Events

  • Austrian Film Museum - In Person: Robert Beavers

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    "The goal is for the projected image to have the same force of awakening sight as any other great image."

    Over five decades, American filmmaker Robert Beavers (*1949) has come closer to this self-set goal than anyone else in his métier. Those fortunate enough to have experienced the complete retrospective of Beavers' work organized by the Austrian Film Museum in the autumn of 2010 are familiar with the sensory intoxication and the intensity of visual and aural experiences these works give rise to. They offer an immersion into the beauty and intelligence of craft – both when it comes to the places and activities recorded by Beavers (anywhere between Florence and Massachusetts) and in relation to his own film craft shining in the projection.

    Dates: 

    Wednesday, March 8, 2017 - 20:15
    Thursday, March 9, 2017 - 20:15

    Venue: 

    Austrian Film Museum - Vienna, Austria
  • Urban Research: Private Affair

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    In the times of public intrusion into the private sphere, right wing populists and religious fundamentalists threatening the freedom of expression and diversity, and conservative politicians pressing for control and surveillance, the expressions of private life become a political affair again. Related to the slogan of 1968 "The personal is political", the here presented films talk about personal or private affairs in relation to the public sphere and the urban space.

    Dates: 

    Thursday, January 26, 2017 - 21:00 to Friday, January 27, 2017 - 20:55

    Venue: 

    Z-Bar, Berlin - Berlin, Alemania
  • BUNGALOW by Alex MacKenzie

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    Iris Film Collective is pleased to present the inaugural installation of IN HOUSE, a year-long series of film and light installation at the Falaise Fieldhouse (3434 Falaise Avenue, Vancouver BC, Canada) by Collective members.

    BUNGALOW is a site-specific installation by Alex MacKenzie on view every evening from 6-9pm at the Fieldhouse from February 13 through the 26th, 2017.

    Dates: 

    Monday, February 13, 2017 (All day) to Sunday, February 26, 2017 (All day)

    Venue: 

  • Xcèntric: A bitter well and an orchard of pomegranates - 'Lacrima Christi' by Teo Hernández

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    Lacrima Christi is the longest of the over 150 films made by the Mexican filmmaker resident in Paris, Teo Hernández. Part three of a tetralogy devoted to Christ’s Passion, Lacrima Christi is an exploration of the transfer between desire and myth that takes as its starting point a series of objects found in the flea market of Belleville.

    Dates: 

    Sunday, January 29, 2017 - 18:30

    Venue: 

  • OFFoff Cinema: Precipitation Mechanism

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    Art Cinema OFFoff presents a unique screening of Asian experimental films in Belgium.

    In a two-part evening, the history of experimental film in Korea since the 1960s will be shown, alongside several contemporary creations from Asia. Together, the two programs explore the relations between the historical avant-gardes and their lasting influences on contemporary work, despite important social and political changes. Next to specific works, there's attention for pioneering groups that make up the Korean underground.

    Dates: 

    Monday, February 6, 2017 - 20:00 to Tuesday, February 7, 2017 - 19:55

    Venue: 

    OFFoff Cinema - Ghent, Belgium
  • Troubling the Image: Tales of Sound and Vision

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    The five-program series "Troubling the Image: New + Restored Experimental Cinema" features an eclectic and wide-ranging group of works that celebrate the vibrancy of experimental and almost-experimental cinema from near and far, now and then.

    Directly and obliquely, narratives are enacted, told, sung, and implied. Keewatin Dewdney’s Wildwood Flower (1971) is a simple, lovely imagining of the Carter Family’s eponymous song. Lois Patiño’s ghost-like