Screenings

  • The Body Extended: Works by Scott Stark

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    Scott Stark has produced more than 75 films and videos since 1980. Additionally, he has created a number of gallery and non-gallery installations using film and video, and elaborate photographic collages using large grids of images. Born and educated in the midwest, he has always been interested in aggressively pushing his work beyond the threshold of traditional viewing expectations, challenging the audience to question its relationship to the cinematic process; yet he also tries to build into the work elements of humor and incongruity that allow the viewer an entryway into the work while maintaining a critical distance. Both a passionate purist and a cynical skeptic, he likes to emphasize the physicality of film while cross-referencing it to the world outside the theater, attempting to lay bare the paradoxes of modern culture and the magical nature of the perceptual experience.

    Dates: 

    Monday, April 6, 2015 - 21:00 to Tuesday, April 7, 2015 - 20:55

    Venue: 

    The Red Room - Baltimore, United States
  • Screening Room (1972-1981): A Tribute to Robert Gardner

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    In association with the festival Cinema du Reel, the film department of the Centre Pompidou pays a tribute to Robert Gardner from March 19th to March 28th. Anthropologist and filmmaker, founder of the Film Study Center at Harvard University, Robert Gardner is the author of a singular oeuvre, dedicated to distant societies – from the Dani's tribe of New Guinea (Dead Birds, 1964) to the Ika Indians of Colombia (Ika Hands, 1988) or the Hamar in Ethiopia (River of Sand, 1973) - as well as po

    Dates: 

    Thursday, March 19, 2015 - 19:00 to Friday, March 20, 2015 - 18:55
    Friday, March 20, 2015 - 19:00 to Saturday, March 21, 2015 - 18:55
    Saturday, March 21, 2015 - 19:00 to Sunday, March 22, 2015 - 18:55
    Sunday, March 22, 2015 - 19:00 to Monday, March 23, 2015 - 18:55
    Monday, March 23, 2015 - 19:00 to Tuesday, March 24, 2015 - 18:55
    Wednesday, March 25, 2015 - 19:00 to Thursday, March 26, 2015 - 18:55
    Thursday, March 26, 2015 - 19:00 to Friday, March 27, 2015 - 18:55
    Friday, March 27, 2015 - 19:00 to Saturday, March 28, 2015 - 18:55
    Saturday, March 28, 2015 - 19:00 to Sunday, March 29, 2015 - 18:55

    Venue: 

    Centre Pompidou - Paris, France
  • Godina & Marc on Film (Presented by Jurij Meden)

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    Introductions and Q&A by Jurij Meden, Curator of Film Exhibitions at the George Eastman House

    Karpo Godina, arguably the most internationally acclaimed Slovenian filmmaker and cinematographer, launched his career in the mid-sixties with a quick succession of independently produced 8mm experimental shorts, predominantly designed to question everything he was being taught at the state film academy. DIVJAD, PES and ANNO PASSATO, which comprise only a small part of this succession, are primarily exercises in motion: constant motion of the gaze, constant motion in front of the gaze, motion in all known and unknown directions, all linked together through seemingly random editing and mere hints of lustful stories.

    Dates: 

    Monday, March 30, 2015 - 19:30 to 21:30

    Venue: 

    Hoyt Auditorium - Rochester, United States
  • Light Movement 3: Werner Nekes

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    Light Movement presents Werner Nekes' Diwan, a film anthology in five installments: 1. sun-a-mul (16 min) 2. alternatim (15 min) 3. kantilene (17 min) 4. moto (16 min) 5. hynningen (21 min). The fifth installment, "hynningen" was awarded the Bundesfilmpreis in Silber in 1975.

    "Hynningen (Swedish for 'honey roof') begins with long multiple exposures of a landscape with a clearing, opening up to the horizon. In the middle of the clearing there is a simple log cabin of the type characteristic of Northern Europe or Quebec. There are actors a man and a woman - at the window, at the doorway, strolling in the grass, doubled or even tripled by multiple exposure. Traces they have left at different moments of the day and in the changing light appear as gentle phantoms. If our varying perceptions would outlast changes in location we would experience a strong sense of continuity and of repetition.

    Dates: 

    Thursday, March 26, 2015 - 19:30

    Venue: 

    Echo Bücher - Berlin, Germany
  • Cinema Anèmic #03: Lluís de Sola

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    Presents... "Water"

    Projection of a set of 16mm films by Lluís de Sola, with water as their common denominator. Shooting of natural environments such as rivers and beaches duly altered by the watery substance itself present in the documented places. A flowing cinema like river currents, eroding as the waves of the sea.

