Events

  • Light Industry: Riddles of the Sphinx

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    Light Industry: Riddles of the Sphinx
    Tuesday, January 12, 2010 at 7:30pm
    220 36th Street (between 2nd and 3rd Avenue), 5th floor
    11232, Brooklyn, NY, USA
    Introduced by Emma Hedditch

    Riddles of the Sphinx
    Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen, 16mm, 1977, 90 mins

    Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen's film addresses the position of women in patriarchy through the prism of psychoanalysis. Riddles of the Sphinx draws on the critical writings and investigations by both filmmakers into the codes of narrative cinema, and offers an alternative formal structure through which to consider the images and meanings of female representation in film.

    The film is constructed in three sections and 13 chapters, combining Mulvey's own to-camera readings around the myth of Oedipus's encounter with the Sphinx with a series of very slow 360 degree panning shots encompassing different environments, from the domestic to the professional. Louise, the narrative's female protagonist, is represented through a fragmented use of imagery and dialogue, in an attempt to break down the conventional narrative structures of framing and filming used to objectify and fetishise women in mainstream cinema. This could be seen as a formal development of the Lacanian analyses that Mulvey had applied to the female image in film in essays such as 1975's 'Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema' (in Screen).

    Riddles of the Sphinx attempts to construct a new relationship between the viewer and the female subject, presenting her through multiple female voices and viewpoints. The dialogue, constructed from the different voices of Louise, her friends and fellow workers, brings a shifting and ambiguous range of meanings to the film, in contrast to the explanatory authority associated with a conventional voice-over. Other voices and images from outside the film's narrative world also question and disrupt pre-supposed meanings and symbols of the woman within and without the screen; from the mythical enigma of the Sphinx to the appearances of artist Mary Kelly and Mulvey herself.

    As Mulvey herself subsequently put it, "What recurs overall is a constant return to woman, not indeed as a visual image, but as a subject of inquiry, a content which cannot be considered within the aesthetic lines laid down by traditional cinematic practice." - Lucy Reynolds

    Tickets - $7, available at door.

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  • Light Industry: Five Films by Joyce Wieland

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    Light Industry: Five Films by Joyce Wieland
    Wednesday, January 6, 2010 at 7:30pm
    220 36th Street (between 2nd and 3rd Avenue), 5th floor
    11232, Brooklyn, NY, USA
    Presented in collaboration with X-initiative
    Introduced by Emily Roysdon

    When she came to the US from Toronto in the early 1960s, Joyce Wieland was already known in Canada as a painter who explored themes of female existence in ways that were often controversially explicit, but once in New York she also began working in Super-8 and 16mm. Along with Hollis Frampton, Paul Sharits, and her husband Michael Snow, Wieland became one of the circle of artists who defined the first generation of structural film (she held the distinction of being the only woman mentioned in P. Adams Sitney's seminal essay which described that sensibility). Though as equally attuned as her peers to an advanced, expanded notion of how space and time might function in cinema, Wieland's work also evinces a sharp wit and inventive narrative sense that foreshadows the small-gauge filmmaking of the 1980s and 90s.

    - Handtinting, 16mm, 1967, 6 mins
    Handtinting is the apt title of a film made from outtakes from a Job Corps documentary which features hand-tinted sections. The film is full of small movements and actions, gestures begun and never completed. Repeated images, sometimes in colour, sometimes not. A beautifully realized type of chamber-music film whose sum-total feeling is ritualistic. - Bob Cowan

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  • Luminous Triptych: Experimental Films by Angelina Krahn, Karen Johannesen, Rick Bahto

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    No Festival Required And Deus Ex Machina Present
    Luminous Triptych: Experimental Films by Angelina Krahn, Karen Johannesen, Rick Bahto
    Saturday January 9, 2010 8 pm (doors open at 7:45)
    Deus Ex Machina, 1023 NW Grand Avenue Phoenix AZ 85007

    Admission $6.00 (dollar off for students with i.d. and Support Card members)
    Limited seating, Adult content

    Working from different aesthetic and conceptual backgrounds, the films of these three artists share an ethos of handmade, personal cinema. All films will be screened from actual 16mm and Super 8mm film on actual film projectors!!!

