Work samples
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The Sky is Coming
'The Sky is Coming' depicts an ecosexual encounter between a thunderstorm and its human lover. These are excerpts from the beginning and end of the two-channel short film.
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What to Expect When You're ExpectingIn 'What to Expect When You’re Expecting', a woman who has been scientifically impregnated with the eggs of the endangered Loggerhead sea turtle nests on the beach one night while a local news crew provides live updates on the oviparous process. This is video documentation of this three-channel projection installation combined with excerpts from individual video channels.
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Spilt
'Spilt' is a 180 degree, first-person virtual reality experience where the user embodies a decapitated version of my body. Within the simulation, a white, cotton boundary is transgressed and a vulnerable orifice comes under threat. (Content warning: simulation of self harm)
About Danielle
Danielle d’Amico is a multimedia artist working with video, installation, virtual and augmented realities. She received her B.S. in Film, Video & Theatre from Stevenson University in 2014 and her MFA from University of Maryland, Baltimore County in 2021. Danielle's work has been… more
Immersive Experience
Virtual Reality
02:02
2024
Immersive Experience is a journey from third person perspective to first person perspective in a 360° virtual reality experience. The vignette begins with the viewer inhabiting the same space as my partially clothed body. The viewer is sucked into one of my body’s orifices, journeys through my intestines and ends inhabiting my body and my point of view. This experience is a study of what it means to be a body in a space and a humorous critique of the promises of embodiment in virtual reality experiences.
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Still from 'Immersive Experience'
This is a still from the beginning of Immersive Experience.
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Still from 'Immersive Experience'
This still captures the transition from the outside to the inside of my body.
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Still from 'Immersive Experience'
Still from Immersive Experience - inside of my body.
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Still from 'Immersive Experience'
Still from the end of Immersive Experience - the viewer inhabits my point of view.
Thirst Trap
Virtual Reality
04:23
2022
Thirst Trap is a 360° virtual reality experience where a woman drinks an entire fish bowl of water.
Spilt
Virtual reality
01:50
2019
(Content Warning: Simulation of self harm)
Spilt is a 180°, first-person virtual reality experience where the user embodies a decapitated version of my body. Within the simulation, a white, cotton boundary is transgressed and a vulnerable orifice that blurs the inside and outside of my body comes under threat. The work is inspired by Julia Kristeva's writings on abjection, specifically the breakdown of barriers between the subject/object and inside/outside of the body.
Throughout the medium’s history, Feminists have considered virtual reality for its potential to create a nonlinear, non-hierarchical way of communicating and exploring female subjectivity, but had their doubts given the patriarchal structure of the programming behind the technology. Spilt is a subversive work that aims to undermine and question the corporate trajectory of VR as a medium for narrative storytelling.
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Spilt'Spilt' is a 180 degree, first-person virtual reality experience where the user embodies a decapitated version of my body. Within the simulation, a white, cotton boundary is transgressed and a vulnerable orifice comes under threat.
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'Spilt' VR ExperienceCathy viewing 'Spilt' in the Oculus headset.
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'Spilt' StillStill from 'Spilt'
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'Spilt' work in progress photoAn image from one of my initial tests with a DIY rig I created to attach the camera to my face.
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Work in progress photo for 'Spilt'One of the DIY rigs I experimented with to attach the camera to my face.
Nighttime Mouse
Experimentation with video performance and augmented reality (AR) utilizing a publicly available AR filter created by Craig Lewis. With the AR filter, I’m transformed into a mouse-woman hybrid character who monologues on the social media platform, Instagram - mainly at night. The linked video compilation is a curated selection of these videos.
The Sky is Coming
Two-channel video installation & olfactory component
04:41
2021
The Sky is Coming is a multisensory two-channel video installation that depicts an ecosexual encounter between a thunderstorm and its human lover. A spunky smelling perfume created from the blooming Bradford Pear Tree serves as an olfactory component. This work ponders the technological mediation of our natural surroundings and the erotic forces at play in the efforts to erode anthropocentricity.
The installation premiered in the group exhibition Home Bodies (April 13 - May 7, 2021) at the Center for Art Design and Visual Culture at University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The film has since screened at Gardenship in Kearny, NJ and as part of MoCA L.I.ghts in Long Island, NY.
Written, Directed & Edited by Danielle Damico
Photographed by Amy Oden
Acted by Aidan Spann
Production Audio Engineer Safiyah Cheatam
My human character is a fulgarophilic - someone who is sexually aroused by thunderstorms. Ecosexuality refers to intersections between sexology and ecology though it is popularly used to describe humans who engage in sexual or sensual relations with elements of the earth. The ecosexual movement utilizes an intersectional approach that breaks down the intimidating guise of mainstream environmentalism and allows for people to come together to celebrate and connect with the earth in a way that emphasizes community building and reciprocity.
