the illusion of three-dimensional forms moving within the two dimensional planes.[24]

The Phonotrope in short films

In 2006 Eric Dyer created the film "Copenhagen Cycles"[7] using Phonotropes created out of printed and cut card and in 2009 made the film "The Bellows March" out of 3D printed hand painted Phonotropic discs.[25]

Alexandre Dubosc has been making food based phonotropic based films since 2011. "Alimation" (2011),[13] "The Caketrope of Burton's Team" (2012)[26] and "Phytopage" (2013).[27]

The Phonotrope in advertising and broadcast

In 2007 Jim Le Fevre used the Phonotropic technique to create an onscreen ident for MTV called "MTV - Turntable"<ref name=""MTV - Turntable" by Jim Le Fevre">"MTV - Turntable" by Jim Le Fevre on Vimeo</ref> and in 2010 he created a 2 meter tall Terry Gilliam inspired Phonontrope for the title sequence for the BBC television comedy film Holy Flying Circus.[28] In 2013 Le Fevre (with Rupert and Alice Johnstone from RAMP ceramics) created a phonotropic film using a pottery wheel for the Crafts Council of England.[3]

Pot created by RAMP Ceramics and Jim Le Fevre. Still taken from camera work by Mike Paterson/Pfilms

In 2009 the fashion house Temperley London commissioned Transmedia company Legs to interpret their Spring 2010 collection through an enormous Phonotropic tower.[4] The tower toured both the US and the UK being shown in conjunction with the Temperley fashion shows.[11]

In 2012 EDF Energy created a Phonotrope to advertise their "Thank Yous" campaign.[29]

References

  1. Tim Wheatley's Cyclotrope on Vimeo
  2. Katy Beveridge's Bicycle Animation on YouTube
  3. 1 2 "Experimental Animation Meets Pottery" film commissioned by the Crafts Council by Jim Le Fevre
  4. 1 2 Q&A with Legs on the Temperley London Spring 2010 Zoetrope on glossyinc.com,
  5. Sculpture live at the Queen Elizabeth Hall
  6. "Turntable animation Guruguru Kun PV" on Vimeo
  7. 1 2 "Copenhagen Cycles" by Eric Dyer on Vimeo
  8. "The Phonotrope (formerly the Phonographantasmascope)" by Jim Le Fevre on YouTube,
  9. Sculpture Live at the Elevator Gallery, London, July 18th 2008 part one
  10. Sculpture Live at the Elevator Gallery, London, July 18th 2008 part two
  11. 1 2 "Temperley of London Zoetrope" on Tomorrow Awards submissions
  12. "Stuck in the Groove" by Clemens Kogler on Vimeo
  13. 1 2 "Alimation" by Alexandre Dubosc on Vimeo
  14. Article on the Phonotrope Wired Magazine May 2010.
  15. Interview with Clemens Kogler from Motionographer April 2010
  16. Eric Dyer biography
  17. "Eric Dyer, Modern Master of the Zoetrope", a supporting film to a continuing project with Creative Capital on Vimeo
  18. Copenhagen Cycles installation @ Sundance (2007) on Vimeo
  19. Sculpture's biography
  20. Live performance by Sculpture. INTERFERENCE Festival of Science and Art. Breda, Netherlands on Vimeo
  21. Sutherland's Reel-to-Reelatrope
  22. Katie Turnbull biog
  23. Modern Vantias exhibition details on Experimenta's site
  24. "Modern Vantias" footage by Katie Turnbull on Vimeo
  25. "The Bellows March (short film, 2009) - excerpt" by Eric Dyer
  26. "The Caketrope of Burton's Team" by Alxandre Dubosc on Vimeo.
  27. "Phytopage" by Alexandre Dubosc on Vimeo
  28. Interview with Jim Le Fevre, on the "Holy Flying Circus" title sequence, on BBC Comedy website
  29. "EDF - Thank Yous" on Phonotropia,

External links

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