영상은 네이버에서 자른다고 해서 여기에 못올리고 스샷만.
홈페이지로 고고싱=3
동방신기랑 심수봉 작업이랑 기타등등도 했는데, 이건 말만 해두자.
http://www.triplez.kr
This webfilm entitled "Paper Airplane" is a collaboration between
Nervo and agency start-up muh-tay-zik
for communications technology company, Premiere Global Services.
Agency muh-tay-zik is in the midst of doing branding work for Premiere that includes revamping their video content.
The first up was their eMarketing product,
which makes it easier for companies to establish dynamic dialogue with customers.
John Matejczyk, founder of muh-tay-zik had set out to "remove the tech-ey, jargon-ey,
unapproachability from eMarketing," says Matejczyk.
"We needed to inspire marketers to get better at eMarketing without being intimidated by it.
So we presented the story of a woman sending out her email and receiving feedback in a rather magical way?
That led Nervo to come back to muh-tay-zik with the work of artist Betsy Walton.
She brought just the kind of whimsical, engaging feel the agency needed.
http://nervo.tv/index.html?sect=5&proj=pgi
http://www.morningcraft.com/
This new project for modular living firm MaxHaus from Brazilian studio Molho
brims with vivid colors, ethereal imagery and fluid animation.
If the combination seems familiar,
it might be because Molho’s founder and creative director,
ex-Lobo designer Marcelo Garcia, has been featured here before.
Agency W/Brasil gave Molho an open-ended brief for this two-minute project,
and in turn, Molho pushed the envelope quite a bit.
The piece is ostensibly centered on the concepts of “habitat, diversity, living, and taste,”
but it goes beyond that into an abstract land of tangential connections and dream sequences.
It’s an artistic, unexpected approach to what could have been a predictable discourse
on architecture and design in another studio’s hands.
Molho is repped in the US by Pitch White and in Europe by El Niño.
이것이 아방가르드!
Watching the work of Toronto-based Crush is refreshing.
They exercise a decidedly straightforward approach to motion graphics
: no 3D (not even 2.5D), no crazy camera moves, no “one long shot” transitions.
Just solid motion with an emphasis on concept and context-sensitive typography.
That was true for their series of Gum Thief animations,
and it’s true for their newest work,
a music video for R.E.M.’s “Hollow Man.”
Crush seems to be channeling the aesthetics of the mid-90s in this one.
Pixelated imagery, intentionally glitched-out transitions and window-based UI metaphors abound.
(I suppose that’s appropriate for a band that I didn’t realize survived the last decade of the 20th century.)
It all feels very earnest and sincere, like a heartbroken missive bashed out on an Amiga 500.
Bjork <Wanderlust>
Bjork’s highly anticipated “Wanderlust” music video hit the web recently with great fanfare. Over a year in the making, the video was a huge undertaking that involved the carefully orchestrated efforts of a massive crew.
Directed by Encyclopedia Pictura (on Ghost Robot’s roster) with post-production handled by UVPHACTORY, the experience feels more like a short film than a simple music video. Props to Bjork and her label, One Little Indian Records, for having the courage (and bank accounts) to pull off such a feat.
“Wanderlust” premiered on March 12th and was originally intended to be viewed in anaglyphic 3D. There will apparently be details about how to get free 3D glasses on Bjork’s site.
The making-of video below is definitely worth checking out: