12.13.2025

Incantations

Incantations is a new three channel video piece (10:00 run time) that makes use of lots of the processed video clips I've been building up in the studio over the last year. In particular, it is based upon my favorite Prayer Wheel footage showing a close up of the rotating mantras on the wheel's surface. The very nature of the prayer wheel when intentionally rotated spreads its mantra (Tibetan glyphs on the wheel itself) outward, envisioned as a spiral flow of blessings into the environment at large. This is the underlying prayer incantation, often accompanied by ritual chanting or music.

A series of visual themes came into focus in roughly three groupings:

Earth, Air, Fire, Water, Mind

Ritual, Mantra, Meditation

Death, Bardo, Rebirth, Redux

As I worked on a range of variations of these themes, I realized what would be really interesting would be to present the footage (set into a vertical aspect ratio as determined by the original prayer wheel footage) on a series of side-by-side vertical monitors. Thus, there could be simultaneous variations and visually repeat rhythms across the channels not possible on a single channel display. The basic presentation configuration is three HD display panels side-by-side, visually mimicking the way multiple prayer wheels are often mounted side-by-side in a temple compound so that a visiting perambulator can walk past the row of prayer wheels and simply activate (turn) each in turn. Although the digital displays don’t offer that level of hands-on interactivity, a complex meditational space can still be achieved.

In order to present the 3 channel video in this online context, I recorded all three simultaneously as one HD program. 

This program is too large file-wise and really deserves a higher definition encoding than provided by Blogger. So, please view the complete program on my Vimeo site:

Incantations - https://vimeo.com/1146248666


source Prayer Wheel image

VectMandala

Recently, Eric Souther (Philosophical Tools on Patreon) released his latest Touch Designer TOX network for video processing called "VectMandala" - here is a sample of something I generated using it: 

(turn up audio)

Psychedelic Shaders - Dark Goddess

Here are more samples of multi-layered compositing from several of the Touch Designer-based GLSL psychedelic pattern generators. 

 
 
 
 
 

Psychedelic Shaders - Goddesses

Here are more samples of multi-layered compositing from several of the Touch Designer-based GLSL psychedelic pattern generators.







Psychedelic Shaders - More Examples With Complex Layering

Here are samples of multi-layered compositing from several of the Touch Designer-based GLSL psychedelic pattern generators used in combination.






Psychedelic Shaders - Introduction

Another project I've been working on is the development of some GLSL shaders (in Touch Designer) with the help of Anthropic's Claude AI. (Use of an AI coding assistant is another whole subject best left for discussion over a bottle of beer...)

I got interested in seeing what sort of psychedelic procedural patterning could be created after coming across trippy artwork by @848elle on Tumblr (848ellie.tumblr.com). She's making use of an AI rendering engine (not sure which one) to create wonderful multi-faceted patterning. A few samples of her work appear below.





Before posting some processing tests on my own video footage, I wanted to show samples of what the underlying GLSL pattern generators can produce for use when compositing and mixing final FXs. (These samples are snapshots of what are evolving (animated) outputs from the GLSL components with specific pattern settings and colorizations applied. All of this is adjustable in my set of components.)




Here are a few examples of initial testing the psychedelic patterns on existing footage from my video library. Note that in both cases, only one level of patterning has been applied. (See later postings herein for greater pattern layering depths...)



BIrdman Processing Via Touch Designer

 Over the last few months, I've been working on a custom Touch Designer network inspired by the Dave Jones Frame Buffer (which I first was introduced to in the 1980's during my residencies at the Experimental Television Center). Although I started with a focus on the core functionality his device provided, of course I couldn't help myself from adding extra features as I build out the project. 

(More details on the DJFB project later. For now I simply want to show a couple of interesting processing presets applied to some found footage from Ancient Aliens of a Native American Bird Man ritual dancer.)


source footage

keyed mix of colorized fog

slo-mo with keyed edge detection

variable bit plane resolutions with colorization

edge detection applied to previous video