- published: 16 Sep 2016
- views: 1138
Erik Jensen may refer to:
A creative director is a position often found within the graphic design, film, music, fashion, advertising, media or entertainment industries, but may be useful in other creative organizations such as web development and software development firms as well.
A creative director is a vital role in all of the arts and entertainment industries. In another sense, they can be seen as another element in any product development process. The creative director may also assume the roles of an art director, copywriter, or lead designer. The responsibilities of a creative director include leading the communication design, interactive design, and concept forward in any work assigned. For example, this responsibility is often seen in industries related to advertisement. The creative director is known to guide a team of employees with skills and experience related to graphic design, fine arts, motion graphics, and other creative industry fields. Some example works can include visual layout, brainstorming, and copy writing. Before one assumes the role of a creative director, one must have a preset of experience beforehand. Like anyone else, these types of artists start up from the very beginning in fields that can relate to motion graphics, advertisement in television, and/or book (or magazine) publishing.
Jensen may refer to:
Amon Adonai Santos de Araújo Tobin (born February 7, 1972), known as Amon Tobin, is a Brazilian musician, composer and producer of electronic music. He is described as a virtuoso sound designer and is considered to be one of the most influential electronic music artists in the world. He is noted for his unusual methodology in sound design and music production. He has released seven major studio albums under the London-based Ninja Tune record label.
In 2007 he released Foley Room, an album based entirely on the manipulation of field recordings. His latest album, 2011's ISAM, included "female" vocals made from his own processed voice. His music has been used in numerous major motion pictures including The Italian Job and 21. Tobin has created songs for several independent films, including the 2006 Hungarian film Taxidermia, and had his music used in other independent films such as the 2002 Cannes Palme d'Or nominated Divine Intervention. A selection of his tracks were featured in commercial bumps on Toonami and in the 2005 anime IGPX, and he produced the musical scores to critically acclaimed video games Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory by Ubisoft in 2005, and Sucker Punch's Infamous in 2009.
The given name Eric, Erik, or Erick is derived from the Old Norse name Eiríkr (or Eríkr in Eastern Scandinavia due to monophthongization). The first element, ei- is derived either from the older Proto-Norse *aina(z) meaning "one" or "alone" or from Proto-Norse *aiwa(z) meaning "ever" or "eternal". The second element -ríkr derives either from *rík(a)z meaning "ruler" or "prince" (cf. Gothic reiks) or from an even older Proto-Germanic *ríkiaz which meant "powerful" and "rich". The name is thus usually taken to mean "one ruler", "autocrat", "eternal ruler" or "ever powerful", "warrior", and "government".
The most common spelling in Scandinavia is Erik. In Norway, another form of the name (which has kept the Old Norse diphthong) Eirik is also commonly used. In Finland, the form Erkki is also used. The modern Icelandic version is Eiríkur, while the modern Faroese version is Eirikur. Éric [eʁik] is used in French, and in Germany Eric, Erik and Erich are used.
Although the name was in use in Anglo-Saxon England, its use was reinforced by Scandinavian settlers arriving before the Norman Invasion. It was an uncommon name in England until the Middle Ages, when it gained popularity, and finally became a common name in the 19th century. This was partly because of the publishing of the novel Eric, or, Little by Little by Frederick William Farrar in 1858.
This video is the first in a series of videos to get to know Nathan Ybanez and Erik Jensen. They were sentenced as juveniles 16 and 17, to life in prison without parole. Nathan killed his mother after years of sexual, mental, emotional and physical abuse. Erik helped clean up the crime scene. The Supreme Court recently determined that it is not right to sentence juveniles to life in prison without parole based on overwhelming evidence that the juvenile mind does not fully develop until about 25 years of age. significant and overwhelming studies show that once a juvenile has been convicted of a serious crime including murder, and has served juvenile time, they almost never commit another serious crime.
Hvem er skyldig?
Saturday Paper editor Erik Jensen talks about his fear of failure – and why it causes him to do things ‘ever more likely to fail’. ‘I think of failure as a huge and inevitable boulder, in front of which I’m always running,’ he offers. ‘Fearing it makes me get things done.’ Epic Fail If you want to succeed, you have to start by failing, and failing big. If you haven’t experienced the downside, the frustration, the rejection, then how can you appreciate the sweetness of success when it finally comes? Australians from all walks of life come together on one big night to revel in the obstacles they have surmounted and the failures that have propelled them to the top of their game.
