We all have daily routines. Some of us like to do some things in the morning, some at late night. Starting the day with a freshly brewed coffee or ending it with meditation. Although routines don’t have to be polished with Gen Y or Gen Z trends. Breakfast, reading, standing still, running, socializing, hiking any repetitive thing can turn into a routine and this gives a motivation to wake up to another day.
It gives us a chance to create a habit, also keeps us sane since we’re highly dependent on some sort of comfort and assurance in daily life. South Korean designer Haeri Cho directed, animated, and designed a short titled Routine Rhythms which focuses on daily activities and their powerful rhythms.
Hidden patterns create Routine Rhythms
Haeri Cho recently graduated from Ringling College of Art and Design and started to work at BUCK as Design Apprentice. Her professional career may be fresh but her creative work proves its worth. Meanwhile, Routine Rhythms! is a collection of patterns obtained by observation, experience. Haeri Cho focuses on different topics and aspects of life.
She emphasizes these patterns in the description as they can be irregular or regular, organic or geometric, structural or decorative, positive or negative, and repeating or random. She found the repetitive tasks in her daily life and found “Repetition” as the umbrella term for her project. And correlated everything around it.
Personally, routines can be a huge eye-opener for many. We usually get lost in routines and most of the time we don’t even notice them. Therefore, it’s not easy to hear their rhythms. Routine Rhythms show this pattern in a humble, direct, and pleasant way.
American filmmaker and scholar Wheeler Winston Dixon created “What Comes Next” a short film by only using footage and soundtracks in the Public Domain.
Routine Rhythms: Daily Life Isn’t Just a Cacophony
We all have daily routines. Some of us like to do some things in the morning, some at late night. Starting the day with a freshly brewed coffee or ending it with meditation. Although routines don’t have to be polished with Gen Y or Gen Z trends. Breakfast, reading, standing still, running, socializing, hiking any repetitive thing can turn into a routine and this gives a motivation to wake up to another day.
It gives us a chance to create a habit, also keeps us sane since we’re highly dependent on some sort of comfort and assurance in daily life. South Korean designer Haeri Cho directed, animated, and designed a short titled Routine Rhythms which focuses on daily activities and their powerful rhythms.
Hidden patterns create Routine Rhythms
Haeri Cho recently graduated from Ringling College of Art and Design and started to work at BUCK as Design Apprentice. Her professional career may be fresh but her creative work proves its worth. Meanwhile, Routine Rhythms! is a collection of patterns obtained by observation, experience. Haeri Cho focuses on different topics and aspects of life.
She emphasizes these patterns in the description as they can be irregular or regular, organic or geometric, structural or decorative, positive or negative, and repeating or random. She found the repetitive tasks in her daily life and found “Repetition” as the umbrella term for her project. And correlated everything around it.
Personally, routines can be a huge eye-opener for many. We usually get lost in routines and most of the time we don’t even notice them. Therefore, it’s not easy to hear their rhythms. Routine Rhythms show this pattern in a humble, direct, and pleasant way.
To discover more about Haeri Cho’s work you can visit Behance, Vimeo, Instagram.
You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram.
Related Posts
L-Jo Provides Safe Harbor for Your Mental Health
Half Colombian and half Mexican artist L-Jo works on different mediums and styles. Also many titles and professions under her belt.
DOUGH JOE: A Travellers Journey To Sacred Prize
Minneapolis-based broadcast design, effects, and animation studio motion504 released an animated short titled DOUGH JOE.
POV: You Trapped In 24framesofginger’s Fabolous and Absurd Stop Motion World
Stop motion artist Jonathan Deutsch aka. 24framesofginger creates beautiful and captivating stop motion loops with quirky and sweet stories.
What’s Done is Done, What Comes Next?
American filmmaker and scholar Wheeler Winston Dixon created “What Comes Next” a short film by only using footage and soundtracks in the Public Domain.