Between the Body and the Eternal: The Cinema of Narcisa Hirsch

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Narcisa Hirsch is one of the foremost figures in the history of Latin American and international experimental film. Born in Germany in 1928, and living in Argentina since her childhood, her name has lurked in the shadows unduly, owing to a twofold “eccentricity”: being a woman and making films that lie outside central spaces constructing the history of this filmic modality: the United States and Europe. 

Yet this binary, off-centre state has not stopped her from being mindful of world movements in experimental film and video art. Her own work, at once domestic and mystical, is related to canonical films and figures from video and experimental art as it constantly shuns imitation and vindicates film as a space of freedom. In Hirsch’s own words: “The freedom of working to a really tight budget is the freedom of not having to sell; the freedom of working in a way that is DIY and artisan, without big teams or stages. I don’t rush either. One frame per day, or one per year. Everyone chooses their time and space, and it’s because of that and everything else that experimental film is a subversive art, more than documentary or political film. More subversive than intellectual or conceptual film. That’s why few go and fewer still remain”.       

Hirsch’s first foray into art was as a painter and draughtswoman in the 1960s, before suddenly leaping into public space, staging happenings in the search for a new kind of spectator. Understanding film and creation as a collective process of work and thought, she has built, since the start of her career, a sturdy community around her filmic and artistic practice, a wide-ranging network of experimental artists and film-makers who came together through the Union of Small-Gauge Film-makers (UNCIPAR), around the Goethe Institute and Di Tella Institute, originally comprising figures such as Marie Louise Alemann, Claudio Caldini, Jorge Honik, Juan José Mugni, Horacio Vallereggio and Juan Villola, who are all, ultimately, key to the formation of Argentina’s independent and experimental scene. A network and solid conception of collectiveness that remains today, and, even at the age of ninety-two, Hirsch holds weekly encounters (in-person before the pandemic, now online) with an extensive network of young film-makers and aficionados of experimental cinema that embrace her work.    

This retrospective is made up of three sessions reflecting some of the must-see pictures in her film oeuvre, made from the 1960s onwards. These works, chosen to engage in dialogue with the film-maker, illuminate spiritual and existential themes: love, birth, death, eroticism and feminine power, orbiting around the materiality of the body. In Narcisa Hirsch’s work domestic scenes and landscapes of inner-city and outlying areas of Buenos Aires and Patagonia function as an amplification of an exploration that is both formal and personal: the body, the eternal, the inside, the outside, movement, that which remains, intimacy and collectivity.

This programme is framed inside a joint project between Museo Reina Sofía and Documenta Madrid, an international film festival promoted by Madrid’s City Council and returning this year, in 2020, in a hybrid format combining in-person and online formats.

Friday, 11 December 2020 – 7pm/ Sabatini Building, AuditoriumSession 1. First session. Filming Performance

  • Marabunta (Swarm) (Argentina, 1967, b/w, sound, 16 mm transferred to digital, 7’55’’)Filming and editing by Raymundo Gleyzer. Lead roles: Narcisa Hirsch, Marie Louise Alemann and Walther Mejía
  • Muñecos (Dolls)/Have a Baby (Argentina, USA and UK, 1972, colour, silent, Super-8 transferred to digital, 15’31’’)
  • Manzanas (Apples) (Argentina, 1973, colour, original version in Spanish, 16 mm transferred to digital, 4’)
  • La noche bengalí (The Bengali Night), co-directed with Werner Nekes (Argentina, 1980, colour, silent, 16 mm transferred to digital, 6’30’’)
  • Testamento y vida interior (Testament and Inner Life) (Argentina, 1976, colour, sound, video transferred to digital, 10’38’’)
  • Retrato de una artista como ser humano (Portrait of a Woman Artist as a Human Being) (Argentina, 1973, colour, sound, video transferred to digital, 15’51’’)

Saturday, 12 December 2020 – 5pm / Sabatini Building, AuditoriumSession 2. Landscape and Experience

  • Rumi (Argentina, 1995–1999, colour, sound, 16 mm transferred to digital, 27’)
  • A-Dios (Argentina, 1989, colour, sound, Super-8 transferred to digital, 22’)
  • Patagonia 2 (Argentina, 1976, colour, sound, Super-8 transferred to digital, 9’56’’)

Sunday, 13 December 2020 – 12:30pm / Sabatini Building, AuditoriumSession 3. Experiments with Experimentation

  • Taller (Workshop) (Argentina, 1971, colour, original version in Spanish, 16 mm transferred to digital, 10’)
  • Come out (Argentina, 1971, colour, sound, 16 mm transferred to digital, 11’)
  • Ama-zona (Argentina, 1983, colour, sound, Super-8 transferred to digital, 10’38’’)
  • Canciones napolitanas (Neapolitan Songs) (Argentina, 1971, colour, sound, 16 mm transferred to digital, 10’)
  • Aleph (Argentina, 2005, colour, original version in Spanish, Betacam SP transferred to digital, 1’)
  • Myst (Argentina, 2019, colour, original version in Spanish and English, video transferred to digital, 15’)

Venue: 

Dates: 

Friday, December 11, 2020 (All day) to Sunday, December 13, 2020 (All day)

Category: 

Dates: 

Friday, December 11, 2020 (All day) to Sunday, December 13, 2020 (All day)
  • Santa Isabel, 52
    28012   Madrid
    España
    40° 24' 30.8304" N, 3° 41' 38.526" W