powered by VideoChannel
VAD - Video Art Database

Ferrandes, Valentina

Valentina Ferrandes (Italy)

  • biography
  • .
    [flvgallery video=”http://video.newmediaserver.org/coff/4/lab/ferrandes.flv” title=”view video” thumbnail=”http://video.newmediaserver.org/coff/4/lab/img/ferrandes.jpg” width=”480″ height=”360″]
    Video title:

    “SUTTSTEVE”
    2007, 3:03

    Steve Sutton, AKA “Suttsteve” is an habitual Youtube blogger, with a conspicuous group of fans. In one of his monologues he talks about his relation with the online community, the possibilities it offers and its usefulness.
    Once cut out the word Youtube, I have streamed this speech in a public square in south Italy. With an act of appropriation, I turned this character into the fetish of a new mediatic era, against which a monumental square acquires a surreal and quirky atmosphere.

    This video participates in
    CologneOFF IV – Here We Are!
    4th edittion of Cologne Online Film Festival
    LAB program series

    [flvgallery video=”http://video.newmediaserver.org/2009/lilong.flv” title=”view video” thumbnail=”http://video.newmediaserver.org/2009/09/img/lilong.jpg” width=”480″ height=”360″]

    Video title: Lilong
    2009, 16:42

    Lilong settlement is a low-rise, ground-related housing pattern, typical of Shanghai. Characterized by a strong sense of neighbourhood and cohesiveness, this typology of estate, constituted by two or more blocks of flats with an inner courtyard, has constituted the prevalent choice of Shanghai inhabitants until 1949. Today, as the urban restyling is taking place, the Lilong typology is quickly disappearing forcing its inhabitants to use public parks rather than its courtyard, for daily physical exercise, variations on Thai Chi and traditional singing.

    While the urban and human geography of Shanghai is changing and these social activities are performed mainly by elderly people, parks become also stages for fragmented “solo” performances. My video is a peculiar collection of individual portraits, of ambiguous repetitive gestures, shadowed by images of high-rise buildings and bird’s eye views of playgrounds. Whether or not these images are a realist representation of common individual workout, at the same time, they suggest a sense of loss and isolation, confinement and detachment.
    The work is realized after a long period of research about the Feng Shui philosophy, particularly the connection between flows of energy, building materials and techniques, and the human beings’ position in between these dynamic forces.