The plot of this Videopainting
/ Video d'ameublement consists of a male Person, who at first is
looking straight in the camera, before he is slowly turning around
180', eventually showing his full back to the viewer. The actor
has been casted, because he looked like a person of public importance.
One can easily imaging him presenting the late night news, or to
be a Member of the French Parliament.

Technical data: Endless video, video monitor, video player, rack-mount
On the Conception of the Videopaintings / Video
d'ameublements
The Videopaintings deal with computer generated video
films that treat television or the internet as media, which show
images that are exemplary of human behavior. The starting point
of my so-called Video-paintings are recordings of everyday happenings
or isolated gestures which are usually arranged to function in an
unbroken, endless movement. Whether I fall back upon found images
from movies or even the raw material of film essentially depends
upon the access speed. An important aspect seems to be that the
selected sequences of images have something universal, general or
simply typical. In the computer, these truly unspectacular actions
are processed in such a way that the viewer could doubt if s/he
isn't looking across at a freeze frame. There is no staccato-like
jerking usually telling slow motion that would lend a clue to the
continually flowing motion on the threshold of perception: once
the brain finally realizes the image has changed, this process is
already over.

I would like to describe the Video-paintings main idea in reference
to Erik Satie's musique d'ameublement as video d'ameublement. The
endless-videos are conceived to run on loops so that one must not
continually pay attention to them. Their existence should be as
natural as a picture on the wall or even a television at home, left
switched on. On the other hand, I have set up certain video films
as installations that take hold of the entire space. In this case
I call them Videopaintings; as a monitor-version or as a plain projection
I call them VidŽo d' ameublement.