Eventos

  • This is Experimental

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    tienz.jpgExperimental or avant-garde film is set to take centre-stage at the Film Archive during This is Experimental: A Festival of Experimental Film and Film Makers.

    The event, organised by Film Archive Exhibitions Manager Mark Williams is an exciting three days of screenings, talks and a workshop – presented by, and featuring, local and international guests from the outer edges of cinematic adventure.

    Highlights include: a screening and workshop by Guy Sherwin, one of the pre-eminent British film artists of the last 40 years; Free Radical: The films of Len Lye, a collection of work by New Zealand's most internationally successful film maker, that returns to New Zealand from a successful North American tour; and The Michael Nicholson Studio Visual Music Project Stage 3: Ops 1–4, a video installation that pays homage to the abstract expression paintings of Wassily Kandinsky.

    Featuring:
    Michael Nicholson, Martin Rumsby, Guy Sherwin, Len Lye

    Dates:
    Thu 14 Aug 08 - Sat 16 Aug 08, every day, All day event

    Venue:
    New Zealand Film Archive - Wellington, Cnr Ghuznee and Taranaki Streets, Wellington City

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  • Measures: Politics and the experimental film

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    The War Game, Peter WatkinsMeasures is a new series of seminars that use screening, reading, discussion and analysis to look at critical assumptions about the image and its meaning once a week over a 10 week period. The first series ‘Politics and the Experimental Film: a sense of urgency’ will by led by AL Rees with one session led by Patrick Keiller who will discuss his film Robinson in Space. The second series will be led by curator Maxa Zoller and will be advertised in January 2009.

    Rees will examine key passages of work by (amongst others): Bunuel, Anstey, Richter, The Duvet Brothers, Vertov, Watkins, Le Grice, Gidal, Eatherly, Rhodes, Straub-Huillet, Conner, Debord, Welsby and Ivens seeking the elusive union of film and politics in the last half-century to question what a contemporary political cinema might be?

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  • Tank tv : 'The Young and Evil' curated by Stuart Comer

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    William E. Jones / Mansfield 1962  'The Young and Evil' on www.tank.tv
    Curated by Stuart Comer

    14th July 2008 - 21st September 2008

    The digital glow of the internet has largely replaced the dark space of the cinema as the site where furtive desires are first expressed and encountered on flickering screens. Consequently, the web continues to evolve into an uncanny hybrid of personal longing and collective interaction where configurations of watching and being watched take on radically new form. Reconsidering the historical contours and shifting relationships of sex and community in the digital age, a range of artists has been invited to select two works: one contemporary video shown to be shown online, and one historical film to be screened in the cinema. Selectors include Andrea Geyer, William E Jones, Carlos Motta, Emily Roysdon, Akram Zaatari, Daria Martin, Karol Radziszewski and Bruce Yonemoto.

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  • Arthur Lipsett Screening - Cinematheque quebecoise

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    THE DOUBLE NEGATIVE COLLECTIVE
    PRESENTS
    ARTHUR LIPSETT: ABOUT TIME, A FILM RETROSPECTIVE

    CURATED BY BRETT KASHMERE

    June 4th, 5th, 6th, 12th
    Cinémathèque québécoise
    335, boul. De Maisonneuve Est (Metro Berri-UQÀM
    514-842-9763
    Price - Adult 7$  Student (13-30) 6$

    The Double Negative Collective, a dedicated group of Montréal-based
    filmmakers and curators of cinema, in collaboration with the
    Cinémathèque québécoise and the National Film Board of Canada, invite
    curator Brett Kashmere to present a film retrospective 0f Canadian
    filmmaker Arthur Lipsett.  The exhibition takes place at the
    Cinémathèque québécoise on June 4th, 5th and 6th.  Eric Gaucher’s
    documentary on Arthur Lipsett screens on June 12th at 7pm.

