STORIES



10.2022

The Infinite Library - BFI London Film Festival


Memories of one month ago at the 66th BFI London Film Festival where The Infinite Library was one of 20 XR and immersive art pieces in the from 17 countries at the expanded program showcased at the 26 Leake Street venue. Project director Mika and Mike Robbins from High Road Stories will head to London for the opening to represent the whole Infinite Library team. Deepest thanks from all of us go to BFI’s immersive art and XR curator Ulrich Schrauth. and his team for putting together this superstar lineup.

The Infinite Library's virtual reality experiences owe their beauty and magic to the man in the third photo: Mike Robbins, programmer, modeler, VFX artist and  creator of digital worlds. It was an honor that Mike could join the installation in London last mont at BFI’s LFF Expanded. We are extremely grateful to Mike and Harmke Heezen, who together make up High Road Stories, Berlin, for their extraordinary contribution to this project. They are the wind behind the sail of The Infinite Library.


Image credit: Tim Whitby



9.2022

The Republic of Dreams  - Polish Film Festival, Gdynia


Mid-September The Republic of Dreams found itself on the windy shores of the Baltic in Gdynia for the 47th Polish Film Festival. While I could not attend this installation in person, very proud of my assistant director Ján Tompkins who beautifully curated this installation of The Republic. Many thanks to the team at the Adam Mickiewicz Institute notably Julia Girulska and Patryk Laban for their dedication in making this installation a reality at such a prominent event. Looking forward to the next installations of The Republic of Dreams during this renewed moment of its life as it remains one of my favorite works to date.

Image credit: Anna Rezulak



9.2022

The Infinite Library - Pune


Below are some images from the final stop on our second South Asia tour which saw us in Pune at The Base with support from the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan Pune! The installation was showcased at the base from the 24th to the 30th of September and we were very lucky to have also had master puppeteer Gunduraju-ji, who hand-made the shadow puppets found within our Library of Shadows, to come and speak for the occasion! My deepest thanks to The Base for their wonderful space and to all our amazing friends at the Goethe-Institut Pune for their tireless effort in putting together an incredible final installation!


Image credit: Goethe-Institut / Max Mueller Bhavan Pune



9.2022

The Infinite Library - Chennai


Our third stop on our second South Asia tour took myself and The Library to South India to the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan Chennai! The Infinite Library was part of the larger festivities for the institute’s “Long Night of VR.” My deepest appreciation to everyone in Chennai for their help in bringing The Infinite Library to such a wonderful audience!




9.2022

The Infinite Library - Kolkata

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After a well-celebrated start of the second leg of our South Asia tour in Dhaka, I traveled across the border to Kolkata to bring our Library to the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan. As always big thanks go to the whole team there for their help in continuing the journey of the Library across the South Asia region. 


Image credit: Sharanya Chattopadhyay / Goethe-Institut Kolkata



9.2022

The Infinite Library - Dhaka


The second part of The Infinite Library’s South Asia tour launched on the 10th of September with our installation at the Goethe-Institut Bangladesh in Dhaka! Many thanks go to Goethe-Institut Bangladesh and The Tech Academy for all their work and support in making this installation a possibility!


Image credit: Ahadul Karim/Goethe-Institut Bangladesh



6.2022

MUT-AT1-0NS at Sideways Festival



The 16th of June marked the premiere of MUT-AT1-0NS at Helsinki’s Sideways festival. MUT-AT1-0NS is an immersive sound and light experience which allows participants the ability to coauthor a short piece of music as they move through a physical space, triggering sensors that create a composition, with sampled voices and music. Very grateful for the team at Frame Rate, in Helsinki, which produced the project, along with our composer and programmer Eli Stine, who brought the entire concept to life.

You can watch the teaser here.

Visit mutations-project.com for more information.



6.2022

.txt conference at re:epublica


Grateful for the interview by Dr. Wolf Siegert, whom I spoke to just after presenting at the .txt conference at re:publica in Berlin on the 11th of June. It was nice to reflect on the overlap and inspiration of three projects that are close to my heart: VRwandlung, The Republic of Dreams, and The Infinite Library. You can listen to that interview at: https://vimeo.com/720632942/392a35fd60

For my German-speaking friends you can read the blog post here: https://daybyday.press/article7906.html?lang=de




4.2022

The Infinite Library -
European Premiere, Prague


After a successful World Premiere in New Delhi and a follow-up installation at the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan Bengaluru, The Infinite Library launched its European presence with a European premiere at the Goethe-Institut in my hometown of Prague. With COVID restrictions easing a bit in the Czech Republic we were able to have a proper event which opened with a meditation and susequent music performance by my dear friend Awali (whose vocals you can also here in the Library’s introductory video and QR code experience). We were also very lucky to have been able to invite The Library’s graphic designer and illustrator Marta Lissowska to travel all the way from Poland and join us for the evening.


