Eventos

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

    By on

    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

    Categoría: 

  • EYE AM: ANOTHER EXPERIMENT by WOMEN

    By on

    What comes between (Cecilia Araneda, 2009)EYE AM: ANOTHER EXPERIMENT by WOMEN
    Tuesday October 12, 2010, 18h
    Anthology Film Archives, 32 Second Avenue (at 2nd St.)
    New York, NY 10003 USA

    EYE AM: WOMEN BEHIND THE LENS is a screening series celebrating experimental, memoir, and documentary film by women. Tonight we will hold a special show, juried by Lili White.

    - Fonction Panorama LG KU990 (Caroline Bernard, 2009, video, 5.48 min)
    from:  Migratory Project, with Michiko Tsuda, and Damien Guichard    
    Poetic ribbon made by a succession of panoramas. The film time is produced by the scrolling image. The past goes out by the left of the image, whereas the future enters by the right. It's also a kind of timeline, the timeline of life, of feelings, feelings trapped in time and space, and it's also a metaphor of tired feeling in a love relationship… There is a kind of a loving duet between the cameraman, and the photographed character (it is true because it is me and my spouse). But of course, it's fictional, we are just in symbolical representations.

    - What comes between (Cecilia Araneda, 2009, S8/16mm/digi, 5.36 min)   
    An examination of personal memory and loss rooted in the filmmaker's birth place – Chile – and her departure from that country long ago. A collage film created with found footage from personal and historic sources, and original hand printed and tinted footage.
    - This kind of town (Marcy Saude, 2010, 16mm/digi, 5:30 min)
    The frontier mythos of nature vs. civilization plays out against the landscape of a former gold rush boomtown of Ward, Colorado in the Rocky Mountains. Mining structures, abandoned cars, railroad remains; roadside junk sculptures, tie-dye and American flags; sights and sounds of “the West” then and now attempt to answer the question, “what kind of a town is this, anyway?”
    - Le monde est immense (The world is vast) (Muriel Montini, 2008, S8/digi, 9.05 min)
    A summer’s day in the countryside. A woman is sewing. A little girl tries to attrack her attention. A boy appears...A few images from a super 8 movie explored in detail and recomposed with a dramatic end in mind.
    - You can see the sun in late December (Sasha Waters Freyer, 2010, 6.40 min)
    Beautiful emptiness, anguish and calm, absence rendered visible and traces of presence in the winter light, all intensified by the damned (non) question of maternity.  Filming every frigid day in the final month as a strategy for overcoming deflated motivation.
    - Bodily heavens (Stephanie Wuertz, 2010, digi, 2.40 min)
    A whirl of whorls and dis-astral staccato, Bodily heavens is a frenetic animation created under a microscope that evokes a nostalgia for the intimate sublime.
    - Paradise (Noe Kidder, 2010; 16mm/digi, 10.00 min)
    Paradise was filmed between 2005-2007 on location in Lisbon, Kauai and at Catwalk Artist Residency in Catskill, NY. By using a kind of home-made optical printing technique and overlapping layers of sound, text and image in the edit, I wanted to experiment with abstraction in a way that would challenge the viewer as well as my own experience of loss.
    - The daughter remembers to forget (Sara Strahan, 2010, score by Melissa Grey, digi/S8, 16MM/HD, 3.36 min)
    Home movies, found footage and hand-made elements are used to explore the complex mechanisms of perception, memory and recollection. Memory is not a conscious recollection of narrative, but textured and interspersed with media and non-linear traces of recollection that always result in an updated output of the past. Does this conception of memory imply a potential for re-making our own stories? Can the daughter forget to remember, or remember to forget?
    - 5 lessons & 9 questions about Chinatown (Shelly Silver, 2010, digi, 10 min)  
    You live somewhere, walk down the same street … taking in fragments, but never fully register THE PLACE.  Years, decades go by ... A building comes down, and before the next one is up you ask ‘what used to be there?’… since the 19th century, wave after wave of inhabitants have moved through and transformed these alleyways, tenements, stoops and shops…past, present, future, time…immigration, exclusion, gentrification, racism, history, China, America… 9 questions, 5 lessons, Chinatown

    Categoría: 

  • MassArt Film Society: Bradley Eros

    By on

    Osmosis (Bradley Eros, 2002)MassArt Film Society: Bradley Eros
    Wednesday, September 29th, 20h, 4$
    Massachusetts College of Art, Film Department
    Screening room 1. 621 Huntington Ave. Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA

    An artist working in myriad media:  experimental film & video, collage, photography, performance, sound, text, expanded cinema & installation. Also a maverick curator, designer, researcher & investigator. Concepts include: ephemeral cinema, mediamystics, subterranean science, erotic psyche, poetic accidents, cinema povera & musique plastique.