The ecosexual movement is included in queer ecological scholarship which examines how humans are included in (not separate from) a natural world and its systems that are ever changing as the result of social and historical influences. The Bradford Pear tree is a hybrid that was created by scientists in Prince George’s County, Maryland in the late 1950s. Envisioned as a decorative, durable tree that could survive various conditions, it was planted all across America starting in the 1960s. Today, the Bradford Pear is considered an invasive species. The root structures of the clones choke out nearby native plants and the supposedly “sterile” trees can reproduce through cross-pollination. The scent of the Bradford Pear tree is popularly associated with the scent of human ejaculate and thus I’ve used them as a metaphor for how we sensually engage our environment.
The two channel film concludes with a ‘facial’ which is a euphemism for the act of ejaculating on someone’s face. From a sex-positive feminist perspective, I interpret and have constructed the facial in this particular romp as a playful act in which both giver and receiver are enthusiastically consenting. At the same time, I acknowledge how this conclusion could be interpreted as an act of degradation or a power play. Storms have the ability to overwhelm, devastate, and at the very least instill fear in humans, partly because they’re beyond our control. Yet, we know that human-related climate change has manifested in drastic shifts in weather patterns. The intermittent fast-forwarding (and rewinding) of the storm by the human character meditates on our role in that equation while alluding to the ways we watch video content on our mobile devices. The cell phone video as a medium recognizes that the digital tool, the body, and the resulting images are entangled, rather than separate, entities.
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Still from 'The Sky is Coming'Cinematography by Amy Oden. Acted by Aidan Spann.
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2023 Installation View - Public Works Administration's HOMECOMING (Brooklyn, NY)
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'The Sky is Coming' DocumentationThe Sky is Coming installed as part of the group exhibition 'Home Bodies' (April 13 - May 7, 2021) at the Center for Art Design & Visual Culture at University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
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The Sky is ComingTwo Channel Video, 04:41
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Bradford Pear Perfume & Sample Cards
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Installation Documentation'The Sky is Coming' premiered in the group exhibition Home Bodies (April 13 - May 7, 2021) at the Center for Art Design & Visual Culture at University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
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Still from 'The Sky is Coming'Still from 'The Sky is Coming'
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Distillation of Bradford Pear tree blossomsThe perfume that accompanies the film was created by harvesting the spring blossoms of the Bradford Pear tree and distilling them in an alcohol/water mixture for 2-3 weeks.
What to Expect When You're Expecting
Three-channel immersive installation
09:17
2019
In What to Expect When You’re Expecting, a woman who has been scientifically impregnated with the eggs of the endangered Loggerhead sea turtle nests on the beach one night while a local news crew provides live updates on the oviparous process.
This speculative fiction vignette poses the question: are we as humans willing to forgo having human offspring in order to help grow the populations of endangered animal species? Species that our earth damaging practices have had a direct hand in depleting? The film explores feminst scholar Donna Haraway’s idea of “worlding-with” and her writing on multispecies feminism, which suggests making kin with nonhuman species as a way to be responsible to each other.
Additionally, this work was born out of a mild obsession with the 2009 media trajectory of Nadya Suleman, a.k.a Octomom, who gave birth to octuplets as the result of in vitro fertilization. In our pro-natalist society, the tabloids and their followers initially praised Nadya’s super fertility, but were quick to scold when it was discovered the pregnancy was a result of corrupt medical science and that the single mother was on welfare and already raising six other children. The three channels present the audience with the action unfolding from three different vantage points: one is the media spectacle.
This project was supported by the Johns Hopkins Saul Zaentz Innovation Fund. The installation premiered at Baltimore's Mercury Theater in November 2019. The three-channel film screened as part of the 2020 Ars Electronica .ART Global Gallery (online).
Cast:
Shantall Gallareta
Brandi Dyer
Steph Joyal
Producer: Brandy Creek
Writer & Director: Danielle Damico
Cinematographer: Taylor Hebden
Assistant Camera: Natasha Marshall
Audio Engineer: Gabby Sturgeon
Gaffer: Tom Faison
Production Assistant: Lauren Flynn
Editor: Danielle Damico
Post-Production Audio Engineer: Mickey Freeland
Motion Graphics: Rachel Dwiggins
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Still from 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'Still from 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'. Cinematography by Taylor Hebden. Acted by Brandi Dyer & Shantall Gallareta.
