Can 24 frames of film change the world? It can if animator Nirvan Mullick has anything to say about it. Nirvan has spent the last six years working on a very short film with a very big purpose: to raise one million dollars for the Global Fund for Women, as well as setting the course for a long term project that utilizes collaborative art and social networking to address social issues.
Nirvan began the project in 2001 as a student at California Institute of the Arts, with relatively small ambitions: to bring together all the arts programs at the school to create a community art project through “micro-collaboration,” a process of many people contributing in small ways to make something much bigger. Over one festive night of art, music and performance, hundreds of people participated in creating twelve giant paintings, each one directed by a different artist. Each painting was then filmed for two frames, and the frames cut together to create one second of animation
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