This Byron Writers Festival 2016 interview between barrister and author Charles Waterstreet and the Saturday Paper's editor, Erik Jensen, takes the format of a live profile, in which Jensen lays bare the journalistic process for the audience.
http://abc.net.au/rn/saturdayextra Artistic flair and passion, obsession and decline. It’s the story of the life and death of the contemporary Australian artist Adam Cullen. And it’s written by a young and talented journalist, Erik Jensen, with whom Cullen fell in love towards the end of his life. All photos courtesy of Erik Jensen, Black Inc. Publishing and ABC TV Archives Publication: Title: Acute Misfortune: The Life and Death of Adam Cullen Author: Erik Jensen Publisher: Black Inc.
This video was shot entirely on green screen and animated in After Effects and 3ds Max. Credits Camera: Joel Kapity Editor: Maeve Price Animators: Brad Chmielewski & Erik Jensen
What is a brand? It is much more than a just name or a logo Today, brands represent a bigger, emotionally centered idea that can shape desire, shift demand, drive growth. They are physical, digital, behavioral -- an essential part of our stories and experiences. At Lippincott, we see brand as possibility. We’re honored to have worked with some of the best over the years, helping them uncover the power of their brand as a truly transformational force. Let's see what's possible together Director/Editor: Matthew Kalish Creative Director: Brendan Murphy Producers: Rick Wise, Heather Stern Writing: Matt Kalish, Brendan Murphy, Heather Stern Design: Eve Weinberg (Never Odd or Even), Erik Jensen (9 North), Chet Purtilar, Diana Estabridis, Brendan Murphy Animation: Eve Weinberg (Never Odd or E...
This is a cool project I worked on with CG artist Erik Jensen of 9North http://9north.com/#702085/Polaroid-SX-70, and producer Nick Campbell of Greyscale Gorilla, for a documentary on the timeline of Polaroid's instant film. All componentry sounds and several woosh sounds were created specifically for this piece. I love the creative folk up in Chicagoland I just wish I could keep up with them at the brewery ;)
AMON TOBIN ISAM Live Visual Experience 2011 Music: Amon Tobin www.amontobin.com Visuals: V Squared Labs www.vsquaredlabs.com Director: Vello Virkhaus Producer: Anastasia King Jaress Lead TouchDesigner Artist: Peter Sistrom for "Lost & Found" Animation: Emilio Sa for "Slowly" Animation: Carlo Sa for "Machine Gun" "Bedtime Stories" and "Horsefish" Animation: Dave Foss for "Nightswim" TouchDesigner Artist: Bryant Place for "Surge" and "Dropped from the Sky" Visuals: Leviathan: www.lvthn.com Creative Director: Sam Gierasimczuk for “Piece of Paper” and “Go to 10” Creative Director: Bradon Webb for “Journeyman”, “Wooden Toy” and “Kitty Cat” 3D Animation: Jody Evenson, Katrina Nelken, David Brodeur, Blake Cartwright, Dan Tiffany, Jimi Filipovski, Dave Pasciuto Compositing: Tim Sepulve...
Awards/Screenings 25 New Faces of Independent Film 2012 • Northwest Filmmakers' Festival 2012 • Borscht Film Festival 2012 • Portland Art Museum • Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art • Eastern Oregon Film Festival 2013 • Starring ROBERT BEAM • EMILY GALASH • ERIK JENSEN Directed, edited, photographed by IAN CLARK Music by LOCH LOMOND Sound Recordist MIKE STEPHEN Made in Eugene, OR ©2011-12 | http://incproductions.org/
BAMcinemaFest 2012 http://www.BAM.org/BAMcinemaFest Jun 20—Jul 1 BAMcinemaFest showcases emerging voices in American independent cinema with NY and North American premieres of films from Cannes, Sundance, Toronto, SXSW, Berlin, and beyond. Opens June 20 with Mike Birbiglia's "Sleepwalk With Me," with special appearances by Birbiglia and co-writer Ira Glass of "This American Life." For some really cool behind the scenes and pre-renders showing how this trailer was made, check out: http://9north.com/BAM and http://www.neveroddoreven.tv/BAM-CinemaFest-Trailer-1 Animation Produced by BAM & NeverOddorEven http://www.BAM.org http://www.neveroddoreven.tv Art Direction/Design/2D animation/cel animation by Eve Weinberg 3D animation/Compositing by Erik Jensen http://9north.com/ Music by Mike Reg...
