Dominique Belloir

Most Popular Dominique Belloir Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

Binary Lives Trailer (1996)

01 January 1996

A short documentary on the life and art of Steina and Woody Vasulka, produced in 1996. The Vasulkas speak candidly about their work and worldviews, and the piece features excerpts from their early works and a glimpse into their '90s output.

Koyamaru, l'hiver et le printemps Trailer (2010)

10 May 2010

Koyamaru, Été - Automne Trailer (2010)

10 May 2010

Memory Trailer (1979)

17 September 1979

Memory is an attempt to reconstruct the functioning of the memory process and, in particular, the phenomenon of triggering a memory from elements perceived in the outside world.

Paris mis à nu Trailer (1981)

01 January 1981

A walk in Paris in 1981 with one of the first thermographic cameras detecting different levels of heat.

Artmatic Trailer (1981)

01 January 1981

Flippers Trailer (1979)

01 January 1979

Dominique Belloir and Rainer Werbitz experimenting with the use of the video synthesizer which, by various processing, explores the fascination of an apparently harmless game, pinball-- The artificial quickly becomes pulsating, violent and sexualized in a frenzy.

Digital Opéra Trailer (1980)

01 January 1980

A short film from Dominique Belloir.

The Night of Candles Trailer (1993)

01 January 1993

Once a year, the city of Pisa is lit up by thousands of candles for an age-old religious festival. Magic, visions, dreams and light.

Fluides Trailer (1974)

01 January 1974

An early experiment by Dominique Belloir and Rainer Verbizh on Marcel Dupouy's Movicolor synthesizer, from footage of waves recorded a few weeks earlier from the top of a rock on the pink granite coast in Brittany: "A small research unit had been installed by Marcel Dupouy, CNAV [.

Feedback Stroboscopy Trailer (1975)

01 January 1975

1975, the golden age of analog manipulation! In the midst of my fascination with the video feedback effect, the equivalent of the Larsen effect for sound, I generated these soaring images by directly connecting the camera to a video monitor while passing through Marcel Dupouy's Movicolor Synthesizer and following the repetitive rhythm of a composition by Nana de Vasconcelos (with, as a bonus, the blessing of Pierre Barouh and Saravah)!