Image credit: Petra Hajská and Mika Johnson / Daisy with Rider Productions


3/4.2022

The Infinite Library -
Bengaluru


With the World Premiere now behind me, I, along with project coordinator Aarushi Khanna from the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan New Delhi, headed south to Bengaluru to present the Infinite Library at the institute there. For this installation I had the privlege to have a public discussion with Anand Varadaraj, Director of the Bangalore International Film Festival.


Image credit: Aarushi Khanna / Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan New Delhi




3.2022

The Infinite Library -
World Premiere, New Delhi


On the 23rd of March, my virtual reality exhibition The Infinite Library had its world premiere at The Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan in New Delhi, India. Two years of empassioned work from a team of 24 artists, producers, and consultants from the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland, the United States, and India culminated in a  5 day world premiere event that included various talks, discussions, and performances by myself, our shadow puppetry experts Anurupa Roy and Gunduraju (who put together a wonderful shadow puppet installation), and filmmakers Shankajeet Dee and Atul Sinha. My deepest thanks go to our project producers at the Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan New Delhi, all the staff and colleagues who made this world premiere possible, and especially to Harmke Heezen and Mike Robbins at High Road Stories in Berlin and the rest of the Infinite Library artistic team for their tireless work in making this project a reality.

For more information on the project please visit infinite-library.com


Image credits: Pawan Kumar / The Creative Wale, Aarushi Khanna / Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan New Delhi, and Mika Johnson / Daisy with Rider Productions

To keep in touch with the project along its world tour,
please follow us across social media:
︎ @infinitelibraryvr
︎ @infinitelibrary
︎ @inf_library
TikTok @infinitelibrary



1.2022

Survival Songs


Survival Songs is a haunting audio visual series created by myself in collaboration with Marcel Karnapke (who also my co-director for Ilios). We were inspired by Dawn Chorus: a Citizen Science Arts project (we had previously worked on an feature for Dawn Chorus called Sonic Feather which you can read about further down), that invites participants to stop and listen to the sounds of nature, and use their phones to record early-morning bird songs. By pairing nine iconic Dawn Chorus bird species with stories about their threats, Survival Songs seeks to create an awareness around the dangers that birds face everywhere. As a series, Survival Songs is made up of nine videos, each 66 seconds in length, all intended as portals to a single event, 66 million years ago, when the Earth was hit by an asteroid roughly 10 km across, causing radical climate change, and the fifth mass extinction. Three fourths of all living species went extinct, including all of the dinosaurs except one, ‘birds’. These Nine songs were released one a day in the middle of January 2022.

You can listen to the songs here.


CONCEPT: In the midst of the sixth mass extinction, Survival Songs asks us to hear the songs of birds a echoes of their evolution. Birds alone carry their song. To represent this, thbird songs have been stretched, mutated so as to unlock their sonic mysteries in time. Meanwhile, an animatio of each bird’s eye mimics their evolution, each second equalling one million years. Whether birds make it through this present mass extinction, the Anthropocene, is in part up to u humans, as we alone have the power to research and respond to the worldwide threats to birds.




11/12.2021

The Republic of Dreams
at Instituto Cultural Paraguayo Alemán – Goethe-Zentrum, Asunción



At the beginning of December The Republic of Dreams wrapped up its second installation in South America! A very special thank you to our host Instituto Cultural Paraguayo Alemán - Goethe-Zentrum in Asunción, Paraguay for all their wonderful support in making this installation such a success!


Photo credit: Alberto Núñez.



11.2021

Ilios at KFFK / Kurzfilmfestival Köln



The show must go on. A huge thank you to everyone at KFFK / Kurzfilmfestival Köln for inviting Ilios. Rarely have I ever seen such an outstanding curation of short films or met such gracious hosts. As Germany enters another lock down, Ilios's message lives on. Wishing safety and peace to all my new friends in Köln.




10.2021

The Republic of Dreams
at FILBA, Buenos Aires


At the end of October, The Republic of Dreams was showcased at the FILBO book fair in Buenos Aires with the support of the Goethe-Institut Buenos Aires, from the 22nd to the 24th of October. The presentation was a massive success with many compliments given to Mika during his Q&A session on the 23rd of October. The piece was featured in a 9th of October article in the Argentian publication PERFIL. In addition to the installation at the book fair, the program included an online workshop given by Mika to university students at CheLa, a center for experimentation and artistic production, on the 28th of October. Next, the piece will be hosted in Asunción with the support of the Goethe-Zentrum at their center from the 24th of October to the 5th of December. The addition of these installations furthered the multilingual feature of the project with the expansion of the Spanish language version of the piece, voiced by Prague-based actor Wendy Rosas.


