By Tod Hardin on August 16, 2014
Temple of Art: A Documentary Worth Supporting
Every now and then we come across a great crowdfunding project that is worthy of giving our highest recommendation of support. Our good friend, and creative master, David Mack, recently turned us on to a documentary project called Temple of Art, which is the brainchild of photographer Allan Amato.
Two years ago Amato began photographing artists and asking them to interpret those portraits through their particular medium. The film will follow these collaborations from conception to completion, providing viewers with an insightful look at the lives and creative processes of over 50 highly talented and prolific artists. It will also provide some valuable insight into the intriguing question of: Why do I make art? – a question often asked of artists, and also one artists ask themselves.
“Ultimately, by merging the objectivity of portrait photography with the subjectivity of drawing, painting, and sculpture, the artist is contextualized within the constructed reality of their own work,” said Amato. “An artist’s work can act as both bridge and barrier; at once deeply personal and highly distorted; the lens through which we present our perception of the world, and the world that in turn interprets us.”
Artists featured include Mack, Bill Sienkiewicz, Grant Morrison, Junko Mizuno, Barron Storey, Greg Ruth, Jason Shawn Alexander, Rebecca Guay and many more. Executive producers on the project are filmmaker Jon Schnepp, singer/songwriter and Cultural Weekly’s official Coolest Gal Around, Amanda Palmer, and writer extraordinaire, Neil Gaiman.
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Here’s an early look at what you can expect from this forthcoming documentary, via the always intriguing Barron Storey:
[embedvideo id=”d3sSPufuaDo” website=”youtube”]
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Author
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tod Hardin is a man of mystery, reason and poor taste. Undefined by humanity, eager for love and always in search of good time, he walks this path of life on a journey of nothingness ... with a smile on his face, a flashlight in his pocket and the immaturity that we will all miss when we say goodbye. In moments of clarity, he serves as the North American managing partner at greatest creative agency in the world - Crowd. www.thisiscrowd.com
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