...

The 61-minute video consists entirely of long, slow-motion pans of people going about their business on the sidewalks and streets of New York City. Mr. Nares used a type of high-speed camera typically trained on subjects like hummingbirds and bullets. Shooting from a moving S.U.V., he recorded scenes in segments of six seconds, the longest stretch for which the camera can record while maintaining high resolution. He edited down 16 hours of recordings to around three minutes — that is, the running time if the video were to be shown at normal speed. Extended to over an hour, the video is a hypnotic, continuous flow of imagery.
‘Street,’ at the Metropolitan Museum
  1. thecap reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  2. jeske25 reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  3. theworldisalie2 reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  4. writtenbylight reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  5. instantcoffees reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  6. whoheisyet reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  7. litalzy reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  8. michellegeoga reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  9. mymentalradio reblogged this from photographsonthebrain
  10. photographsonthebrain posted this

Accent theme by Handsome Code

Photographs on the Brain is the Tumblr outpost of LPV Magazine. Consider it our daily digest of links, quotes, excerpts and photographs from around the web.

Twitter//Facebook//Flickr

view archive



Questions?

Submit