This digital video arose from the idea of trying to transfer to film all the photographic images I had created with the so-called “photo-finish” technique. While in the process of completing it, I used single frame digital animation to shoot the faces and their sudden transformations when subjected to the photo-finish technique, transferring them, then imparting motion to them in a single animated sequence on the computer. This agitation, torn from photographic fixity [is] subjected, in turn, to distortion by its intersection with objects texture-mapped with those same faces. The passage from motionless quiet to paroxysmal interference; the animating startle of Bach’s cello. —paologioli.it
Paolo Gioli was born in Sarzano (Rovigo) on October 12, 1942. Beginning in 1960 he centered his artistic activities in Venice where he attended the Scuola Libera del Nudo, part of the Accademia di Belle Arti. In 1967, he travelled to New York, where he received a study grant from the John Cabot Foundation and met gallerists Leo Castelli and Martha Jackson. In New York he would also discover the “New American Cinema.” In 1968, he returned to Italy. Starting in 1970, he would center his activities around Rome, where he came into contact with the Cooperativa Cinema Indipendente. Moving between Rovigo and Rome, he would produce his first films, that he would develop himself using his movie camera as a laboratory, following in the footsteps of the Lumière brothers. In 1976, he moved to Milan, where besides working in cinema, he would make sustained investigations of photography. And from the beginning of the 1980s, Gioli would receive his first important recognition for his activities in… read more