Close-Up: Seeing/Hearing/Speaking – The Films of Takahiko Iimura + Live Performance

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Close-Up: Seeing/Hearing/Speaking – The Films of Takahiko Iimura + Live Performance
Tuesday October 5th, Time: 20h, Doors open at 19.45h
Venue: The Working Men’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, London E2 6NB
Ticket: £5/£3 to Close-Up members

This programme is a survey of the work of Japan's most influential experimental filmmaker, Takahiko Iimura, from his earliest 1960s experiments and conceptual videos to his later videos on semiology and identity. Takahiko Iimura will perform CIRCLE AND SQUARE and be in attendance for Q&A moderated by Julian Ross.

"Taka Iimura has been making films since the early 1960s. His work has gone through a series of relatively clear, consistent developments: from 1962 to 1968, Iimura was largely involved with surreal imagery, with eroticism, and with social criticism; from 1968 through 1971, he continued to use photographic imagery, but worked with it in increasingly formal ways; from 1972 until 1978, he devoted himself very largely to a series of minimalist explorations of time and space. During the years since, Iimura has been more fully involved with video than with film." — Scott MacDonald

"Although Taka was and continues to be an active part of the New York avant-garde scene, he always remained an enigmatic, mysterious presence, pursuing his own unique route through the very center of the avant-garde cinema. While the intensity and the fire of the American avant-garde film movement inspired him and attracted him, his Japanese origins contributed decisively to his uncompromising explorations of cinema's minimalist and conceptualist possibilities. He has explored this direction of cinema in greater depth than anyone else." — Jonas Mekas

1. 60s EXPERIMENTS

on-eye-rape01.jpg JUNK
1962 | 10 mins | B&W | 16 mm
ON EYE RAPE
1962 | 10 mins | B&W | 16 mm
FILM STRIPS I
1966-70 | 12 mins | B&W | Video
JUNK is "a mixture of [dead]animals, pieces of [broken] furniture, industrial waste, kids playing. I didn't have in mind any of the kind of historical perspective, nor was I trying to make an ecological statement. I was showing the new landscape of our civilization. My point of view was animistic. I tried to revive those dead animals metaphorically and to give the junk new life." – Takahiko Iimura
ON EYE RAPE: "The original film was rescued from a Tokyo trash bin. It is an American sexual education film in which plant and animal sex are explained. I, together with an artist friend, Natsuyuki Nakanishi, punched big holes in almost all of the frames. It was a protest against Japanese censorship of explicit images of sex, particularly pubic hair which the censors would cover with black marks. I inserted a few subliminal frames of pornographic imagery from magazines several times throughout the film. At the end, I even punched holes in these subliminal pictures, thereby 'censoring' the censored image." — Takahiko Iimura.
FILM STRIPS I: "When I came to the USA in the mid 1960s, it was the high point of the Hippie movement and the black riots. I lived in the East village in New York, which was a center of the former, and watched TV news of the latter often. These two films, Film Strips I and II, were taken from the scenes respectively, not as a documentary but as an inner report of mine, abstracted yet chaotic." — Takahiko Iimura

2. EARLY CONCEPTUAL VIDEOS

a-chair01.jpg A CHAIR
1970 | 6 mins | B&W | Video
BLINKING
1970 | 2 mins | B&W | Video
TIME TUNNEL
1971 | 5 mins | B&W | Video
VISUAL LOGIC (AND ILLOGIC)
1977 | 8 mins | B&W | Video
"These videos are experiments in perception, and are very minimal in form consisting of a single object which requires a lot of attention. Visual Logic (and Illogic) (1977) shows visual logic (and illogic) of sign combining with limited movements of camera for panning and zooming. These early videos signify very early experiments of a particular "conceptual video", that almost no other video artists had ever tried at that time. Furthermore this is an important collection to clarify later developments of the art of iimura's video." — Takahiko Iimura

3. SEEING / HEARING / SPEAKING

talking-in-new-york01.jpg TALKING TO MYSELF : PHENOMENOLOGICAL OPERATION
1978 | 7 mins | B&W | Video
TALKING IN NEW YORK
1981 | 8 mins | B&W | Video
TALKING PICTURE (THE STRUCTURE OF FILM VIEWING)
1981 | 15 mins | B&W | Video
"Throughout these videos I have examined the validity of an identity in video, which is different from the actual voice, between "the I who hear" and "the I who speak". It extends also to "the I who see" and "the I who is seen"." – Takahiko Iimura
"Talking to Myself (1978) seems almost preposterously ambitious; its beauty (I say this, of course, only on examining the script) seems to lie in a kind of vertigo, an infinitization of replications, mirroring, suspected detours, half-forgotten and neglected stops, arrests, reconfirmations and confusions. It surely is the strongest, most effective statement one could make from the work of Derrida." — David Allison, Professor of Philosophy and translator of "Speech and Phenomena" by Jacques Derrida.

4. CIRCLE AND SQUARE (Performance) – 20-30 mins
Followed by Q&A with the Artist

Total Running Time: Aprox. 110 mins


This programme will be followed by four other events taking place in London, Leeds and Bristol:

Wednesday 6 October – 7pm at no.w.here:
no.w.here and Takahiko Iimura present: How To Make Time Visible In Film (without photography)
More info at: http://www.no-w-here.org.uk/index.php?cat=3&subcat=main

Thursday 7 October, at Central St. Martin’s College of Art:
More info at: http://www.arts.ac.uk

Monday 11 October – 6.30pm at ICS Cinema, University of Leeds:
Cherry Kino and the University of Leeds present:
Japanese Experimental Cinema: An Evening with Takahiko Iimura
More info at: http://www.cherrykino.blogspot.com/

Wednesday 13 October 2010 – 6pm at Arnolfini
Takahiko Iimura: On Time in Film – Discussion & Screenings
More info at: http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/757


For more information on Takahiko Iimura visit:
- http://www.takaiimura.com

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