    Angelina Krahn utilizes a wide palette of alternative techniques in her films, perhaps most poignantly in Stigmata Sampler, in which she sewed into the surface of the film to cover up and obscure images of her own body.

    Karen Johannesen’s masterful editing and single-framing techniques serve to embody studies into quantum mechanics, bringing to vision in delicate landscapes a world “teeming with billions of unrealized possibilities”.

    Rick Bahto’s in-camera edited works use the people and places of his everyday life as the basis of studies in movement, rhythm and duration, creating a tension between pre-determined structures and a freedom of improvisation.

    This is the first time any of these films have been seen in Arizona.

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  • Northwest Film Forum: Animated Art

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    Animated Art
    Northwest Film Forum
    Thursday, Jan 07 at 07:00PM
    1515 12th Avenue, Seattle, Wyoming, USA

    Rethinking the boundaries of animation, visual art and experimental filmmaking, this program of films by mostly local talent brings together artists working in different disciplines that are rarely shown together.

    Includes works by; Jon Behrens, Cathy McClure, Martha Colburn, Matthew Cox, Webster Crowell, Stefan Gruber, Salise Hughes, Britta Johnson, Sarah Jane Lapp, Davis Limbach, Tess Martin, Jeffry Mitchell, Amanda Moore, Clyde Peterson, Friese Undine, Drew Christie. Tommy Thompson and Brent Watanabe.

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  • Video Pool presents Dominic Gagnon’s Rip in Pieces America

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    Video Pool presents Dominic Gagnon’s Rip in Pieces America

    December 7, 2009 – January 8, 2010
    Video Pool Studio – 3rd Floor, 100 Arthur St (Artspace building), Winnipeg, Canada
    Tuesday – Saturday: 12:00 – 4:00

    Video Pool is very excited to present the North American premiere of Dominic Gagnon’s Rip in Pieces America, a feature-length, single-channel projection of banned homemade short videos.

    As Gagnon watched video on the Internet, he noticed that certain homemade clips were flagged for their content. As they were disappearing from free hosting sites, he started to save and edit them in a capsule format. Working in a gray zone of copyright law, Gagnon’s collection and grouping of the videos acts as a means of contextualization and preservation.

    Dominic Gagnon is an inventor, director, installer and active performer. He considers cinema as a technique for measuring the immeasurable or as a discipline of chaos. Since 1996, he has made public presentations of moving images and installations, invented machines and concepts, and performed sound works at galleries, festivals and biennials around the world. His recent work, Rip in Pieces America, premiered at the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

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  • tank tv: Open End

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    tank tv: Open End
    15th December 2009 - 7th January 2010

    The online gallery tank.tv ends the year 2009 with a group show titled Open End, presenting selected films and videos from recent discoveries and the great number of submissions they've received throughout the year.

    With works by : Andrew Cross, Dean Kissick, Oreet Ashery, Michael Fortune, Jon Purnell, Oliver Michaels, Mark Shorey, Michael van den Abeele, Matthew Johnstone, Nicholas O'Brien, Katja Aglert, Steven Eastwood, Simon Woolham and Jonathan Monaghan.

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  • The Sixth Annual Brakhage Symposium

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    The Sixth Annual Brakhage Symposium
    A Weekend of Short Works Programs, Lectures, and Discussions
    March 12, 13, and 14, 2010
    University of Colorado at Boulder
    New Visual Arts Complex

    A weekend dedicated to the exploration of new ideas in cinema. Guest curator Ed Halter explores the role of repetition/reuse/and the remake in contemporary artists¹ works. CU faculty Christina Battle and Jennifer Peterson investigate the relationship of the amateur and the Avant-Garde.

    Presenters will include Annette Michelson and Andy Lampert. There will also be a program of home movies from the collection of the Academy Film Archive, presented by archivist Lynne Kirste, as well as a number of short works programs (films, videos, and installations).

    More details will be posted in early January. Stay tuned for more information!
    contact: Don Yannacito and Eric Coombs for more information. Info about past symposia here.

    Sponsors of the 2010 Brakhage Symposium include:
    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the William H. Donner Foundation and the CU Film Studies program.

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