    Propelled to international attention through an Oscar nomination at the
    age of 25, the legendary National Film Board artist Arthur Lipsett
    remains an anomaly within avant-garde film histories. Uneasily
    oscillating between a personal, artisanal tradition and the NFB’s
    institutional mandate “to interpret Canada for Canadians,” he was a
    popular experimental filmmaker whose eccentric, satirical collage films
    were renowned around the world. Lipsett’s films were admired by diverse
    film patriarchs such as Stanley Kubrick, Stan Brakhage, and George
    Lucas.  The exhibition Arthur Lipsett: About Time presents an overdue
    retrospective of Lipsett’s short but influential career, re-assembling
    his dazzling collage work alongside correlative Canadian media artists
    from the past half-century.

    Brett Kashmere is a filmmaker, curator, and Visiting Assistant
    Professor of Cinema Studies at Oberlin College in Ohio, USA.  Kashmere
    has organized programs for the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
    Strasbourg, Light Cone, Cinémathèque québécoise, Eyebeam Center for Art
    and Technology, Cinema Project, Vtape, and Cinematheque Ontario.

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  • ATA Film & Video Festival awarded grant by the Trust for Mutual Understanding

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    ATA logoThe ATA Film & Video Festival will receive a grant from the Trust for Mutual Understanding to present the ATA Film and Video Festival at the CINE FANTOM CLUB
    in Moscow, participate in the Renowned Discussions that CINE FANTOM
    hosts with authors and audiences, and to conduct a professional
    exchange through a series of inter-organizational meetings in
    partnership with CINE FANTOM.

    The Trust for Mutual Understanding is an
    American foundation supporting cultural and environmental exchange
    between the United States, Russia, and Eastern and Central Europe. This
    exchange aims to facilitate the cooperative presentation, appreciation,
    and production of Experimental Cinema in Russia and in the United
    States.

    The screening in Moscow is part of an on-going
    exchange between CINE FANTOM and ATA. In June 2007, ATA screened a
    program of films from CINE FANTOM, "CINE FANTOM: Experimental Russian Film,"
    which included the work of filmmakers Olga Chernysheva, Olga
    Stolpovskaya, Dmitriy Troitskiy, Grigoriy Dikkert, Lenka Kabankova,
    Igor & Gleb Aleinikov, Alexander Doulerain, and Jamie Bradshaw .
    Many Russians living in the Bay Area visited ATA, many for the first
    time. They, and others, saw personal and idiosyncratic visions of
    Russia that they would have seen and heard nowhere else in the world,
    except through CINE FANTOM. The audience was amazed to see artistic
    points of view seldom if ever represented in any media, especially in
    the US.

    CINE FANTOM's mission is to bring film
    professionals, artists, and others together to experience, and learn
    about the practice and relevance of Experimental Cinema. The name and
    the history of the club comes from samizdat, an originally handwritten
    magazine by Igor Aleinikov issued by CINE FANTOM since 1985, dedicated
    to history and theory of cinema. CINE FANTOM was associated with the
    Soviet underground cinema, Parallel Cinema (Parallelnoe Kino), and
    became known for its leading role in media openness during Glasnost.
    CINE FANTOM believes that discussion is an integral part of the
    presentation and enjoyment of Experimental Cinema.

    The screening of a selection of short films from
    the 2nd ATA Film & Video Festival will take place at CINE FANTOM
    Club in the FITIL Movie Theater on June 11th. ATA's 5 primary
    participants — filmmakers Sylvia Scheldebauer and Paul Clipson, ATA
    Film & Video Festival directors Shae Green and Isabel Fondevila,
    and ATA's Programming Director Fara Akrami — will be present and will
    also be part of the Renowned Discussions that will follow the
    screening. According to CINE FANTOM, "The aim of these weekly sessions
    is to help create a new criticism capable of understanding new film
    language." A transcript of the discussion will be published online as
    well as included in the book CINE FANTOM: Selected Discussions, to be
    published in 2008/2009.