Photo credit: Ariel Baigorri



9.2021

World Premeire of
The Republic of Dreams at Radio Garage for the Lviv Book Forum


The Republic of Dreams had its official world premiere in Ukraine at the Lviv Book Forum from the 15th to the 19th of September with support from the Goethe-Institut Ukraine. This installation was hosted at Radio Garage and was to be part of a dual presentation of the project in Ukraine. The installation had its public opening on the 16th of September which featured a panel discussion with artist Mykyta Kadan and author Wlodko Kaufmann in conversation with Ewhenia Nesterovych about the worlds of Bruno Schulz and the freedom of their interpretation. Republic of Dreams was part of a lively and packed program for the Book Forum, remaining at Radio Garage until the 8th of November. While preparation work was underway, the installation in Kyiv was unfortunately postponed until March of 2022. This presentation resulted in the addition of a Ukrainian and German language format Republic of Dreams, further expanding its accessibility globally. The Ukrainian pieces are voiced by the our very own Awali, and the German is voiced by Prague-based actor Julie Weber.


Photo credit: Ján Tompkins and Anastasia Ivanova




7.2021

Polish premiere of
The Republic of Dreams


With the generous support of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and the Goethe-Institut Warsaw, The Republic of Dreams had its first official showing, described as its “Polish premiere,” on the 25th of July at Dom Spotkań z Historią (DSH, History Meeting House) in Warsaw, Poland. This event was organized for invited guests, notably attended by Goethe-Institut Kyiv Director Fabian Mühlthaler and Goethe-Institut Warschau Director Christoph Bartmann who gave a few remarks in the opening discussions, reminiscing on his long time partnership with Mika Johnson and his previous work with the Goethe-Institut in the form of his 2019 virtual reality adaptation of Franz Kafka’s the metamorphosis, VRwandlung. Although the event’s audience numbers were limited because of COVID policies, the project was well-received by all guests. See below for photos provided by DSH.  

The tireless and enthusiastic effort of the Dream Collective, our team of international artists, cannot be overstated for it is from their collaborative effort that makes all this has been made possible.


Photo obtained from History Meeting House.



        7.2021

VRwandlung - Stadtbibliothek Nürnberg


Very grateful to be back on tour with VRwandlung. This was our first installation since March, 2020, and one of our best yet, as the full multimedia experience included the full VR piece, our 360 videos, featuring Reiner Stach, and sonic experiences by our composer Joseph Minadeo and sound designer Eli Stine. Sincerest gratitude to Kathleen Röber at the Nuremberg City Library, whose curation and support was incredible, and Daniel Nevaril at the Department of International Relations for hosting us throughout our stay. Nuremberg quickly became one of my new favorite European cities. Many thanks for breathing new life to VRwandlung after a year long pause.






        6.2021

Ilios - AniFilm Film Festival


With the Czech Republic opening up and cultural events coming to vibrant life once more, I am very excited to share well wishes from the wonderful Anifilm International Festival of Animated Films in Liberec where my and Marcel Karnapke’s VR piece Ilios (with sound design by Jackson Bierfeldt) is being presented. Sincere thanks to Ondřej Moravec and the whole team at Anifilm for exhibiting Ilios and putting on this great celebration so that we may all enjoy art in person together again.





5.2021

Sonic Feather for Dawn Chorus phone application


Excited to announce the release of a phone app that myself and Marcel Karnapke created an artistic feature for. Called Dawn Chorus, the app invites people around the world to record and share their local morning bird song and make an important contribution to biodiversity research. The artistic feature, called Sonic Feather, allows you to get creative with your dawn chorus recording. It's available for free iOS and Android. Please check it out. More info here: https://dawn-chorus.org/en/

Watch the tutorial here:



Selected Press:
29.05.2021 - Münchner Merkur -Caroline Priwitzer

29.05.2021 - tz München - Caroline Priwitzer




4.2021

Decomposition for Fluid Frontiers / Liquid Borders at Studio ALTA

Titled "Decomposition" this is performance by myself and Dan Vlček  inspired by Saprophytic fungi (text below), the recyclers of nature.



Many thanks for the invitation from A N T I M O T H E R and Studio ALTA for the support. Thank you Marcel Karnapke for the beautiful projections.

Decomposition is an electronic piece of music inspired by Saprophytic fungi, which grow on dead organic matter, such as animals, fallen leaves, roots, and dead wood. As organisms, saprophytes extract carbon dioxide and minerals by releasing enzymes which digest organic matter into simple soluble compounds that can be absorbed. They are called recyclers of the forest since without these digestive activities, forests would disappear under piles of logs and leaves. While this piece builds off our original composition, Music for Mycelium, which was inspired by mycorrhizal fungi, Decomposition takes a different approach by translating the corrosive elements of decay, digestion, extraction, and destruction, that are an essential part of the fungal world, into music. Without these natural processes, death would not achieve rebirth. Saprophytic fungi are therefore a model of full circle sustainability, or life that is continually renewed through organisms which give back to their ecosystems.



