Luminaries
Luminary in Okayama Japan with Fiz-iks

     Fiz-iks represents everything that is good about light painting: group dynamism, exotic locations, fundamental mastery of light and photography, imagination, story, characters and a real passion.  These components have been woven together brilliantly by Trevor Williams, the ring leader of Fiz-iks. Noya, Hiriamason as we call him in Japan, and Phil are the other two members of the Fiz-iks team.  These folks have been working diligently and with precision for a while now and the development of their techniques has really started to reach an epic level. It’s easy to be lulled into the false impression that what they do is easy when you watch them make their images because Trevor and the team have gotten so adept at nailing their shots that it happens very quickly.  So, a lot of the technique that goes into the image is easy to miss as they work so fast.  While filming with them I often had to pay very careful attention to the “small things” they did that were easy to miss, these bits are where careful attention to detail and experience really made their pictures shine.  The fluid combination of lighting and photographic techniques gelled into a beautiful “ballet” of creation that is a thing of beauty. 


     Beef Jerky!  The call to order each night started with a trip to the convenience store, for Beef Jerky, maybe a couple Chu Hi’s, and a Bento Box before heading out into the Japanese night to make some magic.  The group experience with Fiz-iks is an extremely beautiful thing to behold.  These guys have a mutual respect for each other and an intimacy that comes from years of working along side each other in technical and creative ways.  The laughter and exuberance were ever-present in each session and this feeling buoyed the sessions along making time pass quickly.  Everyone genuinely enjoys each other’s company as well as the light painting itself. I can’t say enough about how “warm” the emotions are when Fiz-iks gets together.

     So, as Trevor likes to say, “If you want to take an epic picture you need to go to an epic location.” I am more than a little bit jealous of the sheer number of “epic locations” that exist minutes away from the Fiz-iks home base in Okayama.  I mean, in Texas I drive 30 minutes to the grocery store.  With Fiz-iks in 30 minutes we were in the mountains at a Buddhist Shrine with no light pollution and stars covering the night sky like a blanket.  In 30 minutes we were at an old school built right after WWII in a location so remote that it had to be closed recently because there were only 4 students left to attend.  In 30 minutes we were at a 70 meter tall dam at the top of a mountain with Japanese dudes speed driving, drifting crazy, fishtailing and sliding around the hairpin turns up the narrow, twisting roads.  In 30 minutes we were at a fertility shrine that was virtually impossible to find and required a drive down a road that was barely big enough for one car with a sheer, steep drop off waiting for you if you went even a foot off the road; the last sign you see as you get on this road is a picture of a truck falling off a mountain.  Okayama is a wonderful place full of exotic feeling locations and photogenic environments and Fiz-iks makes them appear all the more exotic and futuristic.  There is a tremendous energy in the juxtaposition of the majesty of historic Japan with the light painting wizardry that Trevor and Fiz-iks manifest. 

     The Japanese culture is supremely gracious and hospitable.  My stay was filled with kindness and a sense of comfort.  A VERY special thanks goes to Naoya’s family who graciously accommodated me for the duration of my visit.  Naoya’s mom operates a lovely and refined gift shop and wedding planning business in Okayama that is impressive.  The entire family was gracious and tolerant of our late night escapades.  I would not have been able to make the journey had it not been for their kindness.

      

 
Dana Maltby {tcb} in Minnesota

So, we started with 50 mph wind gusts that canceled our original flight.  But we were up early the next morning for the first flight out.   It made our first day on the ground a shooting day and we had our game faces on.

first flight out after a canceled flight the night before

first flight out after a canceled flight the night before

We made it to Minnesota safe and sound….ready to rock……

cool geometry at the minnesota airport

cool geometry at the minnesota airport

The nights were exercises in mad entry and tactical assessment. Dark, echoing iron in forgotten industrial interiors with machines the size of an entire floor that were left with the building……machines whose scale are fearful. How were these beasts installed…piece by piece or was a wall left open and was there a crane of mythic proportions grinding metal braided cables and chains over greasy pulleys creaking under the strain of lifting their now abandoned load? Maybe, and probably, some poor people schlepped every piece of each of these machines up the narrow, dangerous stairs. They must have had a system because the stairs will not accommodate 2 people going in different directions especially not laden with metal machine parts.

 

at night these stairs are scary

at night these stairs are scary

Hard concrete, metal doors, broken windows and vast spaces reverberating with emptiness. Osha certainly had no say in the construction of these places. And now, in repose, the open elevator shafts and uncovered floor shafts lie in wait like deep-water, bottom dwelling, predators…..quiet, sinister, deadly and waiting.