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What to Expect When You're ExpectingIn 'What to Expect When You’re Expecting', a woman who has been scientifically impregnated with the eggs of the endangered Loggerhead sea turtle nests on the beach one night while a local news crew provides live updates on the oviparous process. This is video documentation of this three-channel projection installation combined with excerpts from individual video channels.
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What to Expect When You're Expecting (full three channels)All three channels played side by side (09:15)
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Still from 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'Still from 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'
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Behind the scenes of 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'Filming at Sandy Point State Park in Annapolis, Maryland (April 2019)
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Behind the scenes of 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'Filming at Sandy Point State Park in Annapolis, Maryland (April 2019)
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Installation ViewInstallation view (center and right channels) of 'What to Expect When You're Expecting' at Mercury Theatre, Baltimore, MD (November 2019)
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Installation ViewInstallation view (center and right channels) of 'What to Expect When You're Expecting' at Mercury Theatre, Baltimore, MD (November 2019)
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IMG_4335.jpgPremiere at Mercury Theatre, Baltimore, Maryland. November 2019.
Music Videos
Over the past seven years, I've had the great pleasure of collaboarting with several Baltimore-based musicians to create music videos. Here are some that I’ve directed:
Jason Hatred
Romantic States
February 2020
Cinematography: Taylor Hebden
Your Heart Claps For Me
Gloop
August 2019
Cinematography: Taylor Hebden
Something to Say
Santa Librada
April 2018
Cinematography: Taylor Hebden
Assistant Camera: Amy Oden
Never the Same
Gordy Manny
November 2017
Give Up
End It
September 2017
Early Morning
The Holy Circle
April 2016
Say It
War on Women
Edited by Brooks Harlan
2015
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'Jason Hatred' by Romantic StatesDirected and edited by Danielle Damico. Music video created for Romantic States song 'Jason Hatred' off their 2019 album - Ballerina. Cinematography by Taylor Hebden. Made in collaboration with: Ilenia Madelaire, Caitlin Helle, Lauren Barbour, Shanna Moinizand. Filmed in Ocean City Maryland, January 2019.
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'Your Heart Claps For Me' by GloopMusic video for 'Your Heart Claps For Me' by Gloop. Cinematography by Taylor Hebden. Filmed on a scorching hot day in the summer of 2019. Directed and edited by Danielle Damico
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'Something to Say' by Santa LibradaMusic video for 'Something to Say' by Santa Librada. Cinematography by Taylor Hebden. Made in collaboration with Tom Faison (gaffer), Amy Oden (2nd Camera), AG Sherman (Costumes), Hair and Makeup (Caitlin Helle), Santa Librada and Virginia Peters-Rodbell. Directed and edited by Danielle Damico
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"Never The Same" Gordy MannyMusic video for the song 'Never the Same' by the spoken word artist and musician, Gordy Manny. Directed, filmed and edited by Danielle Damico
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End It - Give UpMusic video for the song 'Give Up' by Baltimore hardcore band, End It. Directed, filmed and edited by Danielle Damico.
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The Holy Circle "Early Morning"Music video for the song 'Early Morning' by The Holy Circle. Directed, filmed and edited by Danielle Damico.
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War On Women - "Say It"In 2015, I directed and filmed this video in collaboration with War on Women and FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture. Video edited by Brooks Harlan.
Beyond Me
00:40
2019
Beyond Me is a conceptual work that was realized as a digital billboard boat that makes its way up and down the beach in Ocean City, Maryland. I chose to commission this boat to display the words “Beyond Me” as an expression of my wonder surrounding this magical, only partially known part of our world and a sense of our inferiority in relation to it. The phrase is commonly used as a means of simultaneously dismissing and refusing responsibility: “It’s beyond me”. This is a meditation on how modern-day capitalism impairs our experience of the natural landscape and through its’ distractions hinders our ability to take action in order to defend our climate during a crucial time.
Umbrella
Single channel video (loop)
01:21
2017
An umbrella burns at the beach and on concrete.
This video was exhibited as part of the Art of Women Invitational (Anne Arundel Community College, 2018) and Light City: On Demand (Baltimore, 2018).
Potion
03:45
2016
Experimental narrative about transforming one crustacean species into another crustacean species through prayer.
Producer: Katelynn Zimmerman
Writer & Director: Danielle Damico
Cinematographer: Brandy Creek
Audio Engineer: Katie Shelton
Production Assistants: Paige Creek, Kai Stone, Ashley Brinegar
Editor: Danielle Damico
Score: Flynn DiGuardia
Screened at Washington ArtWorks (March 2016) and during the Baltimore Film Fatales Panel at Maryland Film Festival 2017.