PP1: Experiments in Synchromism

In this first plunge into Isadora, my main goal was to get to know the program through experiments in seeing. Using ‘synchronism’ as a guide (an art movement that draws analogies between color and music), I focused on orchestrating colors and the pacing between shapes. 

In the first scene, there are three elements at play: the pink transformer emerging from the depths, a green pulsing square sponge, and a blurry animated layer that gently envelops the two. [CG mentioned that the shapes had an organic feel, this may have something to do with the way they ‘breathe.’] The pacing of each shape was an important part of this scene, as a response to the prompt’s challenge of 20 seconds. I felt that if I could let the viewer watch the emerging pink transformer with anticipation, they would get the idea that you have to ‘wait and see’ rather than assume the loop will continue. In the programming, there was a wave generator altering color (+alpha), scale, and facets.

In the second scene, which was meant to be a continuation of the play of pacing, I encountered some technical difficulties (which Alex helped to resolve!) I wanted to create a prism where each square undulated at a subtly different speed so that they would influence the color of the next layer. You would ideally see all the layers in an unending loop, it sounded like a harp in my head. This worked for a good while until I created a new scene and then everything synched to one pulse, erasing the careful layering I had done earlier. Having spent so much time on that, I felt quite frustrated and gave up. The programming for this section comprised of a multitude of squares using wave generator influencing color + alpha. I placed each square so they would overlap with three vertically and three horizontally. Next time, I’ll make the squares very small rather than overlap so they act like pixels.

To be continued.

Conclusion: I learned a lot! I love the suggestion of the class to arrive at a place of clarity. Perhaps, another shape could emerge that is an amalgamation of the prism. I also really enjoyed seeing everyone’s interpretation of the prompts and was particularly impressed by the imaginative storytelling in every project. Kudos!



Leave a Reply