Haptic CInema Curation Pillsbury PDF
Haptic CInema Curation Pillsbury PDF
Haptic CInema Curation Pillsbury PDF
Relating to the sense of touch, in particular relating to the perception and manipulation of
objects using the senses of touch and proprioception. (perception or awareness of the position
noun:
The use of technology that stimulates the senses of touch and motion, especially to
reproduce in remote operation or computer simulation the sensations that would be felt by a user
HAPTIC VISUALITY/
CINEMA
The theory of “haptic visuality” (circa Laura Marks, The Skin of Film) —a visuality that
functions like the sense of touch by triggering physical memories of smell, sound, touch, and
taste—to explain the newfound ways in which intercultural cinema engages the viewer bodily to
EXAMPLES IN ART
raw imagery. (Early 1900’s) His paintings were regarded of the first ‘known’ examples of haptic
visualities in art.
To Connect to film:
“the image allows viewers to experience cinema as a physical and multi-sensory embodiment of
culture, not just as a visual representation of experience.” - Laura Marks, The Skin of Film
This is interesting to think about because it relies on the viewer to come up with these
experiences rather than the creator. The artist can try as hard as they may to create this and get
nothing, or they could barely try and get so many sensory receptions.
NEUROSCIENCE VS PHILOSOPHY
René Descartes, in his epoch-making Meditations on First Philosophy (1641), had
argued that minds and bodies are two distinct kinds of being or substance with two distinct kinds
minds are characterized by properties of thinking (including seeing, feeling, etc.). Centuries later,
phenomenology would find, with Brentano and Husserl, that mental acts are characterized by
consciousness and intentionality, while natural science would find that physical systems are
gravitational field that, by hypothesis, orders everything in the natural world in which we humans
and our minds exist? That is the mind-body problem today. In short, phenomenology by any
Habitual memory, is at the service of every day, pragmatic needs and is recalled by what
we see and need during the day to get through our needs. We see an orange traffic light and we
know to slow down. As drivers, we hear an ambulance and we know to move to the side of the
road. These are memories recalled by what we see and hear, we react to them instinctively, as in
a brain recall. Pure memory comes to us in less structured, non-habitualized forms (sleeping,
daydreaming, when our mind makes lateral connections that recall something entirely unrelated
to our present situation, etc.). After visual input hits the retina, the information flows into
Habitual memory perception is conditioned by what is visible, opposed to pure memory that
distance to perceive them as distinct forms in deep space: in other words, how we usually
conceive of vision. Optical visuality depends on separation between the viewing subject and the
object. Haptic looking tends to move over the surface of its object rather than plunge into
illusionistic depth, not to distinguish form so much as to discern texture. It is more inclined to
Haptic films often have close ups, blurred images, so the spectator has to put his senses
at work to experience what is happening in the film. Haptic visuality can contain some of the
following formal and textual qualities: grainy, unclear images; sensuous imagery that evokes
memory of the senses (i.e. water, nature); the depiction of characters in acute states of sensory
activity (smelling, sniffing, tasting, etc.); close-to-the-body camera positions and panning across
the surface of objects; changes in focus, under- and overexposure, decaying film and video
imagery; optical printing; scratching on the emulsion; densely textured images, effects and
To push this even further, I feel as though my understanding of what ‘haptic cinema’ is oe
can be changes often. I can be watching a ‘mainstream’ film and there are moments when I feel it
takes me out of just a normal ‘viewing’ experience and puts me into a haptic one. Same thing
goes for more Art House films. It is a simple idea that stretches across many platforms; film,
poetry, art, literature, etc. while being both inclusive and expansive. What does it mean to have a
visual experience create another sensory experience? Take for example, Francis Bacon’s
Paintings. A lot of people seem to have a similar phenomenon of sensing rather than feeling. But
an Edward Hopper painting to me makes me feel rather than sense. But for some, his
atmospheres may create an instant smell or taste for someone when they look at them. I think
that Haptic visuality is very vague and is not something that will ever be able to be captured the
way some people try to with things like 4D movies. Perhaps the closest thing we have right now
The haptic image is in a sense, ‘less complete’, requiring the viewer to contemplate the
image as a material presence rather than an easily identifiable representational cog in a narrative
wheel. When our eyes move across a richly textured surface, occasionally pausing but not really
focusing, making us wonder what we are actually seeing, they are functioning like organs of
touch. The brain is cross wired for sensory associations , always looking to connect to
understand. Is it the mind that is creating an experience or is it the brain? Is it a more emotional
experience? Fight or flight? The brain is processing the information you’re seeing and turning it
into a reaction. How come sometimes a film will make one person squeamish while make
LIST OF FILMS
Think about how these films are related to your sensory memories.
Imagining things that haven’t happened to you but scare or disgust you.
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xgp7hc
• Lack of sound elements when they should be there forces the audience to make up their own
sounds, perhaps creating a more immersive experience for the viewer by forcing them to
‘Experimental Animation’
https://vimeo.com/3976305
• Visual textures
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9-bRxSVuzE
(Son of Saul)
• Visual Vs Sonic
- The Phenomenology of Trauma. Sound and Haptic Sensuality in Son of
Saul
Think about a time a film or image forced a connection in your brain. Was that something you
liked? Could it be pushed further? Does this change the way you look at film? Can all films be
off of memory.
Fantastic fungi
Sleep, interrupted