Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Dentsu. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Dentsu. Mostrar todas las entradas

Canon Pixma Sound Sculptures from Dentsu London on Vimeo.




Dentsu London has just launched a beautiful project promoting the new line of Canon Pixma printers.

Done in collaboration with the biochemical / photographer Linden Gledhill, the project called "Sound Sculptures" can be considered surreal, capturing paints simply dancing through the waves of sound. All captured with maximum detail and color. The agency came to Linden through its project called "Water Figures", which became known worldwide, and would fit perfectly to the concept "bringing color to life," used by the Canon PIXMA printers.

The photographs and filming took place using a Canon 5D Mark II, Canon EF 100mm Macro USM.


Canon Pixma Sound Sculptures from Dentsu London on Vimeo.

Making future Magic: Ipad light painting from Dentsu London




Making Future Magic: iPad light painting from Dentsu London on Vimeo.

We’ve been making two films with BERG over the summer. This is the first.

It’s an exciting project for us, as it’s the first time we’ve had a proper chance to explore some of the themes and possibilities behind Making Future Magic, with the benefit of the superbrains and hands of some new creative partners Timo Arnall, Jack Schulze and the rest of the BERG team.


The brief and discussions we had in the process of making these films were about some of the aims behind the Making Future Magic strategy – all of which are about expanding the value of the commercial communications we make by approaching things with a particular set of priorities:

To make creative work that is contributory and sensible to its culture and environment; to be exploratory and sensitive with regard to materials and media; to wonder what magical visions (as opposed to the familiar dystopias) of the future of media might look like.


We also talked about the meaning of each three words. “Making”, with its emphasis on craftsmanship, understanding of materials and media, and collaboration;

“Future”, meaning something not seen before, something new and unexpected (not so much sci-fi, as near-future);

and “Magic” – surprising, culturally powerful, unusual, capable of delighting.

One of the major reasons we were keen to work with BERG is the inventive and human approach to materials and media characteristic of all their work. Their response went beyond the hopes and imaginings of the original brief to produce something of astonishing beauty and ingenuity that breathed life into the strategy both conceptually and executionally. For this particular film they invented a technique using long camera exposures to record the iPad moving through space in order to make a stop motion film of 3-d light forms.