    The program includes:

    Window (Lukas Lukasik); 1,2,3 Solution (Tommy
    Becker); Candy Apple (K.Laitala's S.F.A.I. Optical Techniques class);
    Echo Park (Paul Clipson); The Apollos (Nick Parker & Jazmin Jones);
    I Am The Eggman (Sam Barnett); False Friends (Sylvia Schedelbauer);
    Pursuant To The Subsection (Gordon Winiemko); I, A Director (Rachel
    Manera); 5 Cents A Peek (Vanessa Woods); To Watch After The White House
    Press Briefing, Or With The Apathetic (Mack McFarland); Sissy Boy Slap
    Party (Guy Maddin); Phantom Canyon (Stacey Steers); Flight Home
    (Tadashi Moriyama); Paradise Drift (Martin Hansen).

    During their stay in Moscow, the 5 primary
    project participants will also conduct inter-organizational meetings
    with CINE FANTOM, members of their affiliate organizations, and
    affiliate artists. The meetings will concern the incubation, expansion,
    and production of Russian and American experimental film and video. The
    results of the project will be evaluated and disseminated in several
    ways, including an experimental documentary and experimental film night
    about our experience that will be held at ATA in August 2008. In the
    spirit of CINE FANTOM, the screening will be followed by a discussion,
    and the discussion published online at atasite.org.

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  • Tank TV - Vertrautes Terrain

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    Vertrautes Terrain - Contemporary Art in/about Germany
    A collaboration between www.tank.tv and ZKM

    21st May 2008 – 30th June 2008 / 14th September - 30th September 2008

    Tank TV - Vertrautes Terrain

    Artists on www.tank.tv
    include: Bankleer, Com&Com, Danica Dakic, Sven Johne, Dias &
    Riedweg, Alexandra Gerbaulet, Laura Horelli, Korpys/Löffler, Macellvs
    L., Antje Majewski, Sascha Pohle, Özlem Sulak, Hito Steyerl and Florian
    Thalhofer.

    tank.tv
    is pleased to collaborate with ZKM (Karlsruhe, Germany) to exhibit film
    and video work from their forthcoming exhibition 'Vetrautes Terrain'. tank.tv
    will open its show simultaneously with ZKM, on May 21st, to become part
    of the 'resonance space' of the exhibition. Bringing video work out of
    the gallery space and making it available to an international audience
    we hope to widen the scope of this timely focus on national identity.

    "German
    Art" or "Art from Germany", a label that has exhibition tradition, is a
    fiction – owing to the fact that, in most cases, national political
    determinations have little or anything to do with artistic practice. In
    spite of this, country-specific questions relating to the search for
    history, genealogies or tendencies represent a constant factor in art
    history and the art business: the general exhibition is its most common
    format.


    Local backgrounds and national events are beginning to be seen as
    essential and identity defining whilst national identities appear to be
    levelling out. The place of the 'national' is becoming confused and
    fraught with tensions in contemporary culture, not least because no
    formal, measured thematic-cultural analysis of the idea of 'Germany'
    has taken place.


    It is against this background that the project 'Vertrautes Terrain –
    Contemporary Art in/about Germany' conceives itself, namely, as a
    resonance space within which the differentiated examination of works by
    international artists, who reflect on Germany in distinctly different
    ways as a historical, art, and social sphere can be carried out. The
    focus on the German context refers to an "imaginary cartography", which
    seeks to trace those concerns dealing with form and content, the
    symptoms and the virulent features in art as set against the backdrop
    of their socio-political presence.

    Questions
    of history, memory, cultural location, identity, biographic references,
    structures, symbols, references of forms, clichés and the politics of
    representation form the basis of the project: what interests artists
    among the various nationalities today? In which connection do
    references to Germany appear? Does there emerge from an "identity of
    doubt" (Hans Belting) an arbitrarily disposed thematic volatility in
    works of art? What aesthetic and artistic qualities do those works
    possess, which make reference to German culture, history, persons or
    places? Which roles do historically established quality seals and
    current hypes (from Romanticism to the "Leipziger Schule") play in
    international perception?

