Opening This Friday: Bondsong.

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Anybody who knows me knows that I love James Bond.  So when Alister Karl asked me to join him and a band of other double-ohs in creating Bond inspired work for the Melbourne Fringe Festival naturally I donned my yellow and red gear and ski'd off a cliff with excitement.

The show, titled Bondsong opens this Friday at Brunswick Arts. Each artist was asked to chose a Bond-esque song and imagine a Bond film to go with it. I chose Cat People by Moroder/Bowie and have made a few fun new props for my dream film - which sees the return of George Lazenby to the role. 

On Her Majesty's Secret Service this time around we have Genevieve Piko, The Chaotic Order, Alister Karl, Max Piantoni, Monique Barnett, Ive Sorocuk, The Dark Carnival Dolls & Jenna Corcoran and Jamie Rawls. Truly A View To A Kill!!

Details:

  • Opening 27th September 6 to 9pm
  • Running 28th September to 6th October
  • Open 2 - 6  Thursday & Friday
  • Open 12 - 5 Saturday & Sunday
  • At Brunswick Arts Space
  • 2a Little Bresse St Brunswick

I hope to see you there! In the meantime, let's sit back and enjoy the best Bond Song of them all:

The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)

NOBODY DOES IT BETTER!

'Max The Artist' By Emmett Redding

Emmett Redding a talented Melbourne filmmaker and a good friend of mine has produced a neat little documentary about my work. The film looks at my three major projects to date, and includes some insight into South By Scooter. Emmett also managed to mask my annoying repetitive hand gestures - a task only a truly talented director could accomplish. 

If you enjoy my work, would like to know a little more about it, or are as into behind the scenes things as I am, I encourage you to check it out:

 

Directed by Emmett Redding; Max, The Arist explores the work of Melbourne artist Max Piantoni. You can find Max's work at http://www.maxpiantoni.com or Watch Max's film South By Scooter at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANbsGrXk88g

MAKING SXS: Official Mission Sneakers

‘Making SXS’  is a series of posts documenting exactly how I made my film South By Scooter, from conception, thru production, to release. To see the full series of posts click here.

One of the completed South By Scooter Official Mission Sneakers

One of the completed South By Scooter Official Mission Sneakers

Before I started work on South By Scooter I was developing a story that featured a pair of shoes in almost every picture. That story is still a work in progress, so I wont say more than that, but I guess I had shoes on my mind. 

Initially I thought the South By Scooter Survival Suit would be a bit more like the space suit from Max To Moon - made from odds and ends that I found around the place and thrown together. But as progress on the survival suit continued I found myself making more and more of it from scratch. I realized I would need something to wear on my feet, and that if I bought shoes they would stick out like a sore thumb. By this point in the project I was so into making stuff that I figured I could whip up a pair of shoes no problem! Especially with my trusty new sewing machine. 

As seems to be a common theme in these making of posts/most of the South By Scooter production process - I had absolutely no idea what I was doing, so I just made it up. I didn't have a pattern or anything to work from so I eyeballed a couple of pairs of desert boots and tried to figure out how they were put together. I broke them down mentally into their basic parts and got to work with felt and scissors. The design for my sneakers came together by hand.

I chose gold for the main colour so that the sneakers would match the backpack and stand out from the red of the survival suit and the orange of the scooter deck.

It took about two and a half days to make the pair. The first day was spent hammering out exactly how the shoes would work. I cut out the pieces for one shoe and pinned them together. I was guessing the whole time, I can’t stress enough how little I know about how shoes are made! I tried them on very carefully a few times, cutting down the pieces until they were the right size. 

The second day was spent making a template from the original pieces, deciding where the felt needed to be several pieces thick for durability, adding design details such as the trims, arrows and ‘M’s, and then sewing like mad, making things up as I went.

The design came together very organically. I really did just make it up as I went along. I still can't believe I made a pair of sneakers... I suppose technically they're more like shoe-shaped-slippers... But they sure look like sneakers! Mad sneakers!

I'll be back next week with another making of post. Until then If you haven’t seen it you should check out the film. If you have any questions you can get in touch with me on twitter @maxpiantoni or use the contact page.
 
