
True Colors: Chromaticity, Realism and Technological Honesty
Author(s) -
Andrew I. Iain Philip
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
comparative cinema
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2604-9821
DOI - 10.31009/cc.2021.v9.i17.05
Subject(s) - honesty , realism , meaning (existential) , aesthetics , event (particle physics) , art , epistemology , visual arts , psychology , philosophy , social psychology , physics , quantum mechanics
I propose an application of agential realism to my practice as research, a film about my mother getting one tattoo covered with a new one, to investigate the material-discursive role played by the camera in determining meaning within the film image. I use my practice as a comparative case study, considering how a specific camera apparatus determines and negotiates standards of colour accuracy, and what it means to remove those colour values in post-production. I argue that the different colour processing of the same footage produces perceptible onto-epistemological difference, even while it remains indexically equivalent. Second, I will show exactly how this particular digital photosensitive technology meets the pro-filmic event to record colour, enacting agencies that reduce matter to fit a specifically programmed colour system, prior to any manipulation in post-production. The system itself draws the boundaries of accuracy it claims to achieve, with inevitable ethical implications.