Eventos

  • Exquisite Corpse Video Project vol 2

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    The second volume of the Exquisite Corpse Video Project will have it's first screening in Berlin on November 19th, 8p.m. at Kulturpalast Wedding International.

    The project members Stina Pehrsdotter, Niclas Hallberg (Sweden), Wai Kit Lam (China), Kim Dotty Hachmann and Matthias Roth (Germany) will be in attendance.

    WHAT?
    The ECVP [Exquisite Corpse Video Project] is a video collaboration collaboration project inspired by the Surrealist creation method, the "Exquisite Corpse". The project is coordinated by the Brazilian artist Kika Nicolela and currently has 63 participating artists from 21 different countries.
    The ECVP vol. 2 was made during 2009, with the participation of 56 artists. Together, these artists made about 110 minutes of experimental video, divided in 12 chapters.

    HOW?
    In the Surrealist 'game', a paper is folded such that each contributor sees only a small portion of the previous contributor's work, and begins his own work from that small portion. When the last participant is finished, the sheet is unfolded to reveal a strangely divergent, yet contiguous form or figure.
    Using the semi-blind, sequential method of the surrealists' game, ECVP participants create video art in response to the final ten seconds of the previous member's work. Each member is asked to incorporate these seconds into their piece, creating transitions as they please, until
    everyone's vision is threaded together into an instigating final "corpse."
    While the Surrealists are said to have created the method almost a century ago, only recently could such a fast-paced, pan-global, audiovisual variation of this exercise be produced. The inspiring process of exchange between artists from around the world illuminates the possibilities and potentials of a globalized, collective creativity.

    WHERE?
    ECVP Screenings and exhibitions have been taking place in various countries since June 2008, such as Sweden, USA, Greece, Canada, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa.

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  • First Person Cinema: Ernie Gehr

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    First Person Cinema: Ernie Gehr
    Monday, November 16, 7:00 PM
    ATLAS 100, CU-Boulder campus
    North of the Euclid parking garage. Boulder, Colorado.
    Admission is $3.00.

    I wouldn't mind passing for the young lad with the spiffy sunglasses, but then you would have a hard time believing I've been making films for as long as I have, and when you actually see me you'd possibly crack up laughing so loud it would ruin the picture show. So then, am I one of the characters on the other side of the water? No, but look at the surface of those terrific sunglasses -- Yes! there I am. The guy behind the camera, and that is where I like to stay Ð behind, not in front of the camera.

    I have a terrific program of works for you. Seriously. Almost all brand new. Urban? Yes. Film Noir? No, though perhaps in a way yes. I am a city creature and basically I work intuitively from within. My approach, if I ever had one, is to try to be alive, responsive, and truthful to the moment and the materials at hand. Sometimes the sensual/kinetic character and potentials of the medium become the spring board for a work, and sometimes its my response to the every day world around me.

    - Mirage (1981) 9 min.
    - Rear Window (1986/91) 10 min.
    - Shadow (2007) 9 min.
    - Hurry Up Henrietta (2009) 12 min.
    - Waterfront Follies (2008) 39 min.

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  • Light Reading Series 9: The Wooden Lightbox

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    Light Reading Series 9
    The Wooden Lightbox: A Secret Art Of Seeing
    Friday 20 November 2009, at 7pm
    3rd Floor, 316-318 Bethnal Green Road, London, E2 0AG

    Light Reading’s ninth series continues with a special performance and screening by Canadian artist and filmmaker Alex Mackenzie. Using a homemade, hand cranked projector and a series of hand processed films, the piece forms part of an ongoing exploration into the experiential potential of the cinematic apparatus and the materiality of film. THE WOODEN LIGHTBOX will be performed after Mackenzie’s day workshop at no.w.here on the techniques of handmade film.

