Frontline: A Year of Journalism and Conflict
I've got short docos of mine on display as part of the Frontline Journalism exhibition at the Somerset House.
The multimedia exhibition focuses on four of the major stories of 2011: the Egyptian revolution, Syria, the Libyan conflict and the UK riots. I contributed various pieces on general news coverage as well as behind-the-scenes specials, offering insight into the editorial, political and human aspects of news reporting. The exhibition highlights the dilemmas facing news organisations in authenticating and broadcasting often deeply disturbing images to the public.
COMPLETED: January 2011
LINKS:
http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16147446
http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/visual-arts/front-line-a-year-of-journalism-and-conflict
The multimedia exhibition focuses on four of the major stories of 2011: the Egyptian revolution, Syria, the Libyan conflict and the UK riots. I contributed various pieces on general news coverage as well as behind-the-scenes specials, offering insight into the editorial, political and human aspects of news reporting. The exhibition highlights the dilemmas facing news organisations in authenticating and broadcasting often deeply disturbing images to the public.
COMPLETED: January 2011
LINKS:
http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16147446
http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/visual-arts/front-line-a-year-of-journalism-and-conflict
Comments
Final Cut Pro X: Past Present Future
Moire and Aliasing no more?! A solution for the 5DmkII
The Borgias opening title sequence
Thursday 21 Jul 2011 03:20
| Cool stuff
| Permalink
In The Borgias lush opening sequence, pious palms grip rosaries as beads of ichor seep through canvas bedaubed, inking avarice and lusty limbs groaning. Bon Boullogne's Triumph of Neptune, Caravaggio's Death of the Virgin, Agnolo Bronzino's Exposure of Luxury: these moldering Renaissance and Baroque masterpieces murmur heavy the echo of desire. And when stillness overcomes the wild flow of exquisite stains, there gapes a single eye, staring back.
QTube: the workflow game changer
Quantel's QTube enables users to access and edit media assets from anywhere in the world via the internet. Not only does it provide frame-accurate editing of all server-based assets (including media which are still in-coming) but it also renders both the location of the users and assets irrelevant, making truly global media workflows possible for the first time.