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    • Winnipeg to Saskatoon

    Winnipeg to Saskatoon

    • 2009
    • 00h 02m 20s
    • Brenna George
    • Rent $100
    • My List
    • Contact Us
    • Overview
    • Festivals & Screenings

    Synopsis

    A road trip video. The Canadian prairie landscape is sketched in simple forms in this on-the-move approach to landscape art.

    Categories

    • Animation,
    • Travel,
    • Canada,
    • Environment + Nature,
    • Landscape,
    • Narrative,
    • Short,
    • Works by Women

    Shooting Format

    • DV

    Languages

    • None

    Additional Details

    • Music,
    • Black & White,
    • Paper/Cell,
    • Stop Motion,
    • Sound,
    • Stereo

    Available Subtitle

    • None

    Region

    • Manitoba,
    • Saskatchewan

    Screening Formats

    • DVD,
    • H.264

    Credits

    • Artist: Brenna George

    Provided By

    • Video Pool Media Arts Centre

    Festivals

    • Antimatter [Media Art]
    • WNDX

    More By Brenna George

    Dustpan

    • 2009
    • Brenna George

    Time is measured in increments of what falls on the kitchen floor.

    Dustpan

    Sleep

    • 1995
    • Brenna George

    Sleep is a metaphor for lack of hope, for energy that is inexplicably draining from you. Beyond caring, your passive body allows others to voyeur. A restrained pallet of only black, red, white and flesh establishes a controlled interior and a formative exploration of the soul.

    Sleep

    Red Riding Hood

    • 1994
    • Brenna George

    This version of the classic tale is explored through the internal narrative of Red Riding Hood herself. She is consumed with overwhelming anxiety about everything in her personal life and surrounding environment. Instead of being a comfort, Grandma’s house becomes the site of her resignation to events when fatigue eventually sets in. Visually playful, the main character changes from finger puppet to paper cut out, to human actor, while her inner self remains constant.

    Red Riding Hood

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    • We would like to acknowledge funding support from the Ontario Arts Council and the Government of Ontario for their support.
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