Some may complain about disruption SoundTransit is causing with the walled-off construction pit for its future Capitol Hill Station, scheduled to open in four years. But not animator Clyde Petersen and fellow members of the Seattle Experimental Animation Team. For them, the STart Public Art Program has provided a 19 by 30 foot slab of wall that will, beginning tonight, become screen where eight short films will emerge. Its gigantic, says Peterson of the Wallrus site near the northeast corner of Cal Anderson Park. Over the next six months (or less), hell create a series of colored chalk drawings that will become an animated music video for The Thermals placing them in outer space. The Portland bands new album Personal Life launches this week from Kill Rock Stars, and Petersen will painstakingly animate the song Not Like Any Other Feeling. He notes, Its about four minutes long. Ive never done a project of this scope. Lets do the math: Hell execute 15 drawings for each second of videothats over 3,000 unique panels of animation! After each drawing is done, its photographed with a DSLR from the same fixed position on a tripod. Im gonna try to do it as quickly as possible, because of the weather, Petersen explains. You have to animate when its not raining. BRIAN MILLER
Thu., Sept. 9, 6 p.m.; Sept. 10-Dec. 31, 2010