    Exhibited at 2004 Whitney Biennial & The American Century, The New York Film Festival, London Film Festival, MoMA, The Kitchen, Pacific Film Archives, The Warhol Museum, Arsenal in Berlin, Lightcone in Paris; he also works with the New York Filmmakers' Cooperative, Anthology Film Archives, Issue Project Room, Spectacle, & co-directed the late Roberta Beck Mercurial Cinema.

    Various quotes about Eros’ solo & collaborative works:

    “Eros’ richly layered tapestries of hallucinatory images are riddled with provocative rituals, from sex to science to surgery, that are guaranteed to produce frissions of pleasure” -Village Voice

    “Technologist of the flesh, he creates hypnotic and voluptuous montages, reminiscent of Kenneth Anger’s mystic incantations.” -Dargis, Village Voice

    “Eros and Liotta (as Mediamystics) have worked for years in an area somewhere between cinema and ritual, finding alchemy in the chemistry of body and film. Their beautiful ‘fungus eroticus’ is sensual and disturbing, raw and lysergic.” -Owen O’Toole, Spool

    “The films and performances of Bradley Eros are dark, mysterious, biomorphic, psychedelic and subterranean. Investigating cycles of decay and regeneration, the poetic nature of his work is substantiated by equally haunting soundtracks.” -Film Threat

    Categoría: 

  • Conversations at the Edge: Rosa Menkman - Glitched

    By on

    Rosa MenkmanConversations at the Edge: Rosa Menkman - Glitched
    Thursday, September 30, 18h
    Gene Siskel Film Center
    164 North State St.,Chicago, Illinois 60601

    Rosa Menkman in person!

    Every technology possesses its own inherent accidents. Rosa Menkman is a Dutch artist and theorist whose focus is on visual artifacts created by accidents in digital media specifically. She describes these as “the uncanny, brutal structures that come to the surface during a break of the flow within a technology; they are the primal data-screams of the machine.” Working at the experimental junction of glitch, noise, and new media art, Menkman creates glitch work and writes texts about codecs, interpolation, and compression going awry. This evening, Menkman will introduce a selection of videos followed by a real-time performance. Rest assured, the equipment is working, though it may not look like it is. This presentation coincides with GLI.TC/H, an international noise and new media conference taking place from September 29 to October 3 at various locations around Chicago. Visit http://gli.tc/h. Rosa Menkman, 2006–10, Netherlands, multiple formats, ca. 75 min (plus discussion).

    Rosa Menkman (1983, Arnhem, Netherlands) is the leading international theory-practitioner of glitch art.  She has written extensively on digital artifacts and noise, including the Glitch Studies Manifesto (2010). Her videos and real-time performances have been included in festivals like Blip, Europe and U.S.; Haip, Ljubljana; Cimatics, Brussels; Video Vortex, Amsterdam and Brussels; and Pasofest, Ankara. She has collaborated on art projects together with Alexander Galloway, little-scale, Govcom.org, Goto80 and the Internet art collective, Jodi.org.  Menkman received her Master’s degree in 2009 and is currently a PhD student at KHM Cologne, writing on the subject of Artifacts.

    Categoría: 

  • Artist In Focus: Paul Clipson

    By on

    Paul ClipsonArtist In Focus: Paul Clipson
    Live soundtrack by Ignatz & Paul Labrecque
    Saturday, September 25th, 2010, 20h
    Palais des Beaux-Arts / Paleis voor Schone Kunsten
    Rue Ravenstein 23, 1000 Bruxelles
    Organized by Courtisane & Bozar Cinema.

    Fechas: 

    De Sábado, Septiembre 25, 2010 - 20:00 hasta Domingo, Septiembre 26, 2010 - 19:55

    Local: 

Páginas