Climbing old, iron mill stairs, narrow for one person passage, creates a noise from vibrating the stairs on the way up and down that resonates throughout the rusted iron of 7 stories. It turns into a deep hum when 6 people tromp down the stairs in boots. The braided metal cables clang on the 4th floor from the movement and startled pigeons dart off with the first bang of loose, swinging, metal cargo doors left to rage nightly in the swirling Minnesota wind.

This is concealed lights held low, cupped near windows and cascading ominously down through the grating of iron stairs creating crazy motion down the shaft of a stairwell designed to create a fear of death and cast out the weak of heart and mind. The strong persevere up, down, up….the flashlight swishing is a welcome distraction from ghosts mildly stationed in shadows content to watch your passage, but secretly shifting and shuffling to distract, to cause a misstep…..to have you join them in their eternity.

3 days….cold wind, snow drifts, swollen Mississippi river reflections from spun fireballs under a bridge with pleasure boats drifting, over-lit and gaudy, by our time capturing moments unaware of our magic lurking just out of site in the night with mystical lights shielded from their view by monster modern concrete columns. They are just far away enough to not smell the acrid smoke, to see unidentified spinning lights shooting their way across our retinas and into the time machine that is our camera. Their lives do not contain fireballs skimming horizontally across the Mississippi river before being extinguished by water struggling to stay above freezing.

mississippi river boat in Minnesota

mississippi river boat in Minnesota

Where are the lines and why are they drawn? Which occasions were they designed for? Lines of entry, lines of delineation and circumvention….lines of light that mark our passage, all lines lead to and stem from an interior space. Our progress is across thresholds lonely in their memories of busy passage, of life, of humanity that conceptualized these spaces then moved on. Our motion is internal and towards an internal place. A place we feel exists, that draws us, that motivates us to get up, get out and quest for something. What is the quest for? What is the end game for this?

Well, the destination is not really a physical one and the journey is only representational in it’s physicality. The image at the end of this process is tangible and physical, but the end game is the experience for the viewer; the mental space they are (hopefully) jolted into upon seeing the image. The image experience is the destination and the journey for the viewer. The journey and story of the image is consolidated into a single picture that implies enough, and is compelling enough creatively, to instantly make the mind of the viewer work feverishly analyzing the image, enjoying the challenge, feeling wonder, smiling at the feeling and imagining the actions it must have taken the artist to not only make the image but arrive at the location…..the journey, they end up taking it with you in their own way, left to fill in the story with realities the artist helps construct with the creative execution and intangible imbuing of the image. The emotions and sensibilities of the image provide the pallets for the imaginations of the viewers as they follow you in their mental journey.

gotta get there to get it

gotta get there to get it

When I look at a light painting picture in a location that is in some way “extreme” or outside of my everyday reality I feel the power of that place in the image….If I make a light orb, for example, in my kitchen and then make another orb in the French Alps at the snow line, I bet the Alps orb will be more impactful. Certainly, the details can be argued, maybe I set-dress the kitchen creatively and make a wicked image…..but the point would remain…it’s the background, the environment, that the orbs/light sculptures/artists interact with and place the light objects into that is the main signifier.

The journey is towards an experience that is in itself intangible, but more powerful than any of the concrete walls, massive metal doors swinging violently shut with spasmic irregularity, or loose shaft grates that would welcome a new passenger down their lethal slide. The journey is through these gauntlets physically, but into the mind/emotions/psyche…..the journey evokes and elicits sensations unique to the nature of each location. The procession imbues each traveler with it’s essence and we integrate, re-assimilate, re-contextualize, re-invent these sensations through the artists’ alchemical internal swirl into expressions of our psychic imprint from the environment. The light images come from outside ourselves and inside ourselves in equal measure. We are vessels and masters simultaneously.

The artist acts in the space of time travel and assimilates the lifetime’s and life of the people that have passed before. The psychic traces and psychological reactions to the stark evidence of previous lives puts the artist into a place that is impossible to fully imagine before the moment comes. It’s a progression to an internal place whose time and space are infinitely variable and impossible to predict, but once there the artist knows it instinctively. The spirit descends and the calm, quiet, exhilaration moment arrives when you know for certain, without reason, that you are meant to create right then, in these moments, in the captured series of time and motion that is the light painters’ aboriginal hand print on the face of the invisible, quantum mechanical surface of our new world order rock walls.

It is a new technology extension of our human need to leave an indelible mark on the palaces of our ancestors.

The production journey of Luminary has begun. We are after a series of images and experiences. We are after interactive encounters that exists because of a shared creative vision. We are seeking the nature of creative moments.  We can’t predict the specifics and we can’t govern all the details, but be sure, when the time comes we’ll be rolling…..in surround sound.

