tank tv : Ken Jacobs (1/10-30/11)

By on

Rating: 

Sin votos (todavía)

Little Stabs at HappinessKen Jacobs Online Exhibition
Curated by Mark Webber
1st October - 30th November 2008

Ken Jacobs (b.1933) has been active as a filmmaker, performer and teacher for the past five decades. Rigorous and dedicated, his work is characterised by a keen eye for formal composition and a fierce political consciousness.

As a central figure of the generation that defined independent filmmaking during the post-War era, Jacobs contributed to the liberation of cinema from technical and ideological conventions. Beginning in the 1950s, he developed an 'urban guerrilla cinema' out of poverty and desperation, shooting improvised routines on city streets. The early works Star Spangled to Death, Little Stabs at Happiness and Blonde Cobra feature a nascent Jack Smith, years before the renegade artist produced his own films.

Having lived in New York all his life, the changing character of t hecity has been a strong presence throughout Jacobs' work, from hismanipulation of vintage street scenes in New York Ghetto Fishmarket1903, through to the diaristic video Circling Zero: We See Absence,which observes the aftermath of the attack on the World Trade Center, afew blocks away from Jacobs' home. The Sky Socialist was shot in adeserted neighbourhood (long since decommissioned) below the BrooklynBridge in the 1960s, and Perfect Film uses raw television news reportson the assassination of Malcolm X.

Found or archival footage is a source for much of Jacobs' work. In StarSpangled to Death, entire appropriated films contribute to anaccumulative denunciation of American politics, religion, war andracism, whereas an analytical approach to reclaiming cinema's past wasoriginated in Tom, Tom the Pipers' Son by re-filming selected detailsof a theatrical production dating from 1905. This same footage haslately been digitally excavated in Return to the Scene of the Crime.

The technique of unlocking aspects of film material that wouldotherwise pass unnoticed is the essence of the live Nervous Systempieces that Jacobs has performed with two adapted projectors since themid-1970s. Repetition and pulsing flicker teases frozen images intoimpossible depth and perpetual motion (demonstrated in New York StreetTrolleys 1900), a process further developed by the Eternalism system ofediting used in many recent videos. The previously ephemeral liveperformances Ontic Antics Starring Laurel and Hardy; Bye Molly! and TwoWrenching Departures are amongst the works that take on new life intheir digital form.

A contemporary of Stan Brakhage, Bruce Conner and Jonas Mekas, KenJacobs is one of the true innovators of the moving image, who continueshis radical practice in the present. Though his images frequentlydepict bygone eras, the works are resolutely contemporary, displaying avitality and ingenuity that is rarely matched.

The exhibition at tank.tv presents a portfolio of 20 works covering 50years of Ken Jacobs' artistic production from 1957 to the present day.

Programme on www.tank.tv

The Whirled, 1956-63
Star Spangled To Death, 1957-59/2004
Little Stabs At Happiness, 1958-63
Blonde Cobra, 1959-63
The Sky Socialist, 1964-65
Tom, Tom, The Piper's Son, 1969-71
The Doctor's Dream, 1978
Perfect Film, 1985
Flo Rounds A Corner, 1999
New York Street Trolleys 1900, 1999
Circling Zero: We See Absence, 2002
Krypton Is Doomed, 2005
Let There Be Whistleblowers, 2005
Ontic Antics Starring Laurel And Hardy; Bye, Molly!, 2005
The Surging Sea Of Humanity, 2006
Capitalism: Child Labor, 2006
New York Ghetto Fishmarket 1903, 2006
Two Wrenching Departures, 2006
Razzle Dazzle: The Lost World, 2006
Return To The Scene Of The Crime, 2008

Ask Ken!
For the duration of the online show, tank.tv offers a unique opportunity for discussion with Ken Jacobs in an extended Q+A session. Email your questions to the artist at [email protected]. A regularly updated transcript of the dialogue will be online at www.tank.tv/askken

Categoría: