Pre-event presentation

The Analog World:
an artist talk & performance by Floris Vanhoof 

December 10, 19.00h - Free 
@ aula Dieperik, Campus Mutsaard academy of Antwerp
Please note: This Artist Talk will be mainly in Dutch. 

The digitally indulged viewer is confronted with the analogue world. With artist Floris Vanhoof, we explore the working process and dynamics of flickering slide and film projectors combined with electronic music circuits. Our viewing patterns are shaken up, we explore the analogue field. Away from the virtual world where attention-grabbing algorithms leave little room for imagination, we move freely between auditory and visual media. 

© Cable-Nantes

"The combination of Vanhoof’s modular waveforms and near-strobing assemblages of projected light have the ability to overload the brain’s capacity for synthesis, forcing it to switch modes and enter a pre-lingual altered state. This was the effect I experienced when I saw him perform in Los Angeles earlier this year."

(The Wire)

About Floris Vanhoof 

Floris Vanhoof (°1982, lives and works in Antwerp, Belgium) is interested in the hybrid forms of music, visual art, and film. His first projections -experimental films on 16 millimeter- evolved towards purely visual experiences which questioned our viewing patterns. Inspired by structural film and early electronic music, he builds installations, creates expanded cinema performances, and releases his music. Vanhoof makes his own instruments to explore the border between image, light, and sound.
As media-archaeologist, he confronts the digitally-spoiled audience with flickering 16mm films and 35mm slide installations - formats doomed to disappear. He often chooses analog technology because of the greater transparency of the workflow, and because of its rich dynamic range. Cut loose from all nostalgia, he experiments with what used to be considered "hightech." Vanhoof searches for new ideas with old media. He translates sound to image and vice-versa by connecting different incompatible media. He is especially curious about the effects his work elicits in the viewer: How does our perception operate? Which new perspectives appear?

© Mich Leemans