3.2021

Music for Mycelium 



In March, I performed Music for Mycelium: an electronic piece of music with Czech artist Dan Vlček. This piece was inspired by mycorrhizal fungi, structures which make up what mycologist Paul Stamets has called “Earth’s natural internet” for their ability to form vast networks that allow trees and other plants to exchange information, including warnings and nutrients. Because this natural network is almost entirely underground, scientific inquiry has been limited. The mushrooms we see on the surface are merely the fruiting bodies, the tip of mammoth icebergs so to speak. For this reason, we are using music to attempt a form of interspecies communication with these fungal networks, so vast that they dwarf anything in the human world in density and complexity. If the planet is alive, which we believe, why not try to speak with it? Originally conceived in February 2021, Music for Mycelium was first played live for the plant, animal, and fungal communities in a pine forest in Sumava. Part of “Links. Contact in the mushroom network,” an online event, produced by Stiftung Kunst and Natur, the performance first aired on the 11th of March.





2.2021

A River in the Animal is Damned


Excited to release a new collaboration between myself, Peter Hlinka, Jakub Krejčí, and Justin Evans. Titled A River in the Animal is Damned, this is a poem by Peter read by me and set to music by Justin, who also did the sound design. Jakub created the video. The project was inspired by the idea of sharing poetry in novel ways, including how to find new channels to reach new audiences with a work that would otherwise be published in a book or journal. Very inspired by our results and hoping to create more.



Poem by Peter Hlinka
Video by Jakub Krejčí
Music and sound design by Justin Evans
Voice performance by Mika Johnson

A River in the Animal is Damned

Robots float like parade balloons
Above the summer cityscape
Fire rains down from their red eyes
I descend on a rope from the sky
There is a room I rent
In a hoarder’s home
By the wharf
In this coastal city
The sirens peel an evacuation
The ocean takes a deep breath
My briefcase is a darkroom
Where blank pages develop
Words
I say to the figurine
It’s been so long since I’ve been home
I’m afraid I’ve lost the keys



2.2021

Lost Forms


“All the new thinking is about loss. In this it resembles all the old thinking.”
- Robert Haas

Excited to announce that I will be teaming up with Expanding Focus, in Leipzig, to direct Lost Forms: a VR experience that explores conservation and environmental loss by preserving three nearly-extinct natural forms.


Our team will scan and digitally recreate an alien-like archive, in digital space, where participants can fly around an iceberg, the egg of a critically endangered butterfly, and an equally endangered flower. The audience can then explore these distant and disparate forms across multiple layers of experience and interaction. My hope is that the experience — and these forms — will linger with viewers long afterwards.

For more information visit:
 https://www.expanding-focus.de/project/lost-forms/






11.2020

The Republic of Dreams


On November 19th, we released the first phase of The Republic of Dreams: an online portal devoted to adapting the literary worlds of Polish author and artist Bruno Schulz. The project, which will expand in the coming years through traveling installations and a 2022 exhibition, also doubles as a true Republic, created for dreamers, where membership will soon be possible. The Republic of Dreams is also a digital love letter to one of the most imaginative minds of the 20th century who shed his physical body on November 19th, 1942, a victim of the Nazi genocide. By launching our website exactly 78 years later, we memorialize Schulz’s legacy while simultaneously reimagining it. The following quote can be found within one of the works on the site:

“In another dimension, Bruno Schulz never died. He lives on, since by coding his memories, dreams, and identity into his work with language, Schulz transcended death. Like a Jewish Mashiach (the title of Schulz’s lost work), he now returns to us in the 21st century, intent on leading us out of the labyrinth of materialism and into the collective dream. This is possible thanks to a virtual space, manifested by Schulz in his lifetime, which now expands with each new mind that makes contact with his work. It is that space, which we call The Republic of Dreams…”


Extreme gratitude to the project's producer, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, and our partner, the Goethe-Institut Warsaw, both of whom made this project possible. A huge thank you to all my collaborators - Eli Stine, Jackson Bierfeldt, Marta Lissowska, Jakub Krejčí, Olga Mikulska, Wacław Zimpel, Julie Josephon, and Ján Tompkins - all of whom helped to re-imagine the memories, dreams, words, and worlds of Bruno Schulz through various audio and visual works. In the words of the master: “There is no dead matter...lifelessness is only a disguise behind which hide unknown forms of life. The range of these forms is infinite and their shades and nuances limitless.” ― Bruno Schulz.



11.2020

Scanning the Iceberg


On November 11th I was grateful to launch the Media Innovation Technology Lecture Series, at Prague College, with my presentation titled “Scanning the Iceberg: Storytelling in the Age of Extended Realities.” The lecture, which was livestreamed  direct to Facebook and Zoom, focused on the history of artistic mediums, in general, and the ways in which new technologies such as VR, AR, and immersive audio, can change the ways we tell stories. I also spoke about my latest projects and what the future of these mediums might look like.




10.2020

Ilios - DOK Neuland



Very grateful to have participated with Ilios in DOK Neuland, at DOK Leipzig. While none of our team members (Marcel Karnapke, Jackson Bierfeldt, and myself) were able to travel to Leipzig this year, due to the restrictions on travel, we were extremely thankful that curator Lars Rummel chose to create a beautiful physical installation around the piece, with art direction by Marie Hinkelmann.