    The exhibition is characterized by shared and changing images of what the concept "Germany" signifies.
    Vetrautes Terrain is curated by Gregor Jansen and Thomas Thiel.

    www.zkm.de
    www.vertrautes-terrain.de

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  • Stuttgarter Filmwinter 2008

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    filmwinter08.jpg21. Stuttgarter Filmwinter


    Festival for Expanded Media

    17. January - 20. January 2008

    http://www.filmwinter.de

    The 21st Filmwinter Stuttgart, Festival for Short and Experimental Film and Media Art is taking place from 17.- 20. January 2008. The Filmwinter Stuttgart takes up developments and impulses within the international filmmaking and artistic scene and offers an initial public platform. For the first time Media Space will be an independent section within the overall Filmwinter programme.

    Seven Competition Programmes show the best films competing for the "Norman 2008", the "Team Work Award" and the Wand 5 Honorary Award. 75 films were selected out of the 1,400 submissions in the field of film and video. An international jury -- Pia Maria Martin (Germany), Torsten Zenas Burns (USA), and Mário Micaelo (Portugal) -- will select the winners.

    Further highlights of the Short Film Supporting Programme are the first presentation of Italian artist Roberta Torre's body of work, with the artist being present at all screenings, a presentation of the Swiss Super8 film scene curated by Kilian Dellers, and Pop in Video Art -- a selection showing works of video art and from the huge amount of video clips such as among others "How does it make you feel?" -- music: Air, "Smiley faces" -- music: Gnarls Barkley, and "Bonnie & Clyde" -- music: Brigitte Bardot & Serge Gainsbourg.

    The Experimental Film Programme HHORRRAUTICA curated by Torsten Zenas Burns representing our sexual evolution, and APPORTMANTEAU curated by Torsten Zenas Burns and Darrin Martin presenting video works that take up a language on a bumpy path.

    In the competition category Media in Space international artists compete for a prize of 2,500 Euros. The spectrum ranges from classic video installations to interactive environments and media sculptures.
    The 10-day long exhibition, featuring artist such as Peter Bogers and Daniel Aschwanden among others, is held in co-operation with exhibition spaces Kunstbezirk -- Galerie im Gustav-Siegle-Haus, fluctuating images e.V., and gez. -- Raum für Urheber.

    Artistic works in the field of Net Art, Virtual Communities, Interactive Forms of Narration, and Artistic Software compete for the "Online Prize". 14 works, among others by ubermorgen.com, can be seen at terminals at Filmhaus Stuttgart during the time of the festival. The winners will be selected by renown artists Birgit Brenner (Germany), Markus Huemer, (Germany), Szabolcs KissPál, (Hungary).

    As part of Media Space a scientific Symposium on the topic "Playgrounds
    -- Children, Media, Space"- will be held at Filmhaus Stuttgart from 18.
    --20. January 2008, exploring the relations of adolescents and Media as an expanded parlour game.

    A comprehensive Festival catalogue will be published.

    All programmes, texts and dates can be found at http://www.filmwinter.de

    The Filmwinter Stuttgart and Media Space are held and organized by Wand 5 e.V. founded in 1987 as an initiative of filmmakers, architects and art historians. The aim of the organization is to offer an international platform to independent film and media culture.

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  • Tank TV: The whole world

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    The Whole World

    Curated by Ian White

    1st January 2008 – 1st March 2008

    tanktv_flowers1.jpg

    The
    Whole
    World
    is a list of lists: a programme of artists' film and video and an interactive online exhibition.

