@article {expcin15982, title = {film{\textthreesuperior} [{\textquoteleft}kju:bIk fIlm]: New Cubic Films from the Netherlands}, year = {2010}, pages = {392 pp}, publisher = {Amsterdam University Press}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {

In 2004 the Filmbank and the Filmmuseum in Amsterdam published mm2: Experimental Film in the Netherlands, a survey of the classical avant-garde film in the Netherlands. Since then, the media landscape has undergone major changes, and a generation of directors offering fresh perspectives and innovative techniques has emerged. These new developments are the motivation behindfilm3. The editors bring together eleven in-depth interviews with young Dutch visual artists in which they discuss their work and motivation, examine avant-garde filmmaking in the Netherlands during the past decade, and forecast the future of the genre.

}, keywords = {Dutch Film}, isbn = {9789089641991}, author = {Anna Abrahams and Claartje Opdam and Mariska Graveland} } @book {expcin15997, title = {Experimental Film and Video: An Anthology}, year = {2006}, pages = {302 pp}, publisher = {John Libbey Publishing}, organization = {John Libbey Publishing}, address = {Eastleigh}, abstract = {

The past 40 years of technological innovation have significantly altered the materials of production and revolutionized the possibilities for experiment and exhibition. Not since the invention of film has there been such a critical period of major change in the imaging technologies accessible to artists. Bringing together key artists in film, video, and digital media, the anthology of Experimental Film and Video revisits the divergent philosophical and critical discourses of the 1970s and repositions these debates relative to contemporary practice. Forty artists have contributed images, and 25 artists reflect on the diverse critical agendas, contexts, and communities that have affected their practice across the period from the late 1960s to date. Along with an introduction by Jackie Hatfield and forewords by Sean Cubitt and Al Rees, this illustrated anthology includes interviews and recent essays by filmmakers, video artists, and pioneers of interactive cinema. Experimental Film and Video opens up the conceptual avenues for future practice and related critical writing.

}, keywords = {Andrew K{\~o}tting, Anthony McCall, Brad Butler, Catherine Elwes, Chantal Akerman, Chris Meigh-Andrews, Chris Welsby, Daniel Reeves, David Critchley, David Hall, David Larcher, George Barber, Grahame Weinbren, Guy Sherwin, Jackie Hatfield, Jayne Parker, Jeremy Welsh, Jo Ann Millet, John Smith, Karen Mirza, Katherine Meynell, Kayla Parker, Lis Rhodes, Malcolm Le Grice, Mike Leggett, Nicky Hamlyn, Nina Danino, Peter Gidal, Rob Gawthrop, Sarah Pucill, Stephen Hawley, Stephen Littman, Stephen Partridge, Tamara Krikorian, texts by artists, Tina Keane, Tony Sinden, Vicky Smith, William Raban}, isbn = {978-0-86196-906-7}, author = {Susanna Poole and Gareth Evans and Stephen Littman and Grahame Weinbren and Peter Gidal and Chris Welsby and Nicky Hamlyn and Jayne Parker and Rob Gawthrop and Anthony McCall and Lis Rhodes and Sarah Pucill and Nina Danino and Katherine Meynell and David Critchley and Chris Meigh-Andrews and Andrew K{\~o}tting and Daniel Reeves and Vicky Smith and Karen Mirza and Brad Butler and Stephen Partridge and Catherine Elwes and Malcolm Le Grice and Mike Leggett}, editor = {Jackie Hatfield} } @book {expcin15983, title = {mm2: Experimental Film in the Netherlands since 1960}, year = {2004}, pages = {286 pp}, publisher = {Filmbank, Uitgeverij de Balie}, organization = {Filmbank, Uitgeverij de Balie}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {

mm2 presents an overall picture of experimental film in the Netherlands since 1960. Each and every film mentioned is an expression of an inquiring mentality that, for each film convention, poses the question whether or not it can be done differently. The book contains a historical review, sixteen extensive interviews with authoritative experimental filmmakers and more than a hundred filmographies. Issued with a DVD entitled "Cadavre exquis : le cadvre exquis verra le film nouveau", a documentary film directed by Anna Abrahams and produced by Rongwrong. The film includes interviews with several experimental filmmakers as well as excerpts of their work.

