Caryn Cline
약력
Originally from the Missouri Ozarks, Caryn Cline is a filmmaker and teacher who has been making films and videos for 20 years. She works with found footage, she shoots 16mm film and she creates handmade direct animation "botanicollage" films.
Director
In "Horse Fare" two equine-obsessed filmmakers interact with three horses and their owner. While grooming, saddling and riding, they ponder the connection between the animals and themselves and find a contemporary resonance for this relationship as they discover how and why the owner acquired them as foals.
Director
Narrative breaks down into a searching and tentative score, while optically printed flowers pass greens and reds and dirt against a scratchy white sky, then sometimes purples and blues and pink.
Director
A subtle movement of dancer’s arms invites three panels of film into one frame in this micro-symphony of sound and image in which the changing light evokes the passing of time. Human and non-human, interior and exterior co-exist in this highly improvisational yet serendipitous portrait of the forever-changing city of Seattle. Collaborating to subdivide a 16mm film frame into thirds, Caryn Cline, Linda Fenstermaker and Reed O’Beirne present their separately shot segments simultaneously within one spatial plane. From the interplay of these three points of view emerges a cinematic conversation based on a horizontal compositional logic within the shared frame. This combined connotative relationship between the subframes evokes a spectacle of fractured spatial and temporal perspective.
Director
Inspired by a newspaper article about the plight of monarch butterflies, using found footage from four different sources, I edited, optically-printed, superimposed, scratched on, bleached and otherwise altered the film to highlight, lament and challenge the monarch butterflies’ dilemma. –Caryn Cline
Director
By presenting three filmmakers’ work simultaneously within a single 16mm frame, Tri-Alogue #2 offers a complexity of perspective that undermines the omniscient cinematic gaze and evokes a deeper relational mystery. Collaborating to subdivide a 16mm film frame into thirds, three lmmakers present their separately-shot segments simultaneously within one spatial plane. From the interplay of these three points of view emerges a cinematic conversation based on a horizontal compositional logic within the shared frame.
Director
A 16mm camera roll photographed in my front yard one day in autumn.
Director
I shot and hand-processed “live action” scenes on the farm, using organic materials (trees, flowers, plants) as “mattes” for my post-residency work in the optical printer, where I combined these mattes and scenes with handmade “botanicollage” film that I created from plants gathered at the farm.
Director
A collaborative film produced in a botanicollage workshop hosted by filmmaker Caryn Cline at Experiments in Cinema, Albuquerque, NM, on April 18, 2014. Susan Caffrey, Megan Tucker, Bill Basquin, Mary Broemel, Bart Hood, Leslie Chamberlin, Antoni Pinent, River Quane, and Shawn White.
Director
“All Flesh is Grass” experimentally documents a prairie restoration project in northeast Missouri, combining source footage and handmade “botanicollage” film frames, using in-camera and optical effects.
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A recycled film that addresses our culture of waste. According to a Cornell University research report, eleven thousand tons of trash a day are discarded in New York City, and 15 to 40% is food scraps that could be composted. In COMPOST CONFIDENTIAL, handmade botanicollage film frames, saved from unrealized projects, were put in a compost bin, left for several weeks, then retrieved and optically-printed. In the printing process, the sprocket holes themselves, usually outside of the frame, were intentionally revealed as an element inside the frame. The soundtrack, recycled from an audio project, features interviews with urban composters at the Union Square Greenmarket in New York City.
Director
“Botanicalistas” grew out of a workshop filmmaker and educator Caryn Cline taught at the Olympia Film Festival (November, 2010) on how to make handmade films using botanicals. The participants, all artists, were drawn to the haptic and kinesthetic in this approach to filmmaking. Each created several seconds of footage, working with clear or black leader and botanicals gleaned from his or her own environment.
Director
LEFT SIDE, RIVERSIDE experimentally documents the filmmaker's experience of Riverside Park, on the left side of Manhattan. The film combines "live action" footage and in-camera double exposures. This footage is then further layered by superimposing and bi-packing the camera footage with handmade and hand-painted film frames created from plants and flowers gleaned in Riverside Park. The ambient sounds come from both Riverside Park and the filmmaker’s childhood home in northeastern Missouri.
Director
In 16mm, hole-punched black frames, their inner circles filled with plants gleaned in Seattle, animated and optically-printed, interact with the complex rhythms of Barcelona-born, New York-trained composer and jazz bassist Alexis Cuadrado’s group, Noneto Ibérico.
Director
On a gray winter day in Seattle, the Volunteer Park Conservatory offers a trip to a different climate: lush, wildly colorful, strange, and beautiful. IN THE CONSERVATORY experimentally captures the essence of the place, through the use of direct animation, ambient sound, and music. Plants from the conservatory’s winter collection were gleaned and pasted onto clear, 16mm film leader, then re-photographed on an optical printer while they were still fresh, resulting in a second, chance animation. The soundtrack combines ambient sound recorded in the Conservatory with a performance of a Samuel Barber composition, featuring Lucy Goeres on flute and Eliza Garth on piano.
Director
Caryn Cline composes a gentle, poetic film of optically-printed plants and leaves from her neighbor Lucy Goeres' terrace. Goeres also plays the flute on the accompanying musical track (aided with birdcalls and nature sounds as recorded by Cline herself).
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A young boy in a regimented world dreams of a different, freer self. Using found footage from two educational films, Caryn Cline chose, combined, optically-printed and edited scenes to create a new story. Original score by Melissa Grey.
Director
Mapping a Seattle landscape as the season turns, this film is an optical print of original handmade frames. Featuring hydrangea, geranium, nandina, camillia, oregano, vinca, snapdragon, cyclamen, violet, linden, clematis, linaria, birch bark and daphne. Music by Bay Area composer, arranger, and jazz bassist Chuck Metcalf used with permission.