"Look at some of the audio-visual slideshows on the websites listed above. make some notes about particular works of interest, considering how they are edited, sequenced and how audio is used with the images. Note down your own personal observations.
Whether or not you intend to present your photographs for assignment 5 as an audio-visual piece, suppose that for this exercise you will. Familiarise yourself with any basic slideshow or video-making software and compile an edit of your work, experimenting with transitions, text and music and/or sound effects. Save your work so that your tutor and/or assessor can view this if necessary. Write a brief evaluation of your work."
OCA Course Material
Is this the most appropriate treatment of the work?
I think a slide show works well for this assignment as on this occasion there is a great deal of change happening. A slide show allows for the inclusion of more images.
How long will the slide show be?
Newark and District Photographic Society suggest the performance should last no longer than 12 minutes. At the beginning of my slide show, the introduction is displayed for quite some time to accompany the narration. The following slides are shown for 10 seconds each. I played around with the timing; the default setting on the programme is 7 secs and by imcreasing it I think there is enough time to look at the image. I was initially concerned over the amount of images I used, and watching Hanna Katrina Jedrosz's "I feel every stone of the road" (2014), the speed of her images presented on screen seemed to be quicker than mine. Maybe though that is because I am familiar with my images? Her images worked well with her journey; my work was representative of several journeys into a particular area of land.
Have you got relevant audio and or textural material to accompany the images?
I found a performance on Youtube of "Childs Ballad 123 The Curtal Friar" which links the narration and photographs together. Not being entirely sure around the Youtube fair usage policy, I used some of it on the slide show but have asked for permission to use it from the performer. Using Washington Irving's book "Abbotswood and Newstead Abbey" (1835), I took some of the sentences from the chapter on Sherwood Forest and Fountain Dale and applied my own words at the beginning and end of it. Irving's book is out of copyright.
Sir Walter Scott mentions the Friar, although his book is more story like than Irving's which is a descriptive journey.
Other works I found were a newspaper cutting (image too small to enlarge) and 3 postcards from a book. So as not to infringe the postcard book's copyright, I overlaid the modern view over the top. There were ideas on local history pages, but it basically came down to 2 written stories and the idea that the people who lived at Fountain Dale at the time of Sir Walter Scott's visit (the Need Family) placed the signs in the tree to associate Robin Hood and Friar Tuck with the space. This was a tradition which continued as it became a place marked on the Ordnance Survey map.
Examples of work I looked at were Ride to the Wall by Howard Bagshaw (4 min 16 secs) because I had seen the procession of bikes along the A38 and Chariots of Fire by Ian Bateman (5 min 44 secs) because the title interested me. Both are different works; one being about the people visiting the national memorial; the other being more factual. Chariots of Fire used the same photographs reinserted again to illustrate a point which worked. Both have different audiences and different messages. I did not need The Wall to be any longer, and I found the sound track repetitive. I liked the transitions in Chariots of Fire.
I used Windows movie maker which is a very basic programme. It has the ability to overlay a soundtrack and a narration, and although the slider bar adjusts the volume, it is more difficult to fade one out behind the other. The choice of transitions is limited. The font size can only be changed as a whole on the titles page.
I looked at Powerpoint, but I was put off from using it this time because the version on my laptop looked like it would take a little time to understand.
If I was to do this again, I would invest in a microphone to improve the sound performance. I changed my narrative from a descriptive one to a more flowery version to perform as i felt there was too much information.
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Revised script |
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Original script |
Edit 1
Edit 2
Bibliography
Jedrosz, H. (2014) I feel every stone of the road.[installation, presentation] Sheffield: New pastoral paradigms: Explorations in landscape and the self. Bank Street Arts. 23/07/2016
Bagshaw, H. (2011) Ride to the Wall (4 min 16 secs) [online] The Royal Photographic Society. Available from: http://www.rps.org/special-interest-groups/audio-visual/about/av-examples [last accessed 27/07/2016]
Bateman, I. (n.d.) Chariots of Fire (5 min 44 secs) [online] The Royal Photographic Society. Available from: http://www.rps.org/special-interest-groups/audio-visual/about/av-examples [last accessed 27/07/2016]