Thursday, June 28, 2012






- cinematographe, biograph, bioscope, film -




What is the nature of cinema, what is it's most important element? Is it a movement, a light, or a life itself? Can there be a film without these elements? And how can we define a basic minimal 
film character corresponding to the nature of cinema?


Let us turn to some etymology for help.

Many names were used for projectors of early films - frequently derived from Greek and Latin, and usually clumsy; such as Vever's Viviograph, Wood's Movendoscope, and the Chronophotographoscope. The names of some machines introduced during this period - the Biograph, Cinematographe/Kinematograph, Bioscope - became generic terms for motion pictures.

Multitude of names for certain new phenomenon (or product, in this case new medium) shows the need to talk about it in particular society. Name acquisition is of great importance, and patent owners struggle for primacy. This process takes sometimes more than few decades, and in some cases term that has lost globally, can win locally. Term "bioscope" has lost by "cinematography" globaly, but it is widely used in South Africa, Sweden (bio), India, Pakistan and Serbia.

Going deeper in analysis, from etymological point of view, each term has different priority if we see it as an attempt to define the phenomenon.

cinematograph
 (writing with movement) - term used by Lumiere brothers (1896), developed from Gk. kinema "movement" + graphein "to write". "I had the occasion to visit Louis Lumière many times in Paris, but it was one fine day that I was able to divine, without but a word exchanged between the two of us, the birth in his marvellous mind of the general idea of the Cinematograph. Three months after our first brief glimpse, I sent the first role of film to Lyon. To our immense surprise... the Cinematograph was born, projecting life onto a piece of paper set up to act as a screen... and even then, it had all the perfection of the image that we still admire today." (Victor Planchon)



biograph (writing with life) - term used by Georges Demenÿ and Herman Casler, developed from Gk. bios "one's life, course or way of living, lifetime" (as opposed to zoe "animal life, organic life") + graphein "to write". The name Biograph is short for the American Mutoscope and Biography Company, one of the earliest film production companies, established in 1896. Because it held patents on certain types of camera technology, Biograph became, for a time, one of Thomas Edison’s chief rivals. Eventually they teamed up to establish the Motion Picture Patents Company to protect cinema-related patent rights. Biograph’s studios were in New York, and the company produced over a thousand silent films from 1908 to 1916, including numerous early Westerns.





bioscope - (looking at life). Term was used by Max Skladanowsky and Charles Urban. It is constructed from the Greek bios, life + skopeein, to look at, and the Oxford English Dictionary gives its traditional definition as "a view or survey of life". The word was coined by Granville Penn in his 1812 Christian tract The Bioscope, or Dial of Life. Penn's book included a separate card on which was illustrated a dial marked from nought to seventy, marking the ages of man from childhood to decay in decades, with eternity waiting before and after. A pointer was attached for the reader to mark out his current age, and hence to contemplate the lessons in Penn's book on the allotted span of human life and to avoid the belief "that life is a continuous now". This dial was the bioscope, and just as a horoscope was a measure of the heavens at the hour of birth, so the Bioscope was the "general measure of human life".



Since cinema is the term in much wider use than bioscope, globally, we can say that representation of movement is a defining element of new medium, rather than "looking at life". However, there is another term, and it is in widest possible use. It's the term "film".

film - etymology of this word takes us to old english filmen "membrane, thin skin," Sense of "a thin coat of something" is 1570s, extended by 1845 to the coating of chemical gel on photographic plates. By 1895 this also meant the coating plus the paper or celluloid. It is first used for signifying "motion pictures" in 1905. 

In film, the most natural minimal character is light that forms an image, passing through the celuloid membrane.



Monday, June 4, 2012



- numerical codes as characters -



There is a list of most common HTTP codes and their meanings:


Informational
100 Continue 

Success
200 OK 

Redirection
300 Multiple Choices 
301 Moved Permanently 
302 Found 
304 Not Modified 

Client Error
400 Bad Request 
401 Unauthorized 
403 Forbidden 
404 Not Found 
410 Gone 

Server Error
500 Internal Server Error  
501 Not Implemented 
503 Service Unavailable 


According to Google’s search statistics, HTTP error 500 is more than twice as common as 404 errors:





Darko Fritz uses some of less common codes to produce metaphor of human or urban situations. Code 302 is a special case, an example of industry practice contradicting the standard HTTP/1.0 specification, which required the client to perform a temporary redirect (the original describing phrase was "Moved Temporarily"), now the meaning of code changed to - 302 Found. 





In their video "trinity rgb", milica lapcevic and vladimir sojat use numbers to present and quantify rgb signal. This is personification of color white: 


             





Khlebnikov's poem "Numbers" ["Chisla"] (1911) treats numbers not as digits or a system for counting but organic beings.



I see right through you, Numbers.
I see you dressed in animals, their skins,
coolly propped against uprooted oaks.
You offer us a gift: unity between the snaky movement
of the backbone of the universe and Libra dancing
overhead. You help us to see centuries in a flash
of laughing teeth. See my wisdom-wizened eyes
opening to recognize
what my I
will be
when its dividend is one.





Numbers move, numbers think, numbers dictate. From a semantic point of view, one could say that these numbers here lost their denotative meaning. 

ASCII art uses characters to produce image. If we want to create image of character in ASCII, what we got is character depicted with characters.


                                     character(s) in motion