    Dates: 

    Friday, March 20, 2015 - 20:30

    Venue: 

    Espai ST3 - Barcelona, Spain
  • Even the Good Times Were Bad: The New Pluralism Revisited

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    Students in the MRes Art: Moving Image programme at Central Saint Martins/LUX present a screening in response to The New Pluralism, a mid-decade survey of British film and video art held at the Tate Gallery in April 1985. Curators Michael O’Pray and Tina Keane selected nearly one hundred works for the exhibition in an ambitious attempt to map the pluralistic practices and politics that emerged as a reaction against the Structuralist aesthetic of 1970s British experimental film. Revisiting this exhibition as a moment rather than a movement, the students will reactivate some of these works within a contemporary critical framework. Works shown as part of this programme will include Kim Flitcroft and Sandra Goldbacher’s Scratch video supercut Night of a Thousand Eyes (1984) and Mark Wilcox’s surreal, proto-Lynchian videotape Calling the Shots (1984).

    Dates: 

    Thursday, March 19, 2015 - 14:30

    Venue: 

  • A cocktail of mistakes, or a mistake of cocktails: The (notorious) legend of Robert Beck Memorial Cinema in 2 or 3 easy lessons

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    Every Tuesday night for more than a hex of years, the Robert Beck Memorial Cinema illuminated the snowy-white screen of the Collective Unconscious on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Initiated by Brian Frye & immediately joined by Bradley Eros, both shared the core curating frenzy of this no-budget operation, managing to produce over 300 programs and exhibiting more than a thousand artists. When Frye left, it relocated & regrouped, mutating into Roberta Beck Mercurial Cinema at Participant Inc’s gallery just around the corner, for a year, with a team of at least six, but primarily & irrepressibly Eros & Joel Schlemowitz. It later became a restless, nomadic cinema, mushrooming & mutating in myriad incarnations, most notoriously at Issue Project Room on the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn, both indoors and out. Lastly, it explored more artworld and musical contexts, transforming the field of experimental film, as both quixotic and quicksilver.

    Dates: 

    Saturday, March 21, 2015 - 19:30

    Venue: 

    UnionDocs - New York, United States
  • Xcèntric: Lamentations. A Monument to the Dead World. The Dream of the Last Historian

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    Jonas Mekas described R. Bruce Elder, Canadian filmmaker and writer, as “the most important US filmmaker of the eighties”. His films centre on the relations between philosophy, science and poetry. Lamentations: A Monument to the Dead World. The Dream of the Last Historian is the first part of an epic monumental film that reflects on the despair of human consciousness in the postmodern world. It represents the paranoiac, transcendental mind of the poet (Elder), imagining himself as the last thinker of history. The film has a complex polyphonic structure: made up of thousands of shots, superpositions of images and texts, readings, narrations, photographs, dialogues and electronic music, it also applies poetic resources and an associative logic that seeks to change rational thought.

    Attended by Bruce Elder

    Dates: 

    Thursday, March 12, 2015 - 19:00 to Friday, March 13, 2015 - 18:55

    Venue: 

  • Early Monthly Segments #71: Takashi Ito + Rose Lowder + Paul Sharits

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    To celebrate our sixth anniversary we’ve assembled an evening of determined visual magic, radical geometry and single frame exaltation. Takashi Ito’s sublime Spacy uses the Droste effect (or mise-en-abyme), to turn 700 photographs of a gymnasium into a glorious ten-minute kinetic voyage. Paul Sharits’s seminal Ray Gun Virus is a colour field flicker film that offers a visceral palette of sensory pleasures. Rose Lowder’s Scenes de la vie francaise: La Ciotat is from her four-part series “Scenes de la vie francaise” which references the Lumieres and shows two versions of the same scene, shot frame by frame acutely examining the impact of scale, duration and time. La Ciotat features animated landscapes of the port, dry docks, shipyard workers, launched tankers, fishermen and the beach, showing us contrasting views of the Cote d’Azur port city with graceful perception.

    Dates: 

    Monday, March 16, 2015 - 20:00 to Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - 19:55

    Venue: 

    Gladstone Hotel - Toronto, Canada
  • Imaginary Landscapes: Recent works by Dan Browne

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    The Factory Media Centre is proud to present the work of Toronto-based filmmaker, photographer and media artist Dan Browne. Browne has been producing films and videos for over 10 years that examine our contemporary relationships to technological and natural environments through densely kinetic audio-visual patterned forms. His most recent video works traverse the fertile territories and intersections between cinema, video installation, music, photography, painting and poetry and have been presented in a range of venues, including festivals, concerts, galleries, and public spaces.

    For his first-ever solo show, Browne will present a selection of his recent works in person, followed by a unique two-hour live performance of "memento mori", featuring musician collaborators Dan Driscoll and Steve Richman, that will rework material from the film to create an astonishing and singular live cinematic event.

    Dates: 

    Friday, March 13, 2015 - 19:00 to Saturday, March 14, 2015 - 18:55

    Venue: 

    Factory Media Centre - Hamilton, Canada

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