    THE WOODEN LIGHTBOX is both an archaic and a contemporary investigation into an immersive encounter with the moving image, employing deconstructive and reconstructive methods that draw out the potential for various contemporary, expanded experiences of a cinema of illusions that is created through the apparatus and in the hand making of the image. THE WOODEN LIGHTBOX is performed live with a hand-cranked 16mm projector built and assembled from various relic 16mm projector and rewind parts and framed in a wooden box. Ten “chapters” are presented over the course of 4 reels. Film speed is varied manually by cranking more quickly or more slowly, while the direction of the action is controlled by winding forwards and backwards. The Wooden Lightbox is an ongoing work in progress, an assembly of images entirely hand processed and contact printed, transforming and developing as new materials are added and deleted.

    THE WOODEN LIGHTBOX had its world premiere at Victoria’s Anti-Matter Underground Film Festival, Canada and has been screened at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, Lightcone (Scratch Projections) Paris, le 102 Grenoble, (k-raa-k)3 festival Brussels, Grand-Guignol Lyon, WNDX festival of film and video art Winnipeg, Canada, Struts Gallery Sackville, Halifax Independent Filmmakers Festival, Canada and is currently being performed across the UK and most recently in Toronto, Canada in 2009.

    Alex MacKenzie is a media artist working in film, video, light projection and performance. He has worked with a variety of independent film organizations over the past 15 years including Mainfilm, Pacific Cinematheque, Cineworks, and Doxa. He was the founder and director of The Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images, The Blinding Light!! Cinema and the Vancouver Underground Film Festival, and currently works as an independent curator, graphic designer and writer.

    Light Reading is an ongoing series of critical dialogues that engage artists, writers and curators in conversation around a selected artist’s body of work. To be included on the mailing list for future events, please contact: <[email protected]>. Places are limited so booking is essential.

    at

    no.w.here
    3rd Floor, 316-318 Bethnal Green Road, London, E2 0AG
    Nearest Tube / Train: Bethnal Green

    Tickets: £5 door / £4 advance / £3 members & students
    Telephone: 020 7729 4494
    Email: [email protected]
    Places are limited so booking is essential

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  • ICA Artists' Film Club: Lucile Desamory

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    ICA Artists' Film Club: Lucile Desamory
    Thursday 19 November 2009, at 7pm
    ICA Theatre, Lower Gallery
    The Mall, London, SW1Y 5AH

    For November’s Artists’ Film Club, the Belgian artist Lucile Desamory presents a selection of her films from the past ten years - works in which music, image and text collide.

    Desamory’s films feature fantastic and incongruous scenarios, and the artist describes the characters they contain as “out of touch with reality” and “projected into a universe that is whimsical, unreal, light-hearted and funny”. Her work is deliberately naïve and intuitive, and weaves mythical narratives that are highly personalised, yet absurdly compelling.

    The artist often works with music and musicians, and this month’s Artist’s Film Club is presented as part of "Calling Out Of Context", the ICA’s season of experimental music and sound. After the screeningLucile Desamory will be in conversation with Bruce Haines. The event is supported by the Anglo-Belgian Society.

    at

    ICA Theatre
    The Mall, London, SW1Y 5AH
    Nearest Tube: Charing Cross

    FREE admission, booking required
    Box Office: 020 7930 3614

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  • Experimental Film Club: Flecks of Interruption

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    Flecks of Interruption
    Sunday 15th November / 5pm
    The Odessa Club / Doors: 7 euro (5 euro concession), Dublin

    “Most thought-provoking in our thought-provoking time is that we are still not thinking”, said Martin Heidegger. Such statement opens the main notions and considerations that motivate the programme the Experimental Film Club presents at an unusual time this month. The reason for such an odd date comes from the inspiring source of this programme: the two-part international group exhibition “Automatic”, curated by Gavin Murphy and Chris Fite-Wassilak, currently on at Pallas Contemporary Project (Dublin). Gavin and Chris proposed to us to organize a film session that explored similar ideas to those that embedded the exhibition, which works, in their own words, attempt to “stretch out the persistent, ghostly sensory circuit between the artist, artwork and audience”. Perception was indeed one of the main subjects we discussed during the plotting of this programme, not so much as an experience which could be rationally comprehended, but as a vigorous, direct and impacting encounter with a percept, or a series of percepts, beyond immediate conscious understanding.

