Nature finds its rhythm in Orfeo Tagiuri’s animated music videos for Brian Eno and Beatie Wolfe
The visual artist’s two videos for the musicians are expansive and intertwined, referencing a short film by Ray and Charles Eames as well as the prints of William Blake.
- Date
- 11 November 2025
- Words
- Sudi Jama
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The London-based artist Orfeo Tagiuri has created two animated music videos for Brian Eno and Beatie Wolfe’s collaborative musical project. The most recent is Procession, a track from album Liminal, which joins his existing video for Suddenly from the pairs album Luminal. As each of Eno and Wolfe’s three albums (Liminal, Luminal and Lateral) are so intertwined, Orfeo has tried to create one thing visually – interconnectivity.
For both videos, Orfero didn’t to work from a storyboard, “so every twist and turn can be a response to the audio,” Orfeo says. “I suppose it’s more like dancing improv than a defined choreography.” Both videos share a fluidity, animated stream of consciousness. So much so, it feels as through both audio and visual were created simultaneously.
After receiving the track for Procession, Orfeo created the entire video in Procreate Dreams on his iPad. With the built in functions and Orfeo drawing at 12 frames per second, the animation quickly materialised – a beautifully fresh take on inception of life in all it’s many forms. Orfeo shares: “I’ve always loved the idea that at any moment, every element of every scene could come alive or instantly transform into anything else.”
In Procession, nothing is ever static. The trees and even the rocks are alive with the music, city landscapes are sliced apart by a bird flying by, the blocks of buildings turning into fuzzy shapes as they fade out. Orfeo was inspired by Charles and Ray Eames’ 1977 short film Powers of Ten – where the video zooms out in scales of ten, to a galactic scale, then back down to the microscopic. “One of the major takeaways for me was the similarity between stars floating loosely in space and the orbital movement of particles on the smallest scale,” says Orfeo.
This meandering quality can is also evident in the video for Suddenly. Orfeo designed his own typeface for the video, consisting of single ink dots he likens to grains of sand that “flow and dissolve”. His biggest inspiration was William Blake, whose prints can be found on Orfeo’s shelves at home. “I think wherever possible, if distinct worlds and formats can be referenced and merged, they really enrich and deepen the creative output,” says Orfeo. By merging worlds and collapsing references into the creative output, Orfeo enriches the process. “In the same way that Bob Dylan is drawing upon folk songs and other potent mythologies, I think there is a poetic grativas that can be carried forth through referencing older worlds in new mediums,” he says says.
In both videos, natural imagery and human figures are displayed side by side. In Procession, a figure pops through a tiny open door before launching a moon-faced rock into orbit. While in Suddenly, a person running morphs down into a snail before shifting into a hungry wolf. Facial expressions are particularly vivid too in the video, drawn by Orfeo with nods to his woodcarving work, featuring what he describes as “mythic figures with great smiles or spilling tears”.
On reflection, Orfeo ends: “I like this movement between the two worlds – it is as if for a moment you wake up from one dream and step into another only to be launched back into the original.” Theatricality, nature and folklores liesat the heart of Orfeo’ work, which is vivid and expansive – there’s not a moment the lid can be put on his animation, and not a scene where a conclusion is needed.
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Procession Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, October 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Procession Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, October 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Procession Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, October 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Procession Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, October 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
Orfeo Tagiuri: Suddenly Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, April 2025)
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Orfeo Tagiuri: ‘Procession’ Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe Music Video (Copyright © Universal Music, October 2025)
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About the Author
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Sudi Jama (any pronouns) is a staff writer at It’s Nice That, with a keen interest and research-driven approach to design and visual cultures in contextualising the realms of film, TV, and music.