AMON TOBIN | ISAM PERFORMANCE Projection mapping [the practice of sculpting video content to match the surface geometry it’s being projected on] is not necessarily a new technique, though it’s rapidly increasing in both popularity and complexity among the masses...making it more difficult for companies producing the content to stay competitive in the craft. Leviathan worked with frequent collaborator and renowned VJ Vello Virkhaus on groundbreaking performance visuals for electronic musician Amon Tobin, creating ethereal CG narratives and engineering the geometry maps for an entire stage of stacked cube-like structures. Taking the performance further, the Leviathan team also developed a proprietary projection alignment tool to ensure quick and accurate setup for the show, along with custo...
Amon Tobin returns with his mind-blowing projection-mapped performance sculpture, this time twice as big and with brand new visualizations. Read more here: http://www.thecreatorsproject.com/creators/amon-tobin The Creators Project is a partnership between Intel and VICE: http://thecreatorsproject.com/ Like The Creators Project on Facebook: http://fb.com/thecreatorsproject Follow The Creators Project on Twitter: http://twitter.com/creatorsproject Read our Tumblr: http://thecreatorsproject.tumblr.com/ ISAM Production Credits: Alex Lazarus: Creative Director Heather Shaw: Concept Creative & Set Designer / Vita Motus Design V Squared Labs: Director: Vello Virkhaus Producer: Anastasia King Jaress Lead Programmer / VJ: Peter Sistrom Animators: Emilio Sa, Carlo Sa, Dave Foss, Bryant Place ...
Official Selection 25 New Faces of Independent Film 2012 • BAFICI 2012 • Kansas City Film Fest 2012 • Eastern Oregon Film Festival 2011 Starring CHRIS LAMBERT • AUSTIN WILL • ERIK JENSEN MANDY TREANOR • DUSTY DECKER • AUDREY KOVÁR Directed, edited, photographed, produced by IAN CLARK ©Ian Clark / Inc Productions 2011 http://incproductions.org/
This video is the first in a series of videos to get to know Nathan Ybanez and Erik Jensen. They were sentenced as juveniles 16 and 17, to life in prison without parole. Nathan killed his mother after years of sexual, mental, emotional and physical abuse. Erik helped clean up the crime scene. The Supreme Court recently determined that it is not right to sentence juveniles to life in prison without parole based on overwhelming evidence that the juvenile mind does not fully develop until about 25 years of age. significant and overwhelming studies show that once a juvenile has been convicted of a serious crime including murder, and has served juvenile time, they almost never commit another serious crime.
Erik Jensen was convicted at 17 and will spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole. His hidden voice lies within the walls of the Limon Correctional Facility. Links to the video file will be written on a self-addressed Bulacard that will be part of the Million Mentor March. Memories from the past can be instantly retrieved, displayed, and shared from the card using NFC cell phones such as the Nexus S running on Google's Android 2.3.4. Additional information about the project (Reforming the face of justice through transmedia sculptures) can be found at www.bulatag.com, www.liquidstoneart.com, and www.internetofexperiences.com. The issue is sharing experiences.
This Byron Writers Festival 2016 interview between barrister and author Charles Waterstreet and the Saturday Paper's editor, Erik Jensen, takes the format of a live profile, in which Jensen lays bare the journalistic process for the audience.
http://abc.net.au/rn/saturdayextra Artistic flair and passion, obsession and decline. It’s the story of the life and death of the contemporary Australian artist Adam Cullen. And it’s written by a young and talented journalist, Erik Jensen, with whom Cullen fell in love towards the end of his life. All photos courtesy of Erik Jensen, Black Inc. Publishing and ABC TV Archives Publication: Title: Acute Misfortune: The Life and Death of Adam Cullen Author: Erik Jensen Publisher: Black Inc.
