OverDrawn

Australia, 2004

Film
OverDrawn thumbnail image.

Martin Walch mixes the toxic beauty of his own photographs with industrial and geographic documentation in this animated pan across an area of the Mt Lyell mine, Tasmania.

Content notification

Our collection comprises over 40,000 moving image works, acquired and catalogued between the 1940s and early 2000s. As a result, some items may reflect outdated, offensive and possibly harmful views and opinions. ACMI is working to identify and redress such usages.

Learn more about our collection and our collection policy here. If you come across harmful content on our website that you would like to report, let us know.

How to watch

This work has been digitised and can be viewed in the display above.

Collection

In ACMI's collection

Previously on display

22 April 2019

ACMI Viewing Booths

Credits

producer/director

Martin Walch

production company

ACMI

SBS Independent

Duration

00:00:30:00

Production places
Australia
Production dates
2004

Appears in

Group of items

ARTV

Explore

Collection metadata

ACMI Identifier

B1006507

Language

No spoken word

Audience classification

Mediatheque - all ages (ACMI classified)

Sound/audio

Sound

Colour

Colour

Holdings

MPEG-4 Digital File; ACMI Digital Access Copy - overscan

MOV file ProRes4444; Digital Preservation Master - overscan

Mini DV; Master

Digital Betacam; Master

Digital Betacam; Sub-master

VHS [PAL]; Reference - timecoded

MPEG-4 Digital File; ACMI Digital Access Copy - presentation

MPEG-4 Digital File; ACMI External Digital Access Copy

Please note: this archive is an ongoing body of work. Sometimes the credit information (director, year etc) isn’t available so these fields may be left blank; we are progressively filling these in with further research.

Cite this work on Wikipedia

If you would like to cite this item, please use the following template: {{cite web |url=https://acmi.net.au/works/109408--overdrawn/ |title=OverDrawn |author=Australian Centre for the Moving Image |access-date=12 September 2024 |publisher=Australian Centre for the Moving Image}}