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And again, Nicolas Roeg supplied me with different still frames from his 1973 movie "Don't look Now" starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. In the beginning we see a child playing ball near a pond in the garden. While the parents sit inside their home checking slides and talking to each other, Donald gets a notion of something strange happening on his slides. And while the light source of the slide projector overheats and destroys one of the slides which depicts a small creatures in a red cape sitting in a church row, the daughter accidentally falls into the deep water and drowns. Within seconds we see Donald running outside trying to drag her out the water to reanimate, hopelessly. I realized the pain and loss and captured the scene where he carries her desperately out of the water starting to cry and weep. Roeg slows down the action and lets his voice take another timbre. The cut is instantly done when Julie first sees them outside the garden which ends in a high and shrill scream.  Another shot can be seen in the same Collection.
And again, Nicolas Roeg supplied me with different still frames from his 1973 movie "Don't look Now" starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. In the beginning we see a child playing ball near a pond in the garden. While the parents sit inside their home checking slides and talking to each other, Donald gets a notion of something strange happening on his slides. And while the light source of the slide projector overheats and destroys one of the slides which depicts a small creatures in a red cape sitting in a church row, the daughter accidentally falls into the deep water and drowns. Within seconds we see Donald running outside trying to drag her out the water to reanimate, hopelessly. I realized the pain and loss and captured the scene where he carries her desperately out of the water starting to cry and weep. Roeg slows down the action and lets his voice take another timbre. The cut is instantly done when Julie first sees them outside the garden which ends in a high and shrill scream.  Another shot can be seen in the same Collection.
And again, Nicolas Roeg supplied me with different still frames from his 1973 movie "Don't look Now" starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. In the beginning we see a child playing ball near a pond in the garden. While the parents sit inside their home checking slides and talking to each other, Donald gets a notion of something strange happening on his slides. And while the light source of the slide projector overheats and destroys one of the slides which depicts a small creatures in a red cape sitting in a church row, the daughter accidentally falls into the deep water and drowns. Within seconds we see Donald running outside trying to drag her out the water to reanimate, hopelessly. I realized the pain and loss and captured the scene where he carries her desperately out of the water starting to cry and weep. Roeg slows down the action and lets his voice take another timbre. The cut is instantly done when Julie first sees them outside the garden which ends in a high and shrill scream.  Another shot can be seen in the same Collection.
And again, Nicolas Roeg supplied me with different still frames from his 1973 movie "Don't look Now" starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. In the beginning we see a child playing ball near a pond in the garden. While the parents sit inside their home checking slides and talking to each other, Donald gets a notion of something strange happening on his slides. And while the light source of the slide projector overheats and destroys one of the slides which depicts a small creatures in a red cape sitting in a church row, the daughter accidentally falls into the deep water and drowns. Within seconds we see Donald running outside trying to drag her out the water to reanimate, hopelessly. I realized the pain and loss and captured the scene where he carries her desperately out of the water starting to cry and weep. Roeg slows down the action and lets his voice take another timbre. The cut is instantly done when Julie first sees them outside the garden which ends in a high and shrill scream.  Another shot can be seen in the same Collection.
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Don't look Now - Reanimation Painting

Benjamin Ortleb

Germany

Painting, Oil on Canvas

Size: 35 W x 27 H x 0.6 D in

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About The Artwork

And again, Nicolas Roeg supplied me with different still frames from his 1973 movie "Don't look Now" starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. In the beginning we see a child playing ball near a pond in the garden. While the parents sit inside their home checking slides and talking to each other, Donald gets a notion of something strange happening on his slides. And while the light source of the slide projector overheats and destroys one of the slides which depicts a small creatures in a red cape sitting in a church row, the daughter accidentally falls into the deep water and drowns. Within seconds we see Donald running outside trying to drag her out the water to reanimate, hopelessly. I realized the pain and loss and captured the scene where he carries her desperately out of the water starting to cry and weep. Roeg slows down the action and lets his voice take another timbre. The cut is instantly done when Julie first sees them outside the garden which ends in a high and shrill scream. Another shot can be seen in the same Collection.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Oil on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:35 W x 27 H x 0.6 D in

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I was born in 1965 in Berlin. At the age of 15 I started painting seriously and had my first exhibition two years later in the Berliner Philharmonie. I went to nude painting in class of Andre Bednarczik in Berlin, spent a month in Salzburg at the Sommerakademie to start lithography, graduated as a graphic-designer in 1991, became a webmaster in 2000 and made my MA at the University of the Arts in Berlin ("Institute of Art in Context). Since 1998 Im also working as an art-workshop teacher in private schools and youth facilites. I am a member of the Japan-Germany Contemporary Fine Arts Exchange Association led by Sohachi Shimomisse in Kyoto and also of the BVBK (Brandenburger Verband Bildender Knstler)I live and work as an Art teacher, freelance artist, graphic/webdesigner and musician in Kleinmachnow, Brandenburg Germany.The year of generating images on the computer was the initial spark to use them as templates for large scale paintings. What Im using now are stills, fragments and press photos from newspapers, books and movies. The conceptual idea is to take a closer look on violence and catastrophes and transfer them into a new aesthetic surrounding where the actual scenes of horror and fear are mixed with fascination. Changes in colour, partly achieved through polarized effects, gradations, complementary colours and shades of monochromes, give way to emphasize the relation between content und realities.

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