Events

  • LaViolaBank Gallery: Ouside in

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    Tunnel light (Leighton Pierce) (from Agrancy of Time series)Outside In
    Curated by Mary Dailey Pattee
    September 17 - October 18, 2009
    Private view 6-9pm, September 16
    LaViolaBank Gallery / 179 East Broadway / New York NY 10002

    LaViolaBank Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of “Outside In,” a group exhibition curated by Mary Dailey Pattee and featuring the work of six artists: Daphne Arthur, Marina Berio, Diane Carr, Mira O’Brien, Leighton Pierce and Christopher Saunders.
    Outside In is a multi-media exploration of the connection between real space and the landscape of the subjective mind. Drawing on land, sea, sky and the atmosphere of imagined vistas, the artists in this exhibition engage the landscape tradition as a means of addressing broader questions related to entropy, destruction and renewal in the contemporary world.

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  • Views from the Avant-Garde 2009

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    night side (Rebecca Meyers, 2009)The NYFF's experimental film strand, 'Views from the Avant-Garde' that will be held next October 2-4 in the Walter Reade Theater reaches its 13th edition with eleven programmes of experimental film and video.
    Among the many highlights of the festival, a tribute to the figure of Chick Strand, a reconstruction of Passolini's found-footage essay film La Rabbia and new works by Phil Solomon, Peggy Ahwesh, Lewis Klahr, Michael Robinson, Deborah Stratman, Lynne Sachs, David Gatten, Harun Farocki,Leslie Thornton, Ernie Gehr and many others.
    Curated by Mark McElhatten & Gavin Smith.

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  • LA Filmforum: A tribute to Chick Strand

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    September 13, 7:30 pm at the Egyptian Theater

    Los Angeles Filmforum presents A Tribute to Chick Strand

    Chick Strand, photo by Neon Park, from Canyon Cinema

    Chick Strand, photo by Neon Park, from Canyon Cinema

    At the Egyptian Theatre, 6712 Hollywood Blvd. at Las Palmas, Los Angeles, 90028  $10 general, $6 students/seniors, free for Filmforum members

    Filmmaker, artist, teacher, joyful marvel, force of life… Chick Strand passed away on July 11, and our city and our lives won’t be the same. For those of you who knew her, and those of you who didn’t, Chick was a marvelous and inspirational filmmaker and person, the artful person whom one was always delighted to see, an essential person who made the world a better place.

    “With her camera, Strand does not “document” her subjects–she creates lyrical representations. She is not afraid to look through her lens as a person; questioning, admiring, and honoring what she sees. Just as she brings poeticism and the personal into ethnography, she infuses an integrity, honesty, and selflessness into her works that few people can manage.” – Pablo de Ocampo

    “…For most of her filmmaking career, the integrity of Strand’s vision lay aslant of prevailing fashions, so that only belatedly did the full significance of her radically pioneering work in ethnographic, documentary, feminist, and compilation filmmaking – and above all, in the innovation of a unique film language created across these modes – become clear.  Though feminism and other currents of her times are woven through her films and though her powerful teaching presence sustained the ideals of underground film in several film schools in the city, hers was essentially a school-of-one.” – David James, in The Most Typical Avant-Garde: History and Geography of Minor Cinemas in Los Angeles (University of  California Press, 2005) p. 358.

    Appreciation by Holly Willis:

    http://kcet.org/local/blogs/blur_sharpen/2009/07/goodbye-chick-strand.html

    Article by Pablo de Ocampo in the Portland Mercury from 2001:

    http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/Content?oid=24537&category=22133

    Paintings by Chick Strand:

    http://www.laluzdejesus.com/shows/previousshows/2000shows/chickstrand.htm

    There is an extensive discussion of Strand and her films in David James’s The Most Typical Avant-Garde: History and Geography of Minor Cinemas in Los Angeles (University of  California Press, 2005), pp. 357-367.