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  • Dragging my video camera down the front steps

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    Dragging my video camera down the front steps: 30 years of unconventional camera movements from the Vtape collection.
    Saturday November 21 2009
    Screening at 2& 3:30pm, Curator talk at 3:00pm
    This installation will run until December 19 2009.

    For over a decade, Vtape has developed an intensive and multi-faceted intern programme for students and members of the interested public. We are very happy to support all your future endeavors and provide as many opportunities as we can within our facilities.

    Dragging my video camera down the front steps: 30 years of unconventional camera movements from the Vtape collection provides a showcase for the curatorial research of one of our recent - and longest serving – technical interns, John Shipman.

    Shipman says this of his intriguing selection: “Eight short videos, from 1974 to 2004, playfully use unusual camera positions and movements to create a slightly different visual gravity, showing things improbable, but viscerally informative."

    The opening screening will be on Saturday November 21 from 2pm-4pm. The screenings will be at 2:00pm and 3:30pm with a curator's talk at 3:00pm.

    401 Richmond St., #452
    Toronto, ON  M5V 3A8
    416 351-1317

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  • Center for Visual Music film series at Guggenheim New York

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    Nonobjective Films, 1920s-1950s
    A program of artists supported by Hilla Rebay
    Friday Nov 6, 2pm, and again on Nov 20, in New York

    An accompanying program to the Guggenheim's KANDINSKY exhibition.
    Organized by the Center for Visual Music

    In the 1940s, curator and founding director Hilla Rebay planned to establish a film center at the Museum of Non-Objective Painting, which later became the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, to collect and promote nonobjective films. She awarded grants to artists and presented programs of short experimental films. With the help of Oskar Fischinger, an elaborate film center was planned to include studios and planetarium-style projection capability. Although unrealized, Rebay's support enabled many filmmakers to continue their work in abstract film. This program presents short films by filmmakers whose work was screened and/or supported by Rebay, including Jordan Belson, Mary Ellen Bute, Charles Dockum, Oskar Fischinger, Norman McLaren, Hans Richter, Harry Smith, among others. Having experimented with nonobjectivity, many of these artists were familiar with the work of Vasily Kandinsky, one of its most famous practitioners, having seen his paintings at the Museum of Non-Objective Painting.

    14:00 16mm films
    - Symphonie Diagonale, Viking Eggeling, 1921-24
    - Film Studie, Hans Richter, 1926
    - Tarantella, Mary Ellen Bute, 1940
    - Film no. 7, Harry Smith, c.1952
    - Mobilcolor Performance at the Guggenheim Museum, Charles Dockum, 1952
    - Séance, Jordan Belson, 1959

    14:30 35mm films

    - Studie no. 7, Oskar Fischinger, 1931
    - Loops, Norman McLaren, 1940
    - Allegretto, Oskar Fischinger, 1936-1943
    - Radio Dynamics, Oskar Fischinger, 1942

    New Media Theater, free with Museum admission  (we're told you can access this via the gallery with Kandinsky's works on paper)

    Nov 6 and 20, then 2 December dates; program also screens in January at the upcoming Kandinsky symposium.

    Almost all are new prints; the Fischingers and Dockum are new prints from CVM's recent preservation projects. CVM also thanks Cecile Starr and Robert Haller.

