Events

  • Urban Research At Directors Lounge Program 3

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    Urban Research At Directors Lounge
    Program 3: Activismo Experimental: Artists Involved!
    Saturday, 18 February, 18:45h
    http://berlinlounge.tumblr.com/tagged/15th%20Feb%202012
    Directors Lounge at Naherholung Sternchen
    Berolinastraße 7, 10178 Berlin / Mitte

    In recent years, art has become increasingly political, again. The societies around the globe and even in Europe and the United States seem to wake up from the rigidity of the paralysing West-East conflict, and its aftermath, when there seemed to be no alternative to economic liberalism. Some artists take amazing risks to do public actions, others try to subvert written or unwritten laws in more subtle ways, however, in many ways, the society has become the material again for artists to experiment with. Furthermore, the cheeky and anarchist stance many artists have developed may have an influence on how the freedom to speech, which seems to be in jeopardy again, will be interpreted and used in the future.

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  • Urban Research At Directors Lounge Program 2

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    Urban Research At Directors Lounge
    Program 2: The Future is Now, the City Imagination
    Wednesday, 15 February, 18h
    http://berlinlounge.tumblr.com/tagged/15th%20Feb%202012
    Directors Lounge at Naherholung Sternchen
    Berolinastraße 7, 10178 Berlin / Mitte

    The city we live in consists of much more than what we directly experience, and the program dealing with this idea "naturally" turns out to be divers and colourful. The things we see, the social environment we live in and experience is only one part of our "life in the city". The other part consists of news, media, stories, gossip, and an increasing number of images, shared and received on public and private channels. Thus, life in the city (let's call it a specific city: Berlin, Hamburg, London, L.A., or Singapor, you name it) does not turn into a storyline, I don't live "the story of my life", but it turns into a multifaceted image. As a consequence, we might say, city life in large parts is made of private and public, shared and unshared imaginations.

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  • Urban Research At Directors Lounge Program 1

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    Urban Research At Directors Lounge
    Program 1: Urban Observations and Local Studies
    Monday, 13 February, 20h
    http://berlinlounge.tumblr.com/tagged/13th%20Feb%202012

    Directors Lounge at Naherholung Sternchen
    Berolinastraße 7, 10178 Berlin / Mitte

    This beautiful program comprises films, which meditate on city impressions in rather leisurely pace. Urban observations are always subjective, especially if done with a camera. Also, undertaking observations is only possible when making a distinction. The observer, the camera is always part of the situation. Never is it possible to look from outside (the Hollywood ideal of realism, the "God eye's view" is only possible in fiction). Thus, the distinctions we make are never clear cuts, the opposites spill back in, and the dichotomies unite as the complementary parts of the same idea.

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  • Laida Lertxundi: Films and influences

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    Llora Cuando Te Pase / Cry When it Happens (Laida Lertxundi, 2010)Courtisane presents:
    Laida Lertxundi: Films and influences

    Monday February 13, 2012, 20:30h
    OFFoff Cinema, Gent (Belgium)

    Courtisane is proud to present for the first time in Belgium a survey of the work of Laida Lertxundi (Spain, 1981), one of the most talented young filmmakers working in the tradition of the avant-garde today. Lertxundi makes 16mm films with non-actors often shot within and around Los Angeles, where she’s been living for a number of years. Her films evoke external and internal spaces of intimacy, questioning how viewers’ desires and expectations are shaped by cinematic forms of storytelling, and searching for alternative ways of linking sound and music with found parameters, constructed situations and everyday environments. In recent years her work has been widely shown at festivals and venues such as MoMa, LACMA, the Viennale, the Rotterdam International Film Festival or the BFI London Film Festival. After having screened Cry When It Happens last year in the competition programme, Courtisane will once again showcase Lertxundi’s work during the coming Courtisane festival (21-25 March 2012), with the screening of her latest short film, A Lax Riddle Unit, which premiered last October at Views of the Avant-Garde during the New York Film Festival. As a prologue to this year’s festival, Courtisane will present at OFFoff four films by Lertxundi together with a selection of works by other filmmakers that have inspired her practice.

