XL Video
projects
for Muybridge Festival
AV
Product Stories Published: 24 May 2005
XL Video continues its involvement with innovative site-specific
video projection projects with the Muybridge Festival in Kingston-Upon-Thames,
Surrey.
XL supplied equipment and crew to HFM Lighting
to help realise the projection of three separate giant moving
images onto the curved fascia of the town’s attractive
Guildhall building. The 50ft high Guildhall building was chosen
because its circulator shape reflects the ‘Zoopraxiscope’
invented by Muybridge and used to animate film.
The Muybridge Festival celebrated the life and
works of Edweard Muybridge, one of the finest pioneering Victorian
photographers who was born and died in 1904 in Kingston. The
majority of his highly acclaimed experimental work was completed
in America, and Muybridge is credited with being a founding
father of modern cinema.
XL Video supplied three 17,000 lumen Barco ELM
R18 projectors to transform Kingston High Street into a public
gallery for two evenings as part of a wider series of Muybridge
events and exhibitions.
The project was conceived by artistic director
Robin Hutchison, and the projection co-ordinated by Chris Birch
of One 80 Degrees. HFM’s Mick Scullion co-organised the
production infrastructure and audio with XL Video’s Paul
Wood.
Each projection measured 16 metres wide by 13
metres high. One R18 was trained centrally on the building’s
front portal, and the other two were lined up to flank either
side, effectively wrapping the entire building in moving images.
All three showed 15 minute loops stored on 2 Doremi hard drives,
with the two side projections being identical and different
from the central images.
The specially created films were produced using
original glass plates from the Muybridge archive, edited together
in a series of inspirational animations made by Kingston University
postgraduates combined with footage of contemporary dance artist
Bode Lawler.
The projectors were housed in three 4-metre high
weather proof towers standing 15 metres away from the building,
and the main road was closed for approximately 6 hours. Despite
atrocious weather both evenings, over 500 people turned out
to view the event
After eighteen months of planning and pre-production,
the first ever Muybridge Festival Projection was a phenomenal
success and has established Kingston as a cultural hub for future
innovative film related projects. The Festival, aimed at promoting
talented young film makers, artists and composers, is now set
to become an annual event.
XL’s Paul Wood says, “This was an
excellent project to be involved with on several counts –
because of the event’s challenging nature, the relevance
of the subject material to our industry and the fact that we
were presenting historical cinematic images within a contemporary
context”.
For HFM Lighting, Mick Scullion comments, “It
was a hard call for the crew who battled tirelessly against
gale force winds and torrential rain to deliver a spectacular
show over the two nights. The end result was superb.”