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Whitney Alexander








Client: Adult Swim
Agency: BFG
Featuring: Owl Bundy
Date: May 2012
Creative Director: Ricardo Rivera
Executive Producer: Michelle Barbieri
Producer: Natalie Weiss
Animators: Whitney Alexander, Masahiro Wakabayashi, Steve Rivera
Agency: BFG
Featuring: Owl Bundy
Date: May 2012
Creative Director: Ricardo Rivera
Executive Producer: Michelle Barbieri
Producer: Natalie Weiss
Animators: Whitney Alexander, Masahiro Wakabayashi, Steve Rivera


Nightscape: A Light and Sound Experience by Klip Collective
Longwood Gardens’ new nighttime installation, "Nightscape: A Light and Sound Experience by Klip Collective", has attracted nearly 60,000 guests since its opening July 1. Created by Klip Collective, this innovative display combines light, sound, imagery, and music into an unforgettable nighttime experience. http://longwoodgardens.org/nightscape
Creative Director - Ricardo Rivera
Installation Designer - Josh James
Sr. Experiential Producer - Natalie Weiss
Executive Producer - Marie Patriarca
Director of Production and Post, Monogram - Kevin Ritchie
Executive Producers - Michelle Barbieri
Metaphysical Advisor/ Projectionist - Dave Smith
Production Coordinator - Nicole Giberson
Post Production by Monogram
Lead Animator - Whitney Alexander
Animator - Masa Wakabayashi
Animator - Thom Roland
Animator - Jason Harmon
Animator - Dan Hoffman
Animation Intern- Mark McCallum
Animation Intern - Eddy Nieto
Composer - Jon Barthmus
Composer - Julian Grefe, PinkSkull
Composer - Justin Geller, PinkSkull
Composer - Josh James
Composer - Thom Roland
Video Programmer - Florian Mosleh
Sound Design and Engineering - Tripp Sound
Sound Designer and Systems Engineer - Nick Hoell
Audio Assistant - Kevin Tucker
Lighting Designer - Joshua Schulman
Assistant Lighting Designer - David Todaro
Lighting Technician - Nate Morgan
Interactive Design - Playmatics
Interactive Lead - Brett Burton
Interactive Assistant - Oleg Pashkovsky
Interactive Assistant - Mackenzie Walker
Sculpture Techical Design & Fabrication - Tony Sacksteder & Daniel Stein, WhiteSpace Labs
Sculpture Art Direction - Ioana Chiorean
Documentation Director of Photography - Kevin Ritchie
Documentation Assistant Camera - Justin Pekera
Tech Utility - Julian Grefe
Tech Utility - Justin Pekera
Production Assistant - Ryan Komorowski
Production Assistant - Fred Cliver
Creative Director - Ricardo Rivera
Installation Designer - Josh James
Sr. Experiential Producer - Natalie Weiss
Executive Producer - Marie Patriarca
Director of Production and Post, Monogram - Kevin Ritchie
Executive Producers - Michelle Barbieri
Metaphysical Advisor/ Projectionist - Dave Smith
Production Coordinator - Nicole Giberson
Post Production by Monogram
Lead Animator - Whitney Alexander
Animator - Masa Wakabayashi
Animator - Thom Roland
Animator - Jason Harmon
Animator - Dan Hoffman
Animation Intern- Mark McCallum
Animation Intern - Eddy Nieto
Composer - Jon Barthmus
Composer - Julian Grefe, PinkSkull
Composer - Justin Geller, PinkSkull
Composer - Josh James
Composer - Thom Roland
Video Programmer - Florian Mosleh
Sound Design and Engineering - Tripp Sound
Sound Designer and Systems Engineer - Nick Hoell
Audio Assistant - Kevin Tucker
Lighting Designer - Joshua Schulman
Assistant Lighting Designer - David Todaro
Lighting Technician - Nate Morgan
Interactive Design - Playmatics
Interactive Lead - Brett Burton
Interactive Assistant - Oleg Pashkovsky
Interactive Assistant - Mackenzie Walker
Sculpture Techical Design & Fabrication - Tony Sacksteder & Daniel Stein, WhiteSpace Labs
Sculpture Art Direction - Ioana Chiorean
Documentation Director of Photography - Kevin Ritchie
Documentation Assistant Camera - Justin Pekera
Tech Utility - Julian Grefe
Tech Utility - Justin Pekera
Production Assistant - Ryan Komorowski
Production Assistant - Fred Cliver





Philadelphia Flower Show
Klip Collective worked with GMR Design to create projection spectacles of breathtaking visuals and technological innovation to enhance the 2012 Philadelphia International Flower Show. A large “wave-wall” at the entrance of the show invited visitors to walk under a calming display of undulating projection waves of sea creatures and flower blossoms. A central Hawaiian temple featured video-mapped animations and filmed content to tell the story of Pele, Hawaii’s female fire god, and to transform the temple exhibit into a vibrant light experience.

"The Projectionist" Sundance New Frontier 2014 Teaser
As a main feature of the 2014 festival’s New Frontier exhibit, which celebrates artistic innovations in film and video, Klip wrote, produced and projected on the Egyptian Theatre on Main Street. The live-action narrative called ”The Projectionist” builds off the quirky character animation of "What's He Building In There?" from 2013. The 3D video projections pull away the theater façade to reveal the projection booth inside the building to find the projectionist struggling to keep it together. The projection installation included an interactive element allowing viewers to tweet at Klip’s Twitter handle and restart the narrative.
“The Projectionist” Sundance New Frontier 2014
“The Projectionist” Sundance New Frontier 2014

Mural Remix: Momo
In collaboration with the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program, two legacy murals were brought to life with the artwork of local and regional digital artists using projection mapping.


Mural Remix: Crystal Snowscape
In collaboration with the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program, two legacy murals were brought to life with the artwork of local and regional digital artists using projection mapping. Klip Collective lead the reimagination and production of this street-level art and community experiment as a part of Mural Arts’ month-long Open Source outdoor exhibition in 2015.
With a photograph of the selected mural, Klip created a digital template and a set of rules for content creation, and distributed them to other digital artists. These digital artists are not only given the freedom to explore their art in a new medium, but they gain access to and see the inner workings of content production for projection mapping, a relatively expensive and challenging technology. True to the meaning of Open Source, Klip invites digital artists to develop their craft with these free tools.
With the collected the submitted digital files and simple projection tools, Klip Collective projection mapped the existing murals, laying the new digital artwork seamlessly on top, and transformed the static murals into moving canvases. For one night, this collaboration of many delighted neighbors, passersby and the muralists themselves.
With a photograph of the selected mural, Klip created a digital template and a set of rules for content creation, and distributed them to other digital artists. These digital artists are not only given the freedom to explore their art in a new medium, but they gain access to and see the inner workings of content production for projection mapping, a relatively expensive and challenging technology. True to the meaning of Open Source, Klip invites digital artists to develop their craft with these free tools.
With the collected the submitted digital files and simple projection tools, Klip Collective projection mapped the existing murals, laying the new digital artwork seamlessly on top, and transformed the static murals into moving canvases. For one night, this collaboration of many delighted neighbors, passersby and the muralists themselves.
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