Solid / Liquid \ Özgür Erman \
"A puzzle in two states of matter."
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Graduated from Anadolu University, Animation Department of Fine Arts Faculty, 2006. His films were shown in Istanbul Short Film Festival, Boston Turkish Film Festival, If Istanbul Independent Film Festival, Akbank Short Film Festival, İzmir Short Film Festival (Finalist) , Hamburg International Film Festival, Eva Project (İtaly) and Anadolu University Short Film Festival. More for: ozgurerman.com http://artbychance.org/selections/2nd-edition/solid-liquid.htm
Movemento \ Ahmet Şerif Yıldırım - Davut Toy \ Turkey
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"We wanted to show the difference between the durations living things perceive and the durations viewer percevies according to their movements.Movement is basicaly about the relativity of time according to perception. Their main inspiration was "the dimension and flow of time depend on the speed of moving objects” from the special relativity rule of Albert Einstein."
Contemplate Impermanance \ Thomas Zachmeier \ Germany
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"CONTEMPLATE IMPERMANENCE was a spontaneous creation when he was sitting on 'BIG BEACH', Maui, contemplating impermanence..."
Thomas Zachmeier, born in Munich, Germany (1969), graduated from the University of Arts (UdK), Berlin. His diploma thesis was a paper on Buddhist philosophy called "Empty Words”. After (1997) that he moved to Los Angeles and became a film-editor. 2001 he moved back to Germany where he continued editing Films and TV-Shows (e.g. ‘DerAlte’, ‘Ein Fall für Zwei’). He is Co-founder and creative director of C.A.N. – the Conscious Action Network – a film-project dedicated to tell the stories of change-makers. www.consciousactionnetwork.com
Time Makes Every Static Image Dynamic \ Justin Lincoln \ The USA
Time makes every static image dynamic is a short experiment using Screen Capture software. While people often complain about "information overload", I believe that quick close scrutiny of a single image can have similar effects to the overload that people describe. "Still" images are always scanned and moved about by our perceptions. It is simply a kind of equilibrium imposed by our consciousness that makes things seem "still" for any amount of time. In some ways this brief work illustrates the kind of time that is contained in my own scanning or reading of the image.
Justin Lincoln is an assistant professor in Whitman College. Studied Fine Arts in California Institute of Arts.