    Tonight we’ll be running a wide range of the glorious gamut of her work, and one treat from her husband.  Curated by filmmaker Amy Halpern.  Prints courtesy of the Academy Film Archive, by arrangement with Canyon Cinema.

    ANGEL BLUE SWEET WINGS (1966, 3 min., 16mm)

    An experimental film poem in celebration of life and visions. Techniques include live action, animation, montage and found images.

    GUACAMOLE (1976, 18 min., 16mm)

    Poetic surrealism. Approach is experimental in relationship of image and sound. A film about the loss of innocence and the search for the essence of the human spirit.

    CARTOON LE MOUSSE (1979, 15 min., 16mm)

    “Chick Strand is a prolific and prodigiously gifted film artist who seems to break new ground with each new work. Her recent “found footage” works such as CARTOON LE MOUSSE, are extraordinarily beautiful, moving, visionary pieces that push this genre into previously unexplored territory. If poetry is the art of making evocative connections between otherwise dissimilar phenomena, then Chick Strand is a great poet, for these films transcend their material to create a surreal and sublime universe beyond reason.” – Gene Youngblood

    WAR ZONE by Marty Muller, aka Neon Park (1971, 3 min.)

    Made with Chickie nearby.

    BY THE LAKE (1986, 9,5 min., 16mm)

    A collage film made from Third World images and found sound from a 1940s radio show (”I Love a Mystery”), live recordings of an operation on a horse, and a 1970s church service, all taken out of context and reconstructed into new relationships and meanings. An Anglo woman’s interpretation of magic realism.

    WATERFALL (1967, 3 min., 16mm)

    A film poem using found film and stock footage altered by printing, home development and solarization. It is a film using visual relationships to invoke a feeling of flow and movement. Japanese Koto music.

    KRISTALLNACHT (1979, 7 min., 16mm)

    Dedicated to the memory of Anne Frank, and the tenacity of the human spirit.

    Elasticity

    Elasticity

    ELASTICITY (1976, 25 min., 16mm)

    Impressionistic surrealism in three acts. The approach is literary experimental with optical effects. There are three mental states that are interesting: amnesia, euphoria and ecstasy. Amnesia is not knowing who you are and wanting desperately to know. I call this the White Night. Euphoria is not knowing who you are and not caring. This is the Dream of Meditation. Ecstasy is knowing exactly who you are and still not caring. I call this the Memory of the Future.  This is an autobiographical film funded by the American Film Institute.

    After graduating from Berkeley with a degree in anthropology, Strand threw herself into the cultural ferment of the Bay Area in the 1960s, especially Canyon Cinema, where she was one of its founders and instigators, with Bruce Baillie.  After four years she moved to Los Angeles to study at UCLA and joined the newly formed Ethnographic Film Program.  Meeting Pat O’Neill, who was at that time beginning his experiments with the optical printer, she made Waterfall (1967), a film that solarized and otherwise re-worked both live-action and found footage in the vein of contemporary West Coast psychedelia.  This overall aesthetic continued to inform Strand’s work, but it was sharpened and made more serious by her encounter with what seemed an entirely contrary idiom, that of documentary ethnography.  She did not get involved with the Hollywood film industry, but taught film for twenty years at Occidental College.  She also painted extensively.  Her second husband was Marty Muller, known more widely as the artist Neon Park, and she had one son, Eric Strand, a film editor. – Largely drawn from The Most Typical Avant-Garde: History and Geography of Minor Cinemas in Los Angeles (University of California Press, 2005), pp. 358

    “Her passing comes to me and others at Canyon Cinema with great sadness….Chick was one of the founders of Canyon Cinema and the Cinematheque. She always supported Canyon in all of the endeavors that have been done in the past. Personally she and I became close over the years and I could always count on her for advice in matters of Canyon and also on a very personal level.
    I will miss her greatly and her passing is a loss to the entire community. The experimental film community has lost a great human being. Her absence will be felt for some time.” – Dominic Angerame, Executive Director, Canyon Cinema

    Chick Strand changed my life. A great teacher, a great filmmaker, a great human being. I am so grateful to have met her and learned from her. I would not be who I am today had I not met her. I was just one of so many students, but she was and will forever be a gigantic presence in my soul. – Brook Hinton, filmmaker

    This screening series is supported, in part, by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission and the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.

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  • Light Industry: Ulrike Ottinger's Taiga

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    Taiga
    Ulrike Ottinger, 16mm, 1991/2, 501 mins
    Light Industry
    Saturday, September 12, 2009 at 1:00pm
    220 36th Street, 5th Floor
    Brooklyn, New York

    Presented by Ginger Brooks Takahashi

    "Taiga is Ulrike Ottinger's eight hour documentary film on life in Northern Mongolia, a journey to the yak and reindeer nomads. For this presentation at Light Industry, we will watch the film in its entirety. Food will be served, but please also bring things to share. Attempts and interpretations of the region's cuisine are encouraged--yak butter and various ferments? English translations of the transcript will be provided to the audience to read along.

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  • LFF: Experimenta 09 programme

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    FILM IST. a girl & a gun (Gustav Deutsch, 2009)Compared to previous years' editions, the 53rd London Film Festival's avant-garde and experimental film section Experimenta 'opens up', offering this year a wide selection of feature and short films emphasizing the 'avant-garde' versus the 'experimental' strand.
    Nevertheless, the Experimenta section offers this year the possibility to watch wonderful films such as the restored new prints of Hollis Frampton's Hapax Legomena, the 13th part in Gustav Deutsch's series FILM IST, A girl and a gun, and other works by Mara Mattuschka & Chris Haring, Ken Jacobs, David Gatten, Matthias Müller & Christoph Giradet, Laida Lertxundi and Jim Trainor among others.

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  • 4th Annual ATA Film & Video Festival

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    My Tears Are Dry (Laida Lertxundi, 2009)Artists' Television Access has announced the full programme of its 4th Annual ATA Film & Video Festival, to be held next October 21-23 in San Francisco. Three days full of activities including an interesting workshop on experimental film distribution and exhibition, gallery installations and two programmes of experimental film from local and international filmmakers, such as Paul Clipson, Kerry Laitala, Tommy Becker, Maarit Suomi-Väänänen, Chris Kennedy, Laida Lertxundi and Martha Colburn.
    Complete information available at the festival's website.

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  • Impakt 2009: Accelerated Living screenings

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    pohjola_routemaster2In the context of the programme “Accelerated Living”, part of IMPAKT FESTIVAL 2009, 14-18 October 2009, Utrecht, NL. Preview here.

    All screenings @ Filmtheater ‘t Hoogt

    It seems as if time is increasingly out of joint. We no longer experience time as a succession or an acceleration of events, but rather as something adrift in a fragmented world of information stimuli, out of the realm of chronology and linearity. What is the impact of this evolution on our perception patterns? How do the different internal, natural, social and technological rhythms relate to each other and influence our daily sensory perception? What is the role and potential of cinema, together with music, the art form most particularly devoted to the shaping force of time? These and other questions will be explored through a series of contemporary and historic film and video works addressing the relation between space, movement, technology and (our experience of) time. Via Diagonal Thoughts.

     

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  • 16th Chicago Underground Film Festival programme

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    chicago_underground_2009Here's the full programme for the 16th edition of the Chicago Underground Film Festival, that will be held next 10-17 September at the Gene Siskel Film Center. Via Badlit.

    Sept. 10
    8:00 p.m.: It Came From Kuchar, dir. Jennifer Kroot. A documentary on the life of twin pioneering underground filmmakers, George and Mike Kuchar, who directed such classics as Hold Me When I’m Naked and Sins of the Fleshapoids.