Thank you Susann Jehnichen for the photographs of the installation and otherwise sincerely hoping to see our friends in Leipzig next year. Check out the link below to see all the other incredible XR pieces that were in the lineup. https://www.dok-leipzig.de/en/dok-neuland#dok-neuland-works-2020





10.2020

Ilios - BFI London Film Festival 



In October, I was honored to world premere Ilios, my most recent VR piece which was co-directed with Marel Karnapke, in the Expanded Realities category at BFI’s London Film Festival. The 9 minute piece, which was also made in collaboration with sound designer Jackson Bierfeldt, is a commentary on nature, humanity, and Covid-19. Thanks to the festival, Ilios was available both online, for those who have a headset, and live at BFI Southbank, in London, where tickets were free. Scroll down to May to learn more about the piece or see a 2D version. A final big thanks to LFF Expanded programmer, Ulrich Schrauth, who as able to bring his incredible vision to life. This was the first online festival that I entered in a headset that felt truly immersive, clearly foreshadowing what is to come. Below is a promotional video for the Expanded Realities category that shares snippets from the incredible pieces that were also part of the festival.






10.2020

Music Video: This is (Not) Beethoven - Adagietto - Matthew Herbert Mediterranean Dub




In October 2020, I directed a music video for Matthew Herbert’s Mediterranean Dub,  which remixes "Adagietto,” a track that originates from the current classical album This Is (Not) Beethoven, by composer Arash Safaian & pianist Sebastian Knauer, which uses one solo piano piece to capture and interpret the core of a whole Beethoven symphony (the 7th from 1812). Matthew Herbert stretches out this calm piano solo rework, by slowing it down, in extreme, so the melodies are elongated to another dimension. This takes “Adagietto” to a different place, as if our ears were in a mesmerizing club, the ceiling of which rises to a classical cathedral, its windows embedded in the stars. We experience elevation. To mirror this process, I decided to visually remix Busby Berkeley dance choreographies from 1930 Classical Hollywood with a contemporary YouTube Tai Chi routine. By slowing down the Tai Chi video, an eastern practice intended for calm and mental clarity, and superimposing its stretched moves over complex geometrical patterns of dancers, the video melts the materials into a spiritual form, my goal being to communicate a feeling of transcendence. I am especially grateful to Philipp Ernst for bringing me on board this project.




11.2020

The Lost Shaman




On the 11th of September, deep in the forests of  Český ráj (Bohemian Paradise), Confessions of a Box Man opened up the Šamana ztráta Ƹ̴Ӂ̴Ʒ or The Lost Shaman multimedia festival, which included an amazing lineup of artists and musicians from central and eastern Europe. The celebrations included a box sculpture, with mannequin legs, and box dancing by yours truly. On the dawn of the last day, I ceremonially burnt my cardboard box on the green lawns of the event space, which felt like the beginning of a new journey, as the film now moves out into the world. Very appreciative to the festival organizers Ewelina Chiu, Daniel Vlček, Tereza Odehnalová, and Pavel Kraus.

Below are photos of the event taken by Jan Kuča:









8.2020

Confessions of a Box Man


After five long and loving years, in the first week of August 2020 I officially released my debut feature film, Confessions of a Box Man. After working with an all-star cast of friends, students, and colleagues from Prague Film School, along with filmmakers from my first and second year, I collaborated with a dozen artists in post to complete the film. I am especially thankful to the late Mark McKinley, of Forever Professor, who helped finance the film, along with The Lab, a Prague based production house that super vised the post-production.


Please check out the stunning press kit by Jakub Tranta below, which profiles all the actors and key artists. The complete film is now up on Vimeo and YouTube and as of the end of 2020 has had a successful showing at the Cinema Open, Film and Audiovisual Art Festival in November 2020 where it was honored with the Best Film award and the Eastern Nigeria Film Festival where I was humbly bestowed with their Best Director award (as well as a shortlist nomination of Best Narrative Feature and Best Film). I am beyond grateful to have my film’s premiere into the world be so decorated so far and I look forward as it begins to tour throughout the beginning of 2021. Look out for dancing boxes.


Download press kit HERE




5.2020

Ilios


In May, I released a nine-minute video titled Ilios, which I directed in collaboration with Marcel Karnapke, of CyberRäuber. The initial goal of the piece was to express something about my experience in America, where I was trapped all spring due to the shutdown. While partly a narrative about my private struggles, Ilios is more about new realizations I had about nature and humanity at that time, along with the virus and its relationship to both. I am grateful for the open call from Stiftung Nantesbuch, a foundation in Bavaria, as were it not for their open call, which asked for videos addressing the theme of springtime, this piece would not exist. I am also extremely grateful to have collaborated with Jackson Bierfeldt, who did the sound design on this piece. After having lived together for over a month in our hometown, Amherst, Ohio, Jackson and I took to the woods, literally, staying in his grandparent’s cottage in Little Valley New York, New York. It was there, inspired by the nature around us, that the text for Ilios was born.



