make a Mini ARTHOUSE Movie
Boost your film making portfolio by developing, recording and editing your own unique mini ARTHOUSE movie in just one week.
With a nod to other acclaimed ARTHOUSE Movie makers and animators such as Jan Svankmejer, The Quay Brothers, Maya Deren and David Lynch you will create your own MINI MOVIE ready for the Big Screen, Small Screen, Art installation or theatre show.
Suitable for all video artists, filmmakers, animators, scenographers, theatre makers and any Arts practitioners who want to learn, play or just refresh their creativity in this fun hands on laboratory style workshop.
During the workshop we will…
1. Dive into Micro Cinema techniques to discover the beauty of textures and movements and hidden narratives in tiny things.
2. Get a bit technical with cameras and lighting, focus and composition.
3. Discuss the work of other filmmakers, surrealists and experimental animators.
4. Develop the content for your movie and look at different narrative possibilities.
5. Gather materials and props to build a simple set, collage or diorama.
6. Record your movie using a smart phone or video camera perhaps with the help of other participants.
7. Select the best shots and learn to edit it all together.
8. Add a hand made foley soundtrack, suitable narration or music.
9. Finally screen your Mini ARTHOUSE masterpiece together with the movies of the other participants to an invited audience.
Participants will be asked to bring...
1. Smartphone and/or tablet with at least 20Gb memory to record video at 1080p.
2. Laptop. I will suggest you download the free Davinci Resolve by BlackMagic. (there are some free editing tools for tablet or phone but a laptop is always quicker)
3. Selection of objects and materials to film.
4. Torch, small lights.
5. Simple tool-kit, scissors, glue gun etc.
6. Art materials, paints, inks etc.
7. Optional extras to bring: Camcorder, DSLR, Camera tripod and smartphone clip, angle poise lamp/film light etc.
Duration: 3 to 5 days (18 to 35 hours)
Capacity: maximum 12 adults
Testimonials from Pinerolo workshop 2024
'Gavin has a wonderful way to give space to the artists so they can find our own way to grow. I also really value that we had the opportunity to share and inspire one another every day. I think this was really helpful and created a great bond between us.
I am looking forward to the next one'
Physical theatre performer - France
'I learned to trust my own free experimentation with video and in doing so, I now understand the value of using the simplest working tools and to focus on well-shaped ideas. I realised that looking at the videos we had just made on the projector was really really useful. Not just to appreciate our images but also to look at them in a more objective and critical way.
I will now be implementing this approach in my own working method'
Film animator - Italy
UPCOMING
WORKSHOPS
a similar but shorter 2 day workshop
Micro-cinema Techniques
Making little things BIG for theatre, film and animation
Manipulate Festival, Edinburgh
2 full days 14-15 February 2025
Details to be confirmed -
Press reviews for Gavin Glover's recent short movies online
Bleak House
commissioned by the London Mime Festival
'For something more peculiar, and far darker, head for Gavin Glover’s Bleak House, which snoops inside a very grotty miniaturised house, through which a cot bed hurtles on a pulley, baby gurgles offset against recriminatory adult voices. A jostling congregation of armchairs round the cot and telling dribble under it provides a sinister evocation of unspeakable abuse. What starts by being quaintly charming becomes truly disturbing'
Dominic Cavendish - The Telegraph
'Bleak House, by puppeteer and theatre maker Gavin Glover, has a darker, more austere humour.
His camera, travelling through the rooms and corridors of a miniature derelict house, dislocate spatial scales and unsettles our perceptions – intriguing, disquieting and witty'
The Observer
The Shark was aware of Me
written by Alan Bissett, commissioned by Mull Theatre, Scotland
'The miniaturised city streets, with their tiny people and cardboard buildings, have a paradoxically strange familiarity… visualised and animated with the distinctive brilliance of master puppet-maker Gavin Glover'
Mark Brown - The National
Press reviews for movies in the shows by Faulty Optic Theatre of Animation
Bubbly Beds
'...is like a palm-sized Monty Python skit'
Peter Marks - Henson’s Puppet Festival - The New York Times
Soiled
'The satanic figures and trapped souls are projected onto a screen, creating a creepy but vividly compelling evocation of a bad dream'
Finton O’Toole - The Irish Times
'In this merging of live puppetry and film animation, Faulty Optic have discovered a genre they have made their own: they are indeed masters of their universe'
Dorothy Max Prior - Total Theatre Magazine
Horsehead
'We meet Horsehead on screen, alive and kicking, and later dead and maggot-ridden in a wonderful scene that has something of a Swankmeyer quality...'
Dorothy Max Prior - Total Theatre Magazine