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  • Barbara Hammer: The Fearless Frame

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    Sync Touch (Barbara Hammer, 1981)Seminal American experimental filmmaker Barbara Hammer is the protagonist of a month-long retrospective at the Tate Modern (3-26 February). The nineteen programmes that comprise this almost-complete survey of her work include from her latest films  as the premiere in the UK of Maya Deren's sink (2011) to some of his earlier super-8 films that have been rarely screened. Hammer will also re-enact her 1979 performance Changing the Shape of Film in the Turbine Hall and present three performative lectures on different aspects of her work. Theretrospective will combine Hammer's films with the works of other filmmakers whom Hammer considers crucial influences on her own work, such as Maya Deren, Chick Strand, Stan Brakhage, Shirley Clarke, Gunvor Nelson, Chris Welsby, Gina Carducci, Cecilia Dougherty, John Greyson, William E Jones, Liz Rosenfeld, Emily Mode, Scott Berry, Kirstin Rossi and more.

    Curated by Barbara Hammer and Stuart Comer

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  • AAFF 50th: Retrospective Screening #4

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    Asparagus (Suzan Pitt, 1979)AAFF 50th: Retrospective Screening #4
    January 25th, 2012, 19:30h
    Michigan Theater, Ann Arbor, MI
    Tickets: $5 - $10

    Portraits, the fourth Retrospective Screening, curated by Toronto filmmaker, critic and author Mike Hoolboom, features three past AAFF award winners. Films programmed include: Asparagus; Suzan Pitt's celebrated cult animation, a moving meditation on art and the cost of reproduction, Meditations on Revolution Part One: Lonely Planet; Robert Fenz's stunning silent poetic vision of Cuba and Al Neil: A Portrait; David Rimmer's exquisite depiction of jazz iconoclast Al Neil- poet, recluse and shaman.

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  • Light Industry: Charles Atlas's Torse

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    Torse (Charles Atlas, 1977)Light Industry: Charles Atlas's Torse
    Tuesday, January 24 2012, 19h
    155 Freeman Street, Brooklyn, 11222 New York

    If there can be said to be a subject of Torse, Merce Cunningham’s remarkable and remarkably difficult 1976 dance, it is the torso. But though every imaginable position of the back and backbone is in evidence, the torso is here as much a point of departure as it is an object of inquiry. (Indeed, the dance taxed every element of the body: “My calves were in contraction for about three years,” said Ellen Cornfield, a dancer who was part of its original cast.)

    Charles Atlas’s 1977 film of Torse is an achievement in itself, a significant example of Atlas and Cunningham’s unique approach using film or video to “see” choreography. Atlas shot the dance with three 16mm cameras over the course of three days at the University of Washington, where the company was then in residence. Two mobile cameras captured close-ups, while a single stationary camera was set up for long shots. Atlas and Cunningham manned the mobile cameras while a technician handled the static camera, and the results were edited by Atlas into a single, two-screen film that was originally shown via a now all-but-extinct dual-interlock 16mm projection system.

    The fifty-five-minute work features music by pioneering composer Maryanne Amacher and costumes by the company’s longtime designer, Mark Lancaster. As was typical in Cunningham’s practice, the choreography and sound were made separately, so that any relationship between music and movement is serendipitous. Torse is also notable as an instance of Cunningham’s use of chance operations; the choreography comprises sixty-four distinct phrases, and the floor space is divided into sixty-four squares—a reference to the number of hexagrams in the I Ching. Cunningham created separate “space charts” and “movement charts” and tossed coins to determine the combinations for the ten dancers (Cornfield, Karole Armitage, Lisa Fox, Meg Harper, and Robert Kovich are among those who appear in the film). The result is, as Arlene Croce once described it, “monomaniacally urgent.” That, and something else: one felicitous decision after another, a sublime study in the intersection of rigor and contingency.

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