 
LAPP-PRO on TV, Gestalt, and Kinesthetic Intelligence

     LAPP-PRO makes the rest of us feel something.  We felt something when we visited them

and it seems like more and more people are starting to feel the power of their images.  It's not hard to understand why folks are attracted to LAPP-PRO's images.  It's exciting to see that they have gotten some TV play in their home town Bremen.  Check out the movie here.

     LAPP-PRO creates some of the most compelling and, dare I say, astonishing pictures I have seen.  They are full of Psychic Energy and Gestalt. Gestalt is often defined in English as: A physical, biological, psychological, or symbolic configuration or pattern of elements so unified as a whole that its properties cannot be derived from a simple summation of its parts.

 

LAPP see's the Light

 

     "Gestalt psychology is based on the observation that we often experience things that are not a part of our simple sensations...Furthermore, say the Gestalt psychologists, we are built to experience the structured whole as well as the individual sensations." (Dr. C. George Boree). 

     Now, I think these are apt descriptions for light painting in general, but especially for the images LAPP-PRO create.  Their pictures are much more than the sum of their parts.  The gestalt of LAPP-Pro is seen in each gesture, in every "brush stroke" they make. The unique nature of LAPP is that it is a whole body, kinesthetic, action/experience that is simultaneously technical, creative and developmental. The following is a quote from Dr. Gerald Grow:

     "The core elements of the bodily-kinesthetic intelligence are control of one's bodily motions and capacity to handle objects skillfully (206). Gardner elaborates to say that this intelligence also includes a sense of timing, a clear sense of the goal of a physical action, along with the ability to train responses so they become like reflexes. Along with these, you often find a high degree of fine-motor control and a gift for using whole body motions....Gardner cites a dancer's conviction that we all have the capacity "to apprehend directly" the actions, feelings, or dynamic abilities of other people, without help from words or pictures (228)" (Gardner, Howard. Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences. 1983. New York: Basic Books, 1985)

 
Eric Staller Introduces the Quintette
Eric Staller describes his work as having a thread of optimism running through it—we couldn’t agree more.

A skilled light painter, envelope-pushing artist and all-around amazing guy, Staller continues to deliver fresh ideas and innovation in his latest creation, the Quintette.

Quintette

Yes, the man who brought us the original CoBi ConferenceBike has taken group biking to the next level. The Quintette is a sleek five-person CoBi, complete with hydraulic steering and brakes. It’s affordable, lightweight and ready to ride.

Staller’s bikes are enjoyed all over the world at meetings, festivals, theme parks and other events. A London company uses the ConferenceBike for team-building; guides in Berlin give tourists a unique view of the city aboard a ConferenceBike; in Dublin, it’s a way for the Blind to bike; in New York, it helps seniors exercise.  

Staller has been bringing people together with ConferenceBikes for almost 20 years. And now, his new Quintette promises to bring the fun to an even larger audience.

If you want to be your very own merry maker you can contact Eric about the Quintette and see about getting your very own Conference Bike Shuttle Service set-up.  It would sure beat sitting in a cubicle farm drooling your life away for corporate interests!

 


 

 
Michael Bosanko for TalkTalk

 

Michael Bosanko is lighting up Britain, and TalkTalk’s latest advertising campaign, with a giant green dinosaur, glowing flowers, an electric bull—and the queen herself.

The UK’s leading internet service provider enlisted renowned light artist Bosanko to illustrate the company’s repositioning as the UK’s “Brighter Phone and Broadband” provider.


Bosanko spent a weekend shooting overnight for the campaign at landmarks in London, Birmingham, Sheffield, Newcastle and Edinburgh. Using long-exposure photography and an array of torches to paint with light, Bosanko created a series of captivating images showcasing some of Britain’s most famous attractions.


In Bosanko’s world, a dinosaur shines from the gate of the Natural History Museum. Whimsical flowers illuminate the Sheffield Botanical Gardens. Flames engulf the Angel of the North. A lone bull stands outside the Bullring Birmingham, and the queen sparkles from her throne in front of Buckingham Palace.  


TalkTalk’s ad campaign brings Bosanko’s one-of-a-kind images to a large public audience, formally introducing the little-known art of light painting.

A photographer for more than a decade, Bosanko discovered light painting on a trip to Greece in 2004. Since then, he has helped pioneer and define the medium.

Bosanko spent years perfecting his technique, but aspiring light artists and curious onlookers have the opportunity to try their hand at light painting on TalkTalk’s Web site.

Check out Bosanko's tour of the UK!! And, check out our visit with him in Cardiff Wales.

 

 

 


 
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