    Both a formal device and a political strategy,
    film and video that deploys a list as part of its structure often does
    so with political intent: to subvert hierarchies, to undermine
    rationalism or to reveal contradiction. In contemporary culture the
    pop chart's Top 10 has been replaced by an ever-expanding craze for
    "Top 100s" of everything from Hollywood genres to celebrity gaffes. The Whole World attempts to wrestle back

    the initiative…

    A selection of artists' film and video that
    feature lists or different kinds of taxonomies - visual, audio or
    textual – are presented as an online exhibition of extracts. Works by
    Dalia Neis, Uriel Orlow, Jean-Gabirel Périot, Michael Robinson and
    Valerie Tevere take as their subject such wildly diverse lists as
    depictions of saints, everything on Ebay, magazine advertising, our
    mediated world, protest, violence and war, the pages of National Geographic magazine and the words spoken by people on
    the streets of New York. Text scrolls across the
    screen, images flash past, immersive landscapes ultimately
    disintegrate. Many things are logged and something is undone.

    At the same time, viewers are invited to contribute to
    the
    programme by uploading their own video list, be that an extract from an existing work or something made specially for the purpose, to compile a unique, exponential collection: an extraordinary list of lists, of
    the world as we know it – the whole
    world
    .

    The Whole World is situated somewhere between
    the

    absurd and obsessive enterprises of Flaubert's eponymous characters
    Bouvard and Pecuchet (they hopelessly collect and explore until,
    exhausted, they revert to their original jobs as copy clerks) and the Japanese animated game Katamari in which players roll all matter – objects, buildings, landscapes,
    the
    world itself - into snowballing globes of stuff. The Whole


    World
    is ridiculous and irreverent, ambitious and viral.

    Programme
    Dalia Neis, Saints, 2005 / Jean Gabriel Periot, 21.04.02, 2002 / Uriel Orlow, Everything in Red, Yellow, Blue and Green, 2006 /
    Michael Robinson, You Don't Bring Me Flowers, 2005 / Valerie Tevere, When I Say / Valerie Tevere & Angel Navarez, Freque
    ncy Allocations / Martha Rosler, Semiotics of the Kitchen, 1975

    Submitted work will be selected to join
    The Whole World as well as
    tank.tv's programme on the CASZartscreen in Amsterdam.

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  • Artists' Television Access' Year-end Party and Benefit

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    Join us for a night of magic and mystery at the ATA Electric Revival
    year-end party, as we invoke the wild spirit of invention and channel
    dreams and delusions from the ether through various forms of technology...

    Friday, December 7, 2007
    8pm - Midnight, Admission $10-50.
    All proceeds benefit ATA!

    Artists' Television Access
    992 Valencia Street (at 21st)
    San Francisco, CA 94110

    In the main gallery:

    • DayV Jones, videollusionist extraordinaire, dazzles the house with
      images from his moving picture trove
    • DJX-1138, the Bay Area's only all-analog sci-fi DJ, electrifies the
      atmosphere with his collection of far out tunes
    • Lee Montgomery, founder of Neighborhood Public Radio, conjures old
      spectres in a new video installation, from the project "Broadcast
      Version"

    Downstairs in the inner sanctum:

    • Craig Baldwin, legendary mad cinema scientist, shares celluloid gems
      from the Other Cinema archive in his subterranean laboratory
    • Low Speed Duplicating, free-spirited Japanese sound duo, beckon spirits
      from the earth with savage and sublime psychedelic noise

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  • LFF 2007: Avant-Garde Weekend

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    lff07.jpgLa edición de este año del London Film Festival nos trae de nuevo su fin de semana de cine de vanguardia, Experimenta. En la última semana de Octubre, se podrán ver diversos programas de cortos, comisariados por Mark Webber, sobre temas como la identidad, la percepción poética de la naturaleza o la revisitación del pasado. A destacar, nuevas obras de Ken Jacobs, Peter Hutton y Robert Beavers, nuevas versiones restauradas de los filmes de Carolee Schneemann Fuses y Kitch’s Last Meal y un taller práctco con David Gatten 'sobre el uso del texto en la cinematografía de 16mm'.

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