}, keywords = {Dutch Film}, isbn = {9789066173064}, author = {Anna Abrahams and Mariska Graveland and Peter van Hoof and Erwin van {\textquoteleft}t Hart} } @article {expcin15979, title = {Placing spaces, spacing places : Canadian experimental films \& videos since 1990}, year = {2003}, pages = {35 pp}, publisher = {Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery}, address = {Halifax}, abstract = {

Contents:

}, keywords = {Canadian Cinema}, isbn = {9781894518161}, author = {Gerda Cammaer and Paulette Phillips and Dennis Day and Manon Labreque and Daniel Cockburn and Gunilla Josephson and Ian Toews and Paul Landon and Michael Yaroshevsky and Barbara Sternberg and Jean Th{\'e}berge and Jason Britski and Phillip Hoffman and Michael Crocheti{\`e}re and Emanuel Avenel and Marie-France Giraudon and Nelson Henricks and Kika Thorne and John Price and Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay and Serge Cardinal and Nikki Forrest} } @book {expcin15994, title = {Experimental Cinema: The Film Reader}, year = {2002}, pages = {356 pp}, publisher = {Routledge}, organization = {Routledge}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

Brings together key writings on American avant-garde cinema to explore the long tradition of underground filmmaking from its origins in the 1920s to the work of contemporary film and video artists.

}, keywords = {Agn{\`e}s Varda, Andy Warhol, Barbara Hammer, Black cinema, Carolee Schneemann, Chantal Akerman, Female cinema, Gay cinema, Germaine Dulac, Hollis Frampton, Jack Smith, Kenneth Anger, Maya Deren, Michael Snow, Stan Brakhage, Su Friedrich, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Warren Sonbert, Yoko Ono}, isbn = {9780415277877}, author = {Jan-Christopher Horak and Jonas Mekas and Lauren Rabinovitz and Agn{\`e}s Varda and Juan Antonio Su{\'a}rez and Suranjan Ganguly and Jerry Tartaglia and Kate Haug and Reva Wolf and Daryl Chin and Yoko Ono and P.Adams Sitney and Scott MacDonald and Philip Lopate and David Ehrenstein and Peter Gidal and Chris Holmlund and Gloria J. Gibson and Kobena Mercer}, editor = {Wheeler Winston-Dixon and Gwendolyn Audrey Foster} } @book {expcin16091, title = {The German Experimental Film of the Seventies}, year = {1980}, pages = {48 pp}, publisher = {Goethe-Institut}, organization = {Goethe-Institut}, address = {Munich}, abstract = {

Fine softcover illustrated exhibit catalog. With cards on Dore O. Nekes, Bastian Clev{\'e}, Wilhelm and Birgit Hein, Klaus Wyborny, Heinz Emigholz, Werner Nekes.

}, keywords = {Bastian Clev{\'e}, Birgit Hein, Dore O, German Cinema, Heinz Emigholz, Klaus Wyborny, Werner Nekes, Wilhelm Hein}, editor = {Ulrich Gregor} } @book {expcin15991, title = {The Avant-garde Film: A Reader of Theory and Criticism}, series = { Anthology film archives}, number = {3}, year = {1978}, pages = {295 pp}, publisher = {New York University Press}, organization = {New York University Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

This anthology is both a history of the avant-garde film genre and a compendium of theories of cinema articulated by major filmmakers. The 33 selections include several previously unpublished theoretical and critical articles and many articles that were especially translated into English for this collection. Other selections were drawn from interviews and from lectures contained in the Anthology Film Archives.

