All Work Directed, Designed, and Composed by Nick Spencer

"DOSE" by Nick Spencer

"DOSE" is a nine minute animation by Nick Spencer that reinterprets Alice's trip through Wonderland. In this version, a noir Wonderland serves a a platform to explore the intersection between the world we perceive through our senses and the symbols, images and visual constructs that form our inner world. It is the crossroads of these two worlds, that "DOSE" explores. In this Wonderland, Alice is an explorer of her inner world. Placed in a modern urban setting, a contemporary Alice struts her way through her new founded vision, empowered by what she sees. As she wanders, she follows the clues, and finds herself transported and transformed.

"The Wild Dogs of Tai Pei" Book Trailer

This motion graphic is a promotional book trailer for a short fiction ebook "The Wild Dogs of Tai Pei" available at Smashwords and Amazon Kindle.

The car accident left musician Memphis Davis with few options after he lost his hand. After meeting Faith, he is introduced to Winston, the underworld boss of the district, who makes a pact with Memphis to manage a deal smuggling opium from the Golden Triangle. "The Wild Dogs of Tai Pei" is the odyssey of a man fighting to keep his freedom and reconstruct his identity as he is challenged in a supernatural duel for the ultimate demise or salvation of his soul and the soul of the woman he loves. Moving in settings from San Francisco to the Far East, Memphis and Faith's search for love and hope takes them on a shared rite of passage through a dimension of supernatural obstacles inhabited by the spirits of their souls.

Rimbaud's "Vowels"

I created this motion graphic based on Rimbaud's poem, "Vowels." The poem in part is an expression of the synaesthetic experience. That being the intermingling of sense impression. Color as sound, sound as color . . . etc. Narration and translation courtesy of Christian Bök.

“Paul Klee’s Model for Form Generation”

This video describes Paul Klee’s “Model for form generation” visually as a motion graphic. The concept is straightforward: It shows how a point can become a volume if considered in a four-dimensional context, meaning, “time.” A point moving in one direction in space can be conceived as a line. If the line is moved in another direction other than it's inherent direction, it could be said to have formed a plane. When the plane is moved in another direction into three-dimensional space, a volume is formed.