"Stunting Cunts" by Gina Kamenstky
“My practice as an artist is divided between creating Kinetic Sculpture and making experimental animated films. The common thread between both mediums is time, movement and generative process. In my animation work, I explore issues of movement, abstraction and structure working directly, painting and drawing on 35 and 70mm movie film.
I work mainly on found footage from movie trailers. This allows me to experiment with surface and leave artifacts from the original films. The graphic quality of these elements adds rhythm and variation to the work and creates new meaning disconnected from the original subject matter of the found elements.
The field size of the film frame is very small so I limit myself to working with simple graphic elements. After preparing the surface I place the film directly over a small video screen and use live video footage as movement reference for inking, painting and gluing small shards of film on the surface. My goal is to preserve the quality of movement in the original video, limiting myself to simple shapes and lines in the small frame.
Creating structure in this medium presents an interesting challenge. I work intuitively and allow a film to emerge out of a long series of experiments. Sound is central to building the structure of a piece. I start this process, gathering found spoken elements and creating field recordings. In the editing stage, rather than matching sound and image, I incorporate inappropriate sound and move image and sound out of sync to create unexpected and ambiguous meaning.”
– Gina Kamenstky
Trans Experimental, a group exhibition of experimental film and animation by trans artists in the greater Boston area, launches at The Sidewalk Video Gallery on February 14, 2021. The show, organized by Boston LGBTQIA+ Artist Alliance (BLAA), introduces a new artist each week. Experimental film deals with perception and abstraction and uses non-commercial techniques including photochemical abstraction, hand-painted animation, digital glitch work, and found footage collage. In this show, trans artists explore and find solace in practices of experimental film that are based on the re-collage, the tactical, the degradation, and the reclamation. Each work lends itself to reflection on the trans body and identity.