}, keywords = {Andy Warhol, Anthony McCall, Antonin Artaud, Ernie Gehr, Germaine Dulac, Hans Richter, Harry Smith, Hollis Frampton, James Broughton, James Whitney, Jean Epstein, John Whitney, Jonas Mekas, Joseph Cornell, Maya Deren, Michael Snow, Paul Sharits, Peter Kubelka, Sergei Eisenstein, Sidney Peterson, Stan Brakhage, Tony Conrad}, isbn = {9780814777930}, author = {P.Adams Sitney and Sergei Eisenstein and Hans Richter and Jean Epstein and Germaine Dulac and Antonin Artaud and Joseph Cornell and Maya Deren and Sidney Peterson and James Broughton and John Whitney and James Whitney and Harry Smith and Carel Rowe and Stan Brakhage and Peter Kubelka and Stephen Koch and Annette Michelson and Michael Snow and Jonas Mekas and Ernie Gehr and Anthony McCall and Paul Sharits and Tony Conrad and Hollis Frampton} } @book {expcin15990, title = {Structural Film Anthology}, year = {1976}, pages = {144 pp}, publisher = {British Film Institute}, organization = {British Film Institute}, address = {London}, abstract = {

{\textquotedblleft}This anthology of texts about what have been termed Structural Films attempts to bring together some of the more important essays and articles on those films which have formed the core of film work in this field since its inception. It is a first attempt to bring together texts from Europe, Britain and the United States. In the past we have been inundated with the parochial, American view of avant-garde film work, as expounded on both sides of the Atlantic. This anthology was published to coincide with the series of eighteen programmes, Structural Film Retrospective, at the National Film Theatre, London, in May 1976.

As it happened, no film-maker was included in the programmes who had not produced relevant work before 1971, though many works were from after that year. No new films were introduced; this was a retrospective programme intended to enable a viewing that saw each film in the context of each other film, that could recognise alliances and misalliances between films, that could attempt to deal with the individual filmworks and the critical practice which preceded or followed.

In some cases, the critical practice here is a virtually complete repression through ideology of the text of the film; in the gaps presented work can now take place. The lengths of the sections are dictated by the materials of interest available, and unfortunately in a few cases only very slight material existed. I hope that the selection will not offend; the younger Americans have been left out, as have many of the younger British, because of the wish for a solid retrospective programme as elucidated above. No doubt there are quite a few film-makers completely unknown to me, and to nearly everyone else, who have done and may be doing very important work, and whose work remains {\textquoteleft}out of view{\textquoteright} for a variety of sociological reasons, none of which are praiseworthy. I wish to thank all the film-makers and writers, obviously.

For this reprint nothing has been changed, though a few minor errors have been corrected and Ben Brewster{\textquoteright}s review of the Anthology inScreen has been included as an afterward. I call attention to the {\textquoteleft}Theory and Definition of Structural/Materialist Film{\textquoteright} article in its original form in Studio International (November 1975), and to Deke Dusinberre{\textquoteright}s article relating to it in Screen (Summer 1977). P.G., January 1978" (Introduction)

}, keywords = {Birgit Hein, David Crosswaite, Fred Drummond, George Landow, Gill Eatherley, Hollis Frampton, John Du Cane, Joyce Wieland, Ken Jacobs, Kurt Kren, Malcolm Le Grice, materialist film, Michael Snow, Mike Dunford, Mike Leggett, Paul Sharits, Peter Gidal, Peter Kubelka, Roger Hammond, structural film, Tony Conrad, Wilhelm Hein, William Raban}, isbn = {9780851700533}, url = {http://monoskop.org/log/?p=2612}, author = {Peter Gidal and Malcolm Le Grice and Michael Snow and Hollis Frampton and Mike Dunford and Paul Sharits and Jonas Mekas and Birgit Hein and Gill Eatherley and George Landow and Fred Camper and William Raban and Fred Drummond and David Curtis and Ben Brewster and John Du Cane and Regina Cornwell and Gordon Gow and Simon Hartog and Annette Michelson and Lois Mendelson and Verina Glaessner} }