Description:
ILIOS is a meditation on the state of flux we are all living in today: a moment where patterns emerge only to change in such rapid succession that normality can only be assumed in short bursts. The project evolved as a correspondence between artists Marcel Karnapke and Mika Johnson during the COVID-19 shut down after a digital project they were working on was put on hold, due to Johnson being stranded all spring in North America. The two artists continued to communicate, discussing the meaning of the shutdown and COVID-19 in their personal lives. ILIOS is the result of that conversation.

Directors: Marcel Karnapke, Mika Johnson
Concept and VR Development: Marcel Karnapke
Script: Mika Johnson
Sound: Jackson Bierfeldt
Narrators: Mika Johnson, Jackson Bierfeldt



5.2020

All is Lost


The final day of May 2020 marked the release of my medieval short film, All is Lost. The film stars Juan Raúl Díaz Fábrega, Maxmilián Hruška, and Issy Mccallum Stewart. Extremely grateful to the entire team of Prague Film School students that made this film possible and Lokomotiv Studio, in Brazil, who did the color grade, titles, and visual effects. With stunning cinematography by Felipe Corvello, haunting sound design by Kirk Pearson, and a mesmerizing score by Quarter Davis, this was a piece born of passion and commitment, as it’s not easy to produce a costume period drama on a shoestring budget. But we did it. Poster design by Jakub Tranta.


Summary: When a Marauder takes over the country, sets fire to the castles, and kills their lord, two doomed knights set off on horseback to join the battle against him. They don’t get far.






2.2020

VRwandlung - Montreal




At the end of February 2020, my virtual reality adaptation of Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis, VRwandlung had its Canadian Premiere at the Goethe-Institut Montreal as a part of Nuit Blanche: an all-night event, once a year, that began in 2003. During this one night, institutions and spaces throughout the city host music, audiovisual installations, standup comedy, and more. This exhibition marked the final showing of VRwandlung before COVID-19 began to shut down cultural events around the world. Very grateful to Tomi Grgicevic for the video he made that captured the installation.






2.2020

Nantesbuch - tree scanning

In February of 2020, as part of a ten-day residency at Nantesbuch, a foundation in the heart of the Bavarian Alpine foothills, I worked with artist Marcel Karnapke, of CyberRäuber, to 3D scan trees using the Leica BLK360 3D Laser Scanner. We focused on two solitary trees and several patches of forest.


Our project, called Found Forms, is dedicated to telling the story of trees and the fungal networks below them. Below are some screenshots and videos of these scans. This raw data will soon be transformed into more recognizable textures that are detailed and interactive and include the creation of roots and mycorrhizal fungal structures beneath the surface.





11.2019

Music Video: The Envlps - “The Last Star”




In November of 2019, I co-directed “Last Star”: a music video for the Prague-based indie-pop duo The Envlps. Working in collaboration with director Martin Schumet, who co-directed, and Ján Tompkins, who assisted us on the edit, we remixed the major films of Marilyn Monroe’s career, our goal being to create a story that hinted at the ways in which pop culture mutates both those who join its ranks, as performers and those who consume it. By manipulating the images of Monroe, the video reproduces the performer’s own struggle with her image and examines the ways in which audiences influence the life of a performer. Monroe is the Last Star, symbolizing that all images are beyond our control; once created, they have the potential to destroy us.





7.2019

Music Video: ba:zel - Situation


Back in April I directed a music video for the Prague based avant-pop duo ba:zel. The project is made up of Ewelina Chiu and Daniel Vlcek and features piano, flute, heavy bass, a fragile soprano, and post-techno/dub/grime beats.



After loading up the car, the duo and I headed out with cinematographer Tommaso Montaldo to Trosky Castle: a stunning 14th century structure about one hour from Prague in an area known as Bohemian Paradise (Český ráj). After filming the castle and nearby rock formations for several days with a drone, we went south to a village near České Budějovice to film birds of prey at the home of Milan Zaleš.



Over the next few months this footage was cut into a gorgeous three and a half minute music video color graded by Ajay Kulkarni. While I do not want to describe how the castles and birds connect  - as I don’t want to ruin the surprise! - I do want to share part of what Ewelina wrote about the band’s song “Situation.”

“The concept of ‘free time’ is a terrifying catch 22. Once upon a time there was no such thing as “free time,” humans worked themselves to the bone and were glad to have a moment to rest and something to eat before catching a bit of sleep. Or they were born into prestige and their life and work was to spend, enjoy and live above the majority. Since the industrial revolution and the rise of capitalism, “free time” has become articulated and commodified. Not only do we have to earn our free time but we also have to earn for it. ‘Situation’ explores the idea that our free time is anything but.”


Above are some screenshots of the music video. Check out ba:zel’s amazing music in the meantime.
https://soundcloud.com/bazel-detritus
https://bazel.bandcamp.com



6.2019

Siro Creative: Midsummer


In June, I directed a commercial for a midsummer festival on the island of Seurasaari: a small forested district in Helsinki with wooden buildings transplanted from elsewhere in Finland.


