From Ubuweb featured September resources: Palindrome (1969), 16mm, color, silent, 22 min.
While working at a photo lab, Frampton found that the waste at both ends of the rolls of processed film-where chemicals worked on the emulsion through clips used to attach the film to the machine-produced images far too interesting to be discarded. For Palindrome, Frampton selected images which he described as "tending towards the biomorphic," resembling abstract surrealist painting. However, the rigid palindromic structure that Frampton imposes on the images-a motorized sequence based on "twelve variations on each of forty congruent phrases"-deviates from the subjective aesthetic of the expressive, demonstrating Frampton's interest in the "generative power" of films composed by rules and principles. (Harvard Film Archive)."Hollis Frampton (1936-1984) was an American avant-garde filmmaker, photographer, writer/theoretician, and a pioneer of digital art. The last few years of his life, Frampton taught at SUNY Buffalo, writing, working on Magellan, an ongoing photographic projects with fellow artist and wife Marion Faller, and investigating the relationship between computers and art. Alongside Stan Brakhage, Hollis Frampton was a leading pioneer of abstract expression in American film, akin perhaps to John Cage and Morton Feldman in contributions to their art."--more or less from wikepedia.
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