30 MINUTES LATER In the 17th century the Japanese artist Hokusai received commissioned work from the emperor to make a picture of a cockerel. Hokusai worked on the assignment for years. Regularly an envoy from the emperor showed up at Hokusai's studio in order to ask if the project made progress. Every time he was told that the artist was working with the assignment but that the picture was not finished. When the emperor envoy showed up at the studio after three years, Hokusai went into an adjoining room and painted the picture of the cockerel in 30 minutes. The emperor envoy was taken by surprise and asked how the project could take so long time when the artist was able to paint the picture in 30 minutes. Hokusai showed him the adjoining room. Walls, tables and floor were filled with sketches, preliminary studies, models, notes, books and drawings. The picture that he had just made was the result of years of preparatory studies. On the background of the legend about Hokusai, the art class was given the assignment to make a 30 seconds video for the Krabbesholm exhibition Peepshow in Istedgade in Copenhagen. The students had 30 hours for the preliminary work. Then they should in 30 minutes make the video..
> 30 sec #1
> 30 sec #2
> 30 sec #3
> 30 sec #4
> 30 sec #5
> 30 sec #6
> 30 sec #7
> 30 sec #8
> 30 sec #9
> 30 sec #10
> 30 sec #11
> 30 sec #12
> 30 sec #13
> 30 sec #14
> 30 sec #15
> 30 sec #16
> 30 sec #17
> 30 sec #18
> 30 sec #19