Hi all,

I just looked up when we tried to screen it at Los Angeles Filmforum.  It was 
Sunday, March 13, 2005.  The program was Crystal Palace (2002), The 
Astronomer's Dream (2004), and Precarious Garden (2004).  I made a note that 
Crystal Palace was cancelled due to projection shortcomings.

It was at the Spielberg Theater at the Egyptian, a room that no longer exists.  
It had a progressive projector (not a CRT) but he needed it to be interlaced to 
work.

 

Best regards,

Adam

 

 

-----

Adam Hyman 

Executive Director

Los Angeles Filmforum

 

 

From: Frameworks <[email protected]> on behalf of Steve Polta 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: Experimental Film Discussion List <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, August 13, 2025 at 2:07 PM
To: Experimental Film Discussion List <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Frameworks] field-level processing in video

 

Dear Jared,

 

I'm pretty sure that I was at the same screening of Crystal Palace that Mark 
Toscano references which, if I'm not mistaken, was at Pacific Film Archive in 
Berkeley CA on October 7, 2003. At this screening the work was shown as 
projected video and was definitely not on a CRT. Ernie Gehr was there in person 
and, if I recall correctly, was frustrated that they could not get the 
projection system to reproduce what he'd seen in his piece. This sort of 
thing—artists being unable to replicate effects they'd worked with on one video 
system on another—were not uncommon in these "early days" of projected digital 
video. If Gehr has another piece that attempted this, I don't know what it is. 

 

Steve Polta

 

On Wed, Aug 13, 2025 at 11:16 AM jared ashburn <[email protected]> wrote:

Mark, Adam, Michael, and Robert,

 

I saw "Crystal Palace" at some point, but couldn't remember the title. It was 
that one that provoked my question, so thank you for reminding me. I'm seeing 
it described as "An ode to digital interlace, which is to video what intervals 
between frames are to film…". Do you happen to remember if it was displayed on 
a CRT? I'm trying to figure out the title of the other one you mentioned, and I 
do wonder if (and how) he managed to resolve the transfer to a progressive 
format. I stumbled upon the same kind of field flicker in FCP at about the same 
time he made "Crystal Palace" and was only able to capture the output through 
rescan. I think a VTR (analog without an internal TBC, maybe?) and a display 
that doesn't deinterlace by default might work to preserve the field flicker, 
but I'm not certain. I also don't know if that could then be transferred to a 
digital format (tape or file) without it being deinterlaced at some point. Even 
if it were, as Adam points out, most all digital projectors (and LCDs) would 
deinterlace and apply frame interpolation, which would kill the flicker. To 
Robert's point, perhaps field-based effects are best left to the analog domain. 
Still, even there, it required a special instrument (Rutt/Etra or the Vasulkas 
Digital Image Articulator —a hybrid device). Michael, I am unfamiliar with 
Yalkut's work that you mentioned. I'd be interested to know, and VERY curious 
to know what instruments he used. Thank you all for your input. I appreciate 
it. -Jared

 

On Sun, Aug 10, 2025 at 2:45 PM Robert Harris <[email protected]> wrote:

The person who most formally, thoroughly, and passionately immersed themself in 
the video field, in the formative instant of image generation, was video 
maker/filmmaker Al Robbins, working with portapak, reel to reel video in 1973 
and after.
Given the fragile, uncopyable nature of his tapes, and given the generally 
galleryizing world of video in the mid 70’s, Al’s work was tragically under 
appreciated. 
Rather than look to filmmakers who had no interest in analog video, you should 
pursue your Vasulka thread, and look to the individuals associated with the 
Experimental Television Center in Owego, NY. Founder Ralph Hocking is deceased, 
his wife and collaborator Sherry Hocking Miller is still around. Seek out Peer 
Bode, Hank Rudolph, David Jones, Neil Zussman. 
But for the original artist with absolute investment in the glitch and all its 
implications, Al Robbins.



Robert Harris, Professor
Fitchburg State University



> On Aug 9, 2025, at 12:13 AM, jared ashburn <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Does anyone know if Ken Jacobs, Ernie Gehr, or any other artists besides 
> Woody and Steina Vasulka have worked at the level of the video field? I’m 
> particularly interested in practices that manipulate fields (1/60 second in 
> NTSC), whether for timing-based image alteration or for preserving 
> field-specific flicker phenomena. Thanks!
> -- 
> Frameworks mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

-- 
Frameworks mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

-- 
Frameworks mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

-- Frameworks mailing list [email protected] 
https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org 

-- 
Frameworks mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

Reply via email to