Interview with Teamsters Local 320 Union Steward Erik Jensen. Part 1
In December 2003, Kent and Tricia Whitaker and their sons, Bart and Kevin, returned home from a dinner celebrating Bart's supposed graduation from Sam Houston State University. When they opened the door of their home in Sugar Land, Texas, a masked gunman opened fire on the family, killing Tricia and Kevin and wounding Bart and Kent. After a thorough investigation, the police learned that Bart was behind the assassination. He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. In 2008, Lisa Ling went to the Texas prison where Bart sat on death row to ask the question that was on everyone's mind: Why did he want to kill his family? Here's what she found. For more on #oprahwinfreyshow, visit http://bit.ly/1ODj0x7 Find OWN on TV at http://www.oprah.com/FindOWN SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/1...
Derrick Jensen joined Clint Culberson to speak about the state of affairs in the world today. He shared his views on the inherit lack of sustainability that the capitalism model provides. He answers to the importance of a hero's/heroin's journey in reconnecting with the natural world, learning to live symbiotically within it, and to helping stop the practices that are killing this planet. Derrick is not one to pull any punches when it comes to the reality of the environmental degradation that the modern system has caused, and this interview with the renowned author was no exception. It was an honor to sit down with someone who's been in the trenches of environmental protection. Check out his work on the Deep Green Resistance Youtube channel and website, and also at his personal website...
Eric Morecambe talks about his 1968 Jensen Interceptor, featuring a clip from the 1972 interview with Morecambe and Wise on Parkinson when Eric describes the time he was driving through Batley in Leeds late one evening when he became unwell and decided to drive home. He felt increasingly ill, and eventually was forced to ask a passer-by to drive him to hospital in the Interceptor. He had actually just suffered a mild heart attack. Apparently the passer-by was so excited to be driving an Interceptor that it took him several minutes to realise who he was helping!
Based on a documentary theater piece, DYLAN truly rides the line of documentary and narrative genres. Performed with incredible honesty and dramatic skill, Becca Blackwell unforgettably portrays a young man exploring his identity as he finds himself immersed in a new community. DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT: I began the process of making this film nearly ten years ago when I wrote the script as part of a writer's workshop taught by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen (The Exonerated). The workshop was specifically focused on documentary theater writing, which was a format I knew very little about but immediately fell in love with. We were tasked to interview someone whose story seemed interesting, and through a very detailed and specific method would eventually edit these interviews into a documentary...
KultuFyn er taget ud for og at se og høre om stykket Dyrene I Hakkebakkeskoven på Nyborg Voldspil. Interview med blandt andre instruktør Niels Erik Johannesen, skuespiller Frida Lunde, Benjamin Nielsen, Karsten Knudsen og Koreograf Majbritt Jensen. Se KultuFyn på Fynboen og på fynbotv.dk/tv-arkiv
Inger Svane blev født i Aarhus i 1946, hvor forældrene drev et mejeriudsalg. Med fem børn i en toværelseslejlighed havde alle børnene pligter derhjemme. Inger gik på pigeskolen i Christiansgade. I fritiden gik Inger til dans og akrobatik og Martha-kursus, hvor unge piger kunne lære at blive dygtige husmødre. Senere læste Inger historie på universitet. I 1969 blev Inger gift med Erik, som var medlem af orkestret Kærne, der var husorkester under festugen. Parret blev viet af Bernhardt Jensen under festugen på borgmestergården i Den Gamle By. Efter at have boet mange år i andre byer, vendte Inger i 2010 tilbage til Aarhus. Interviewet er produceret af: Amalie Henriksen Sophia Grundtvig fra Skåde Skole, oktober 2016. Interviewet er en del af Aarhus Stadsarkivs erindringsindsamlingsproje...
If you can just get your mind together
Uh-then come on across to me
Well hold hands and then well watch the sunrise
From the bottom of the sea
But first, are you experienced?
Uh-have you ever been experienced?
Well, I have
I know, I know, youll probably scream and cry
That your little world wont let you go
But who in your measly little world,
Are you tryin to prove to that youre
Made out of gold and-uh, cant be sold
So-uh, are you experienced?
Have you ever been experienced?
Well, I have
Uh, let me prove it to you, yeah
Trumpets and violins I can-uh, hear in the distance
I think theyre callin our name
Maybe now you cant hear them,
But you will,if you just
Take hold of my hand
Ohhh, but are you experienced?
Have you ever been experienced?