During midsummer, thousands of people, both tourists and Helsinkians, attend the island’s traditional festival, which includes bonfires and dancing. Many thanks to the project’s producer, Eeva Jousi, and everyone at Siro who put their talents and energy into this commercial, which will be released in 2020. Very excited for the final piece.



13.3.2019

Music Video: The Envlps - “Stare”




On March 13th, I released a music video I directed for one of my favorite bands in the Czech Republic, The Envlps: an  Indie pop / synthpop duo from Prague.


While the band members and I kicked around ideas for a music video for their song “Stare” since 2017, it failed to materialize. But unable to get the song out of my head,  I began to mix the song to a few clips from my favorite film noirs and loved the results. In the end, this led to my cutting up twenty two classics, co-editing the final piece with Martin Schumet, and working with color grader Ajay Kulkarni, on what would become one of my favorite creations to date. A very special thank you to Ján Tompkins:  our godsend assistant editor who cut up the originals.





12.2018

Siro Creative: National Museum


In December of 2018 I joined the Helsinki based creative agency Siro as a commercial director. My first project was to create a short video for the National Museum of Finland’s exhibition “Man Matter Metamorphosis – 10 000 Years of Design,” which opened to the public two months prior.



The show, which was conceptualised, curated, and designed by Florencia Colombo and Ville Kokkonen, was described as follows: “What is design other than rethinking man’s relationship to the material environment? Where do objects come from? In what ways will objects and the environment change? The exhibition 10, 000 years of design – Man, Matter, Metamorphosis challenges us to take a closer look at our relationship to objects and the environment.” The video was a pleasure to direct thanks to Siro producer Jukka Karhula, our editor, Kari Lamsa, and composer Justin Simon, whose music brings the piece to life.



23.11.2018

PFS Masterclass

From November 20th to 23rd, I teamed up with filmmaker Martin Schumet to co-teach an intensive four day workshop at Prague Film School which focused on getting second year students to pre-visualize their thesis films.


Rather than traditionally pre-visualize scenes using storyboards, photographs, or floorplans, we asked our students to use their cell phones to film three short exercises, over three days, with three goals in mind.

1. Make a 1 minute film that shows the experiences and discoveries that a character makes, be they related to objects, spaces or other characters.

2. A character enters a space they have never been before. Make a 1 minute film about that characters’ experience. How do you communicate what a character feels, hears, smells or tastes?

3. Make a 1 minute film that communicates  absence, ambiguity, fragmentation, or some other larger concept (like God, time, or fate)  through presence.

With mornings and afternoons devoted to watching examples and discussion, the students spent the rest of each day in groups co-authoring a simple narrative, shooting, and editing the captured materials, which sometimes included sound. The results, which we screened each mornings, were fascinating.

While I don’t see cell phones replacing real filmmaking equipment anytime soon, I do think they should be seen as the equivalent of the painter’s sketchbook. Making a film with a cell phone is still making a film, even if you’re just roughing out a scene; and to use them as a previs tool reminds us that making films cannot be learned on paper; nor in a classroom; nor by reading books or watching films and talking about them. Making a film is a collaborative experience that involves a camera and a continually dynamic set of changing circumstances, which is why filmmakers get better hitting record, even on their cell phones.


16.11.2018

Bauhaus-Universität Weimar: Spirited Away


From November 14th to the 16th production designer and scenographer, Sebastian Soukup, and myself facilitated a three day workshop at the Bauhaus University Weimar, as part of an architecture class taught by Professor Heike Büttner. Titled “Spirited Away” the workshop focused on Delusionist architecture.


To connect our two main themes - dreams and space - we facilitated a series of interconnected rituals and conversations where mind, body, and awareness practices doubled as approaches to understanding the qualities of space, including architectural, virtual, cinematic, meditative, and sleeping space. In each case, we questioned how space can be used to tell stories related to light, sound, colors, materials, textures, and even time.



While some of the rituals were presentations, with slides or video or musical accompaniment, others were group exercises, including an observational walk around campus inside a cardboard box which was later repurposed as the walls of a makeshift Japanese tea house. Guest facilitator Hiroki Mano then served tea and led the students in a short meditation. The workshop culminated in an independent project, completed by each student who presented their work using a cardboard box, the medium par excellence. A heartfelt thanks to everyone involved as the workshop was endlessly inspiring. Please check out the video.




10.2018

FAMU

In October of 2018, I began teaching a directing course at the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, otherwise known as FAMU.

It was honor to teach at the school where some of my favorite directors had attended. My course, titled “The Language of Cinema,” focused on “mastering the basics of film grammar, with an emphasis on visually translating scripted ideas into short, narrative exercises, to be shot with a cell phone.” While it felt slightly taboo to ask FAMU students to direct one film per week, using a cell phone, in a program devoted to 16mm, I also found that it worked.

The students screened their first assignment, Smartphone Lumière (a one-minute film inspired by the classic Lumière Brother’s films) next to a piano where they were invited to score their film live or invite a performer to do so. In some cases, our class improvised sound and music as a group, using whatever percussive instruments were available. Below are two of my favorite Smartphone Lumiere films, by Raff Fluir and Oksana Sanytska.


