Whanganui Midweek

Artist in internatio­nal limelight

Experiment­s with digital animation now bearing fruit

- Steve Carle

Whanganui sculpture/ video artist Brit Bunkley’s work was accepted for this year’s Rencontres Internatio­nales — Paris/ Berlin.

His video, Peaceable Kingdom, was selected from the 7024 submission­s from 120 countries.

“It will fittingly be at the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature — Paris, a museum of hunting and nature (and in Berlin in March),” said Bunkley.

“This year, they also will be screening a retrospect­ive of full-length films by the great Yvonne Rainer at The Centre Pompidou.

“New work will be shown by the New Zealand artist Gavin Hipkins, Peggy Ahwesh and Jacqueline

Goss (US), Ivan Argote (Colombia), Jonathas de Andrade (Brazil), and Eliane Esther Bots (Netherland­s) (https://art-action.org/site/ en/prog/index.php),” he said.

Bunkley immigrated from New York City to Whanganui 28 years ago to take up a position at the new art school at the polytechni­c (now UCOL). He graduated with an MFA from Hunter College, NYC, in 1985, while receiving the prestigiou­s USA Rome Prize the same year.

Although Bunkley’s main practice has been sculpture and public art, he began experiment­ing with animation software for public art proposals. He started making short videos in the late 90s.

“They needed someone to teach video at the art school here, so I adapted and taught myself the complexiti­es of video and animation.”

He soon began sending them to internatio­nal competitio­ns.

“I was surprised to be getting into more and more of these digital exhibition­s overseas,” he said. “This year so far I have been accepted into 14 film festivals and exhibition­s overseas.

“My latest video Peaceable Kingdom took me six months to complete. It can take up to 45 minutes per frame to turn a 3D scene into a photoreali­stic animation frame. At 25 frames per second, the time adds up, so I have occasional­ly been using inexpensiv­e overseas rendering farms that have thousands of computers dedicated to such tasks.

“I’d use real animals if I could, but they’d eat each other up before the first take,” he joked.

So, he is using the next best thing, what he calls “deep fake animals”.

The inspiratio­n for animals getting along peaceably came from Bunkley’s wife, Andrea Gardner, who is also an artist. She first introduced him to the series of paintings, Peaceable Kingdom, by the 19th-century Quaker minister and painter Edward Hicks. They named two collaborat­ive sculptures with this title.

Since this video, Bunkley has been working on the Signs of Life, a video of microbes and small animals focusing on their social interactio­ns and heartbeats, while in Natural Intelligen­ce he is creating more animated digital mammals in unusual contexts (such as coexisting naturally inside elaborate empty buildings).

Bunkley says video art has been a respected art genre since the 1970s. This art form is now common in major museums globally while having a major presence in most contempora­ry art reviews.

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/ collection/search/11081

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 ?? ?? Whanganui sculpture/video artist Brit Bunkley had five seconds or so each hour for a day on this video billboard in Times Square, New York, as part of an ad for the New Realism / Altered Reality exhibition at Gallery23, NYC recently. INSET: Bunkley.
Whanganui sculpture/video artist Brit Bunkley had five seconds or so each hour for a day on this video billboard in Times Square, New York, as part of an ad for the New Realism / Altered Reality exhibition at Gallery23, NYC recently. INSET: Bunkley.
 ?? ?? Peacable Kingdom by video artist Brit Bunkley, from Whanganui, will be screened at the Musé e de la Chasse et de la Nature in Paris (and in Berlin in March).
Peacable Kingdom by video artist Brit Bunkley, from Whanganui, will be screened at the Musé e de la Chasse et de la Nature in Paris (and in Berlin in March).

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