 

South By Scooter is the latest 'handmade epic' by Max Piantoni. Watch as Max's imagined felt world springs to life in a charming adventure to the South Pole. http://www.maxpiantoni.com for more of Max. If you enjoy South By Scooter please consider paying $1 for it.

MAKING SXS: The Scooter.

‘Making SXS’  is a series of posts documenting exactly how I made my film South By Scooter, from conception, thru production, to release. To see the full series of posts click here.

This deleted scene from South By Scooter gives the Official Mission Scooter the diagram treatment.

This deleted scene from South By Scooter gives the Official Mission Scooter the diagram treatment.

There’s something so awesome about exploration vehicles. Take The Discovery from 2001 A Space Odyssey, Bathyscaphe Trieste, or the Apollo Lunar Module for example. These vehicles are more than just transportation, they are characters themselves, enablers of epic adventures, extensions of explorers bodies, and they are homes - protecting their inhabitants from the outside world as they plunge toward their goals... It was in this spirit that I created the South By Scooter Official Mission Scooter.

It took three attempts to build a scooter that would be suitable for the South By Scooter mission. I have always admired the economy of the design popularized by the ‘Razor Scooter’, a popular method of transport that I badly wanted when I was in primary school but never had. Finding one of these scooters and riding it around was the catalyst for the idea that became South By Scooter, so I figured that was as good a place to start as any for my design.

As with all of the props in my film I attempted to create an archetypal - cartoony - design... How little does it take to describe a scooter? Basically it’s an L with wheels...

Mk 1: The Cardboard Scooter.

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I knew from the outset that the scooter wouldn’t actually have to scoot - as the plan was to move the set around the action, rather than the action around the set. With this in mind I figured a sturdy cardboard scooter (with cardboard wheels) would do the trick, and whipped this one up in an afternoon. 

The cardboard scooter looked cool but literally fell apart when I stood on it. I was worried that Filming would be impossible If I was constantly stopping to re-build the scooter, so I went back to the drawing board... So to speak. There were no drawings.

Mk 2: The Conduit Scooter.

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The inspiration behind the second scooter was to build it out of conduit piping and gaffer tape, which is cheap, colourful and chunky. Great! So I dragged Liz down to the hardware store and bought a whole heap of conduit, some ‘conduit connector bits’, and gaffer tape. Liz was bored out of her mind! But whatever, I got my materials.

 

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Dad taught me how to use a Japanese hacksaw and I went to town on the piping, again making up my scooter design completely as I went along. I sawed, and sawed, and sawed, and used up what seemed like kilometres of tape. By the end of it I had my conduit scooter. I retained the cardboard wheels of the first scooter and even build a little axle assembly out of smaller gage conduit.

I was pretty proud of myself! I thought I had it, so I packed everything up and brought the scooter into my room, even showing it off to a few people. But it didn’t feel right. This scooter had none of the simplicity that I admire so much in small folding scooter designs. It didn’t look much like a scooter, and it was massive!! Also... Cardboard wheels!? Nah.

Mk 3: The South By Scooter Official Mission Scooter.

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After a couple of days of being pretty grossed out by the hulking mess of plastic that was my second scooter, I set about making the simplest and most compact design that I could with the conduit that I had left. I kept the handlebars and vertical bar from the second scooter and scrapped the rest.

I realized I needed to get some proper wheels so that the thing would actually be able to roll around and take my weight. I went to the local department store and found a kids scooter kit that had a great front wheel assembly. I bought two kits (the back wheels weren’t suitable) and took them home. Conveniently the wheel assembly was the perfect size to jam into the conduit! So I used the wheels and discarded the rest of the kit components. 

This scooter came together beautifully, with a much more straightforward design, way better colour scheme, and more of that stereotypical scooter look that I wanted. It even kind of works as a scooter if you ride it in a particular way...

I made some felt hand grips for comfort, added some extra tape (just in case) and customized it with some big ‘M’s for Max. The South By Scooter Official Mission Scooter was complete!!

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The not-quite-complete South By Scooter Official Mission Scooter.

The not-quite-complete South By Scooter Official Mission Scooter.

I'll be back next week with another making of post. Until then If you haven’t seen it you should check out the film. If you have any questions you can get in touch with me on twitter @maxpiantoni or use the contact page.