I received some excess 16mm film from my friend who is a film student, and I had the opportunity to test out different modes of abstracting the format on unexposed leader. Below I have some visual documentation of the process, however, the majority of it was done without it being documented because I was not sure if I would share this process on my blogs as a part of the prototype for this portfolio project. The use of a needle was much more involved for me, and I enjoyed the subtraction of material as a form of abstraction. Using markers on clear leader felt more volatile, and I did smudge quite a bit of the material.
Currently, the prototype of my project is the sum of experimentation both in instrument design as well as how to interact with film leader through means that resonate with me as well as ideas I have surrounding the interaction personal perception and the manipulation of material and environment in artworks.

The celluloid on the left is clear film leader that I used marker over to try to create abstract stop motion images, however, I did not like the interaction of material and the ink of the marker. The film stock on the right is black leader, more traditional, and I used both a needle and a marker in some sections, however, the interaction between the needle and black leader was more appealing to me. Maybe it was the subconscious tie I placed between this work and Len Lye’s film free Radicals. Distortion of material feels more closely related to the concept I am exploring involving abstraction and perception. Rather than focusing on specific theory and creating an image of that through the sum of this artwork, I am planning on using experimentation and trial and error to draw more personal conclusions on how the abstraction of material from physical distortion and reduction and simplification leads to the challenge of how perception and form are linked in the creation and absorption of abstract artworks.

Below are some early sketches of my final instrument design. Abstraction comes into fruition through the minimization and interpretation of a hurdy gurdy through my own primitive means. Originally I was going to rely on the simplification of the construction process as well, however, I did not resonate with the construction of a scale model of the instrument using the laser cut material presented in earlier blogs. As a result I have been researching Japanese woodcraft techniques and philosophy, which presents the importance of interaction between construction and the natural environment, this is to reframe my subconscious and conscious perception of the process I am embarking on when building the instrument itself. Allowing me to hopefully equally focus on the process of building the device as well as conceptualizing and designing the device. Based on how my brain works or over works the thinking process before the actual realization and experimentation process I have realized how important research and developing process is for the sake of my process.