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  • Light Industry: We Dig Repetition - Peter Roehr

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    We Dig Repetition: Peter Roehr
    Tuesday, November 24, 2009 at 7:30pm
    Light Industry
    220 36th Street (between 2nd and 3rd Avenue), 5th Floor
    Brooklyn, New York

    Curated by Mark Webber

    “I alter material by organizing it unchanged. Each work is an organized area of unchanged elements. Neither successive or additive, there is no result or sum.” (Peter Roehr, 1964)

    You might think that Andy Warhol took pleasure in endless repetition, but he’s got nothing on Peter Roehr, a German artist whose brief career produced hundreds of works using type, photography, collage, film and audiotape. Not content with applying mechanical reproduction techniques to art-making, Roehr instead chose to appropriate industrially produced materials. His many photo collages present austere grids of identically cropped images from magazines. Similarly, his film and sound montages are constructed from brief passages, frequently drawn from commercial advertising, repeated without variation, for an irregular number of reiterations. The result is an insistent, hypnotic demonstration of stoic seriality that takes time and time again.

    - Film-Montagen I-III, (Peter Roehr, 16mm, 1965, 23 mins)
    - Ton-Montagen I-II, (Peter Roehr, audiotape, 1965, 60 mins)

    Roehr died at the age of 23 in 1968. From November 2009 to March 2010, his work is surveyed in parallel exhibitions at the Städel Museum and Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt which commemorate the 60th anniversary since his birth.

    “I feel identical with what I do. In the ‘montages’ I realize, in an unrestricted manner, everything that is important to me. I believe, I am free.” (Peter Roehr, 1965)

    Mark Webber is an independent curator of avant-garde and artists' film and video, and programme advisor to the BFI London Film Festival. Recent projects include "Shoot Shoot Shoot", "Reverence: The Films of Owen Land”, and Tate Modern seasons on Robert Beavers and Tony Conrad. He is currently working on several publications, and visiting New York through the generosity of the Gershwin Hotel's artist-in-residence program.

    Tickets - $7, available at door.

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  • Close-up: Histories of the Avant-Garde Part II

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    guy-sherwin-02.jpg

    Histories of the Avant-Garde Part II - Guy Sherwin in Person - Short Film Series + Man With Mirror

    Close-Up and The Dog Movement present a rare chance to see a large group of Guy Sherwin’s interconnected 3 minute films as well as the wonderfully subtle Expanded Cinema performance of Man With Mirror followed by a Q&A with the artist.

    Tuesday 24 November 8pm
    Guy Sherwin In Person - Short Film Series

    Parts from the Short Film Series will include: Eye, Bicycle, Metronome, Portrait with Parents, Window, Barn, Cat, Chimney, Maya, and Tree Reflection. All 3 mins B&W 16mm silent

    Followed by Man with Mirror (10 mins colour S-8mm)

    Venue: The Working Men’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, E2 6NB. Ticket: £7/£5 Close-Up members
    Doors open at 7.45 pm

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  • Medienhaus Hannover: Urban Research

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    Urban Research
    presented by Klaus W. Eisenlohr
    Thursday, 05 Nov. 2009, 20:00h

    Klaus W. Eisenlohr, artist and filmmaker in Berlin, former Cast & Cut fellow in Hannover, presents a selection of his curated program "Urban Research". The selection comprises films from France, USA, Mexiko, Hungary, Finland, Germany, United Kingdom and Chile. Artists who explore the relations between built and social space use different forms of experimental and documentary film to express their concerns and views of public space in the city they live in, or in foreign countries. Different forms of close-up documentation or personal alienation to the places give ideas on how space is being used and transformed in contemporary cities. A multi-faceted show with both witty and subversive perspectives on urban architecture.

    Urban Research is a special, themed program at Directors Lounge art media festival. Urban Research selections have been shown in St. Petersburg, London, Freiburg, Poznan, Dordrecht and Berlin.

    Medienhaus Hannover e.V.
    Schwarzer Bär 6
    30449 Hannover

    www.medienhaus-hannover.de
    0511-441 440

    http://www.directorslounge.net
    more infos and images:
    http://www.richfilm.de/currentUpload/index.html

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