waterpump
Member
Sticking my neck out on this one! (last time I posed on this subject (about 15 years ago) elsewhere, I received a massive slating.) so here goes....
With the advances in archival techniques, particularly in B&W images, in the analogue domain and digital imaging storage systems, archival stability is no longer a major issue in photography. In the 1990's I explored a number of techniques, some historically well established, some possibly new, to deliberately produce physical images that changed with time, or changed according to viewing angle or angle of illumination, hence the term 'spatio-temporal kinetic'. Some images were deliberately changed or manipulated on stage as a live performance.
Below is an example of a spatial kinetic image published in the BJP, No 6946, 28th October 1993, The Kinetic Tin Process. These are two shots of the same single print viewed from different angles taken from the BJP article. The original print was given away many years ago.
Anyone interested in exploring these concepts?
With the advances in archival techniques, particularly in B&W images, in the analogue domain and digital imaging storage systems, archival stability is no longer a major issue in photography. In the 1990's I explored a number of techniques, some historically well established, some possibly new, to deliberately produce physical images that changed with time, or changed according to viewing angle or angle of illumination, hence the term 'spatio-temporal kinetic'. Some images were deliberately changed or manipulated on stage as a live performance.
Below is an example of a spatial kinetic image published in the BJP, No 6946, 28th October 1993, The Kinetic Tin Process. These are two shots of the same single print viewed from different angles taken from the BJP article. The original print was given away many years ago.
Anyone interested in exploring these concepts?