Directed by Raff Fluri


Directed by Oksana Sanytska

In another assignment students were asked to watch Bezúčelná procházka (Aimless Walk), from 1930, directed and photographed by Czech filmmaker Alexander Hackenschmied. Using a smart phone they then filmed their own one minute version of Bezúčelná procházka, using all of the shots we had learned thus far. I was very impressed by René Kmet’s resulting piece “Derive.




5.2018

All is Lost

During my last year as a full time directing teacher at Prague Film School, in 2017, I was approached by a group of students in the acting program who asked me if I’d be interested in directing a film starring them.

I smiled and asked if they had a script. “No” came the answer. “Do you have an idea?” I asked. One of them, Juan Raúl Díaz Fábrega spoke up and said “What we know is that Max and I want to fight with swords!” “We also want to wear armor and ride horses,” quipped Max. Freudian, I thought. “Do you have a budget?” was my next question. “No” said Juan “But we can get one.”


So they did and from this conversation “All is Lost” was born, a medieval drama that tells the following story: When a Marauder takes over the country, sets fire to the castles, and kills their lord, two doomed knights set off on horseback to join the battle against him. They don’t get far.

While a year passed before we could complete the film, we finally wrapped in the spring of 2018. Written by Aaron Labaree, the film stars Juan Raul Diaz as Sir Mattius, Max Hruska as Sir Theodore, Issy Stewart as Leah, and a handful of others. With an original score and sound design by Kirk Pearson, “All is Lost” will be released in the fall of 2019. My heartfelt thanks to the entire team of PFS students that made this film possible, especially Felipe Corvello, whose beautiful cinematography is stunning throughout, and Lokomotiv Studio, in Brazil, who did the grade and visual effects.



15.3.2018

Kasting Kafka

On March 15th, 2018, a press release went out from the Goethe-Institut, Prague that read “Casting 10 Kafka look-alikes for “KAFKA’S SON.” The casting was for a real scene in a feature written by Aaron Labaree that is now in development.

Making the casting a live event that audiences could attend was the brainchild of Jakob Racek, at that time the Cultural Programmer at Goethe-Institut Prague. Along with the press release, silkscreened posters, designed by Kaori Mitsushima, went up around Prague.


On a website, we advertised the following:
No acting experience necessary.
All ages, races, genders, body types encouraged to audition.
Kafka wigs, props, costumes, and make-up provided at audition.
Audition material will be provided.
Preference given to actors who “feel” or “look” like Kafka.

After the media in Prague described Kasting Kafka as one of the top ten events in Prague that week, the Goethe-Institut was flooded by both those who wanted to play Franz Kafka alongside those who came to witness the spectacle, which included judges and audience members holding up paper Kafka masks. It was our version of The Trial, only playful. The casting was captured by director Martin Schumet, whose coverage of the event will be released as its own short film this coming fall. Česká televize (Czech Television) also covered the event and invited myself and the best Kafka lookalike, Marek Lentvorsky, to the studio the next day.

A very special thanks to the judges (Jakob Racek, Ingrid Arnold, and David Woodard), director Martin Schumet, the production crew, producer Kristyna Milaberska, and wardrobe & hair and makeup team: Koko White and Kaori Mitsushima.



25.1.2018

VRwandlung

On January 25th, a virtual reality adaptation of Kafka’s “The Metamorphosis,” that I conceived and directed, opened in Prague.


Produced by the Goethe-Institut Prague and Shahid Gulamali, the exhibition’s success led to press coverage in The Economist, Stern Magazine, and elsewhere throughout Europe; and thanks to that press, the exhibition, which continues to be booked, has now been to over 35 cities worldwide. As part of that tour I have presented and taught workshops on VR in Helsinki, Minsk, Riga, Sofia, Leipzig, Kiev, Frankfurt, Madrid, Tokyo, Hamburg, and Prague. My graditude goes out to the 30 plus people who made that piece and exhibition possible. A short video tells that story.



Main website: goethe.de/en/uun/akt/21150235.html
Instagram: instagram.com/vrwandlung/



7.1.2018

MomenTech

In January, 2018, the NYC based trio I belong to, MomenTech, was invited to create a site-specific piece that responded to two novels by the late Nigerian author Amos Tutuola, based in part on Yoruba folktales.


The final piece, "THREE GOOD CREATURES TOOK OVER OUR TROUBLE—THEY WERE:—DRUM, SONG AND DANCE," was presented on January 7, 2018, at a private home in New York City's Chinatown, as part of the “First Person Plural” performance/conversation series, which takes place in domestic settings around the city. For more information on this piece, which could be called a participatory artwork, a group exercise, a collaboration, a game, or a ritual, go HERE.

For more information on MomenTech -  a multiplatform experimental production studio devoted to transnational progressism, post-humanism, neo-nomadism and futurism - go HERE.