Nuts & Bolts
Overview of films
-
Talking Electronic Components
From his earliest Super-8 films onwards, Floris Vanhoof’s work has looked and sounded emphatically primitive. Like some anachronistic jamming st
-
P.O.V. Window Nr. 15 Rotterdam
Boogaerts essentially concentrates on painting on windows, using tinted oil or soap and brushes, along with window wipers and some other cleaning mate
-
The Great Silence
Arecibo, the world’s largest radio telescope is located in Esperanza, Puerto Rico, which is also home to a critically endangered species of parr
-
RE-ENACTMENTS, This Comb Does Not Work at Random (Hommage à Segundo de Chomón) El Hotel Electrico 1908, 2014
The Brothers Quay constructed an octagonal scale-model with little mirrors, inspired by de Chomón’s animated short film, The Electric Hot
-
66 Kinos
Philipp Hartmann made a film, toured the German cinema scene with it and made that into a film too: an overview of an eclectic mix of cinemas all run
-
Peter Kubelka Presents: Bread, Butter and Other Metaphors
“Objects of art may be edible, like a buttered slice of bread or they may be inedible, like ordinary sculpture.” Avant-garde monument Peter Kubel
-
Step-direction
Playing with perspective and space to create a “real” virtual reality, Julien Maire ponders on an archaic way of representing reality usin
-
#61
In #61, abstract moving images react to the eye movements of several visitors. The installation deals with visual perception as a dialogue betwee
-
It’s Always Darkest Before It Becomes Totally Black
With a quote from Chairman Mao as the title for this installation, viewers see a rectangular, paper puppet theatre inhabited by a number of clearly vi
-
How to Build a Time Machine
For decades, animator Rob Niosi has concentrated on a single hobby: making a perfect replica of the time machine in George Pal’s film from 1960. Likew
-
Cataract
Jason Dee creates video installations that combine found footage from numerous lens-based and audio media from different eras. In this installation th
-
Showfish
With the help of a transparent fish egg, two cat’s whiskers and a small piece of copper paper, Sarah Vanagt tries to recall some of the earliest micro