    Sept. 11
    6:00 p.m.: “An Open Relationship with Vannevar Bush”
    A New Ecology For The Citizen of the Digital Age, dir. Nick Briz
    Model Homes, dir. Nick O’Brien
    Somewhere Only We Know, dir. Jesse Mclean
    The Return Of The Black Tower, dir. Jennet Thomas
    es/ Synch Up Elements (Version Five), dir. Stom Sogo
    Mistake of a Hedge Monster, dir. Harvey Benschoter
    MEHOH (VR1a), dir. Jon Satrom
    Untitled (2 Axes), dir. Timothy McConville
    What-If?, dir. Torsten Zenas Burns & Darren Martin

    6:15 p.m.: The Boy With the Sun in His Eyes, dir. Todd Verow. A gay man distraught by the death of his lover travels to Europe with a former B-movie scream queen while she shoots a pilot for a new travel show.

    8:00 p.m.: Impolex, dir. Alex Ross Perry. A WWII GI goes on a lonely mission to find undetonated German V-2 rockets.

    8:00 p.m.: “Breaking the Bank”
    Paying Tax Is Sexy, dir. Eva Linder
    Payroll: From the Passive Aggressive Series, dir. Noah Klersfeld
    A Necessary Music, dir. Beatrice Gibson and Alex Waterman
    Dropping Furniture, dir. Harald Hund & Paul Horn
    Resonance, dir. Karel De Cock

    Sept. 12
    3:00 p.m.: “This Must Be the Place”
    Trypps #6 (Malobi), dir. Ben Russell
    Developer, dir. Karthik Pandian
    Arcadia, Downtown, dir. Yaron Lapid
    Wound Footage, dir. Thorsten Fleisch
    American Dreams # 4, dir. Moira Tierney
    Transmissions, dir. Grey Gerstein
    Dick Cheney in a Cold Dark Cell, dir. Jim Finn
    Dogs of Straw, dir. Yin-Ju Chen & James T. Hong

    5:00 p.m.: The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia, dir. Julian Nitzberg. A portrait of the infamous family that lives in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains.

    5:00 p.m.: “The Watchful Eye”
    Freude (Delight), dir. Thomas Draschen
    The Citizens, dir. Jerome Everson
    The Image World, dir. Adele Horne
    San Quentin, CA 94964, dir. Katherin McInnis
    Boy/Analysis: An Abridgement of Melanie Klein’s “Narrative of a Child Analysis”, dir. Steve Reinke
    Behind the Walls and Under the Stairs, dir. Christina Battle
    The Book of Salt: Chapter 1: Mary’s Garden, dir. Andrew Busti
    Groundplay, dir. Robert Todd
    1-9, dir. Mary Billyou
    The Body Parlor, dir. Frédéric Moffet, Katrina Chamberlin and James Kubie

    7:00 p.m.: Cellar, dir. Steve Staso. Three separate stories about residents of NYC’s Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood, including a Lebanese immigrant chef, a Colombian manicurist and a lesbian African-American veteran of the Iraq war.

    7:15 p.m.: Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo, dir. Jessica Oreck. An examination into Japan’s obsession with insects.
    Screening with The Sound of Crickets, dir. Justin Chouinard.

    9:00 p.m.: Gold, dir. Bob Levis. A 35mm, digitally-restored print of the trippy 1968 film set in a really wild Old West mining town.

    9:15 p.m.: “Magic Hands”
    Peeks, dir. Jo Dery
    Twilight Spirit, dir. Jodie Mack
    Launderman, dir. Scott Cummings
    Elfmädchen, dir. Mirka Morales
    All Ghost Women Play the Theremin, dir. Jerzy Rose
    Peaches, dir. Anders Nelson
    Faust, dir. Steve Emmons

    Sept. 13
    3:00 p.m.: “The Entire Cycle”
    Simultaneous Contrast, dir. Chris Kennedy
    Honorable Mention, dir. Kevin Everson
    The Shutdown, dir. Adam Stafford
    Earl, dir. Nick Harvey
    We Began By Measuring Distance, dir. Basma Al-Sharif
    Kalendar (from The Ukranian Time Machine Project), dir. Naomi Uman
    Me Broni Ba (My White Baby), dir. Akosua Adoma Owusa

    3:15 p.m.: China Town, dir. Lucy Raven. This experimental documentary using still photos and ambient sound traces the evolution of copper from a mine in Nevada to a smelter in China.
    Screening with Between the Sheets, dir. Warren Cockerham; and 12 Explosions, dir. Johann Lurf.

    5:00 p.m.: American Radical, dir. David Ridgen and Nicolas Rossier. A documentary about the controversial author and academic Norman Finkelstein.

    5:15 p.m.: “Coconuts and Cocaine”
    Untitled RPG, dir. JD Walsh
    Jaws, dir. Sabine Gruffat
    My Third Painting, dir. Usama Alshaibi
    Papal Broken Dance, dir. Marie Losier
    Myth Labs, dir. Martha Colburn
    Constant Craving, dir. Shana Moulton
    Blondes in the Jungle, dir. Ball Deep International

    7:00 p.m.: The Time Machine, dir. Bill Brown and Sabine Gruffat. Live performance piece.
    Screening with In the Jungle, dir. Stephanie Barber. Live performance piece.

    Sept. 14
    6:00 p.m.: Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo, dir. Jessica Oreck. An examination into Japan’s obsession with insects.
    Screening with The Sound of Crickets, dir. Justin Chouinard

    8:00 p.m.: “Magic Hands”
    Peeks, dir. Jo Dery
    Twilight Spirit, dir. Jodie Mack
    Launderman, dir. Scott Cummings
    Elfmädchen, dir. Mirka Morales
    All Ghost Women Play the Theremin, dir. Jerzy Rose
    Peaches, dir. Anders Nelson
    Faust, dir. Steve Emmons

    Sept. 15
    6:00 p.m.: “Coconuts and Cocaine”
    Untitled RPG, dir. JD Walsh
    Jaws, dir. Sabine Gruffat
    My Third Painting, dir. Usama Alshaibi
    Papal Broken Dance, dir. Marie Losier
    Myth Labs, dir. Martha Colburn
    Constant Craving, dir. Shana Moulton
    Blondes in the Jungle, dir. Ball Deep International

    8:00 p.m.: Gold, dir. Bob Levis. A 35mm, digitally-restored print of the trippy 1968 film set in a really wild Old West mining town.

    Sept. 16
    8:00 p.m.: American Radical, dir. David Ridgen and Nicolas Rossier. A documentary about the controversial author and academic Norman Finkelstein.

    Sept. 17
    6:00 p.m.: The Boy With the Sun in His Eyes, dir. Todd Verow. A gay man distraught by the death of his lover travels to Europe with a former B-movie scream queen while she shoots a pilot for a new travel show.

    8:00 p.m.: “The Watchful Eye”
    Freude (Delight), dir. Thomas Draschen
    The Citizens, dir. Jerome Everson
    The Image World, dir. Adele Horne
    San Quentin, CA 94964, dir. Katherin McInnis 2007
    Boy/Analysis: An Abridgement of Melanie Klein’s “Narrative of a Child Analysis”, dir. Steve Reinke
    Behind the Walls and Under the Stairs, dir. Christina Battle
    The Book of Salt: Chapter 1: Mary’s Garden, dir. Andrew Busti
    Groundplay, dir. Robert Todd
    1-9, dir. Mary Billyou
    The Body Parlor, dir. Frédéric Moffet, Katrina Chamberlin and James Kubie

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  • 13th Annual MadCat Women¹s International Film Festival

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    The 13th Annual MadCat Women¹s International Film Festival
    Kicks off September 16 at El Rio with World Premieres, Live Musical  Accompaniment, and Directors in Person.
    Screening the best films by women directors from around the world

    When:  September 16, 2009, Doors open at 6:30pm and films start at 8:30 pm
    Rain or Shine. Tickets at the door CASH only $8­-$20 Sliding scale

    Where:  El Rio, 3158 Mission Street at Precita Street in San Francisco.

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