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SEVEN DAYS


by Chris WELSBY

1974 / 16 mm / coul / son / 20' 00

Movie viewable in documentation center
The full movie is viewable in our documentation center.

The location for this film was by a small stream on the northern slopes of Mount Carningly in southwest Wales. The seven days were shot consecutively and appear in that order. Each day starts at the time of local sunrise and ends at the time of local sunset. One frame was taken every ten seconds throughout the hours of daylight. The camera was mounted on an equatorial stand which is a piece of equipment used by astronomers to track the stars. In order to remain stationary in relation to the star field, the mounting is aligned with the Earth's axis and rotates about its own axis at approximately once every 24 hours. Rotating at the same speed as the Earth, the camera is always pointing at the either its own shadow or the sun. Selection of image, (sky or Earth; sun or shadow), was controlled by the extent of cloud coverage, i.e. whether the sun was in or out. If the sun was out, the camera was turned towards its own shadow; if it was in, the camera was turned towards the sun. A shotgun microphone was used to sample sound every two hours. These samples were later cut to correspond, both in space and time, with the image on the screen.


1 PRINT IN DISTRIBUTION

distribution format 16 mm
1 reel (220 meters)
speed 24 ips
screen 1,37 - standard
sound opt
rental fee 61,00 €


1982-2012 Light Cone - all rights reserved - images : © the artists
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