Events

  • Directors Lounge: Phlipp Hartmann | f.k.flumen

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    Directors Lounge: Phlipp Hartmann | f.k.flumenDirectors Lounge: Phlipp Hartmann | f.k.flumen
    Von der Notwendigkeit dessen (Whereby according to necessity)
    Thursday, 27 September 2012, 21h
    Z-Bar, Bergstraße 2, 10115 Berlin-Mitte
    With guest Jan Eichberg

    Philipp Hartmann, whose short film comedies about Karlsruhe called "Der Anner" ("the other, there" in Southern Dialect) have been audience favorites on festivals, also works in very different styles with film, preferably with Super-8, and with much more subtle humor. Tracking the traces of Alexander Humboldt or his grandfather in Latin America, reflecting on the physical-poetical conditions of condensation trails in the sky, or recording the last remnants of an old lady who passed away, he always combines documentary with fictional approaches in such subversive, subtle ways that the viewer at the same time may be following the "movies of his own mind" or his own associations while watching these films. In addition, Philipp Hartmann will present Jan Eichberg as guest artist in the program, who creates short narratives in similar aesthetic ways. Both artists with be present and available for Q&A.

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  • Experimenta Weekend 2012

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    Peter Kubelka working on the Arnulf Rainer installationExperimenta, the avant-garde and experimental films strand of the London Film Festival returns in its 2012 edition (October 19th-21st) with the biggest and broadest programme to date. The main protagonist of the section curated by Mark Webber with assistance from Shama Khanna, is the presentation in Europe of Peter Kubelka's latest work Antiphon (2012), as part of his lecture Monument Film. Kubelka will also be the protagonist of a full retrospective of his work, and of Martina Kudlácek's latest documentary film Fragments of Kubelka (2012).

    The festival opens with the screening of a newly-restored print of Isidore Isou's masterpiece Traité de bave et d'éternité (1951), and will present as always, a selection of the most recent experimental works including the latest films and videos by Nathaniel Dorsky, Jerome Hiler, Luke Fowler, Mati Diop, Beatrice Gibson, Ben Rivers, Laida Lertxundi,... Experimenta will also present present several screenings the precious week coinciding with the Frieze Art Fair, from 10-13 October.

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  • Experimental Film Club: Of Ruins and Light

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    Redshift (Emily Richardson, 2001)Experimental Film Club: Of Ruins and Light
    Friday September 21st 2012, 21h
    Coal Quay carpark Culture Night, Cork.

    This programme of 16mm experimental film works is curated by Esperanza Collado and Aoife Desmond of the Experimental Film Club, Dublin. Their chosen films present expanded representations of time and space; from the earthly to the celestial, from the transience of man's structures on earth, to the vastness of the universe.

    - Scotch Tape (Jack Smith, USA, 1959-1962, 3 minutes, B&W, Sound (optical), 16mm)
    - The End (Patrick Keiller, 18 min, 16mm, B&W, sound (optical), 1986)
    - Stellar (Stan Brakhage, 3 min, Colour, Silent, 16mm, 1993)
    - Origin Of Species (Ben Rivers, 16 minutes, Colour, Sound (Optical), 16mm, UK, 2008)
    - Redshift (Emily Richardson, 4 min, 16mm, colour, sound, 2001)
    - The Cup And The Lip (Warren Sonbert, 20 mins., 16mm, colour, sound, 1986)
    - Observando El Cielo (Jeanne Liotta, 19 mins, 16mm, colour, sound, 2007)
    - Transit Of Venus (Nicky Hamlyn, 2 Min, 16Mm, B&W, Silent, 2005)

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  • Tate Modern: Jeff Keen

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    White Dust (Jeff Keen, 1970-72)Tate Modern: Jeff Keen
    18 September – 23 September 2012
    Part of the series The Tanks: Art in Action
    Tate Modern, Bankside, London SE1 9TG

    Jeff Keen (1923-2012) was a pioneer of experimental film whose rapid-fire animations, multiple screen projections and raucous performances redefined multimedia art in Britain.

    This major installation for The Tanks at Tate Modern was conceived by Keen in response to the unique nature of the Tanks. Featuring a large, dioramic screen, the installation will demonstrate the spirit of Keen’s expanded cinema events, his early experiments in drawing, painting and animation, his fascination with surrealism and popular culture, and his radical development of multiple screen projection, cut-up soundtracks and unruly live action.

    A very special live performance in the Tanks on Friday 21 September at 20.00 will feature projections and live music and actions performed by Keen’s daughter Stella Starr and a range of Keen’s collaborators, including Alan Baker, Chris Blackburn, Rob Gawthrop, Mike Movie and Jason Williams as ‘Silverhead’.

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  • Artists' Film Club: Owen Land

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    Dialogues, or A Waist Is A Terrible Thing To Mind (Owen Land, 2007–09)Artists' Film Club: Owen Land
    Wednesday 19 September 2012, 18:45h
    Institute of Contemporary Arts
    The Mall, London SW1Y 5AH

    The late Owen Land’s final long form work Dialogues, or A Waist Is A Terrible Thing To Mind (2007–09) is an episodic tale of love and hate. Screening in the UK for the first time, it will be supplemented by several of his shorter works. Dialogues “concentrates on the events of Owen Land’s life in 1985, when he returned to Los Angeles after spending a year in Tokyo, Fukuoka, and Okinawa, Japan. […] It was a time for much soulsearching about his relationships with women (and with strippers). There are flashbacks to that very formative period, the 1960s when ‘we won the sexual revolution’ as one character says. Some of the episodes contain events which are more speculative, or imaginative, than literally real.”

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  • Glorious Catastrophes

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    Little Stabs At Happiness (Ken Jacobs, 1958-1963)Glorious Catastrophes
    Wednesday, 31 October 2012, 20:30h
    Beursschouwburg, A. Ortsstraat 20-28, 1000 Brussels
    In collaboration with Courtisane

    “A seriousness that fails”: this is how Susan Sontag described the essence of “camp”, this transient mixture of excess, fantasy, passion and naivety that has taken up a distinctive place in the cultural firmament since the 1960’s. Andy Warhol, who emphatically responded to this trend with his film Camp (1965), saw it differently: he was rather interested in the idea of failure itself, a failure that has to be taken seriously. After all the majority of Warhol’s films consists of observations of people in and as image, who in all their fallibility reveal a genuine authenticity and startling vulnerability. Two characters who play lead roles in Camp also take up a central place in this film programme: Paul Swan and Jack Smith. Warhol’s self-titled portrait of Swan, a dancer and actor who was once lauded as the “most beautiful man in the world” is an as ruthless as affectionate observation of a man who alternately falls in and out of the role of his lifetime. The area of tension between playing and being, playful fantasy and harsh reality, is also the arena of Jack Smith, the “enfant terrible” of the post war American underground scene. The early films Smith made in collaboration with his then confidant Ken Jacobs manifest a brutal beauty and audacious hedonism, unleashing a bewildering vitality not despite but because of their deliberate “trash” esthetics. Between innocence and nonsense, order and disorder, catastrophe and utopia: what the films in this programme have in common, are forms of expression that thrive in relation to their own failing.

    With film works by Andy Warhol, Ken Jacobs, Jack Smith

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