Welcome to the early 2000's.
But not the cool kind where you can spend six months in 1800's France and still be home in time for brunch. No this kind of time travel only goes one way. You hack off hours, days, sometimes years of your life, for the sake of one short-lived project. But it's the most satisfying thing.
Time bends around you, stretching and dragging on, and then all of a sudden you find yourself in the future, and all of your past several hours are condensed neatly within the confines of a 10-second video. Animating sucks up time like a black hole, crunches it down, and deposits it into small artistic nuggets. And then the animation eats away even more time, as viewers forgo precious moments of their lives to experience it. Animated video must be incredibly valuable, for people to devote so much life to it. I think has some sort of hyper-concentrated mental or emotional benefit. Why else would we have let so many hours slip away, if we weren't receiving something worthwhile? This has been my philosophical blurb on the nature of time travel and animation. |
AuthorHello. I'm Alison. I'm not really a blogger, but I have this blog now. I'm an art student at ASU, born and raised in the searing Arizona heat. I Like fandom and spooky stuff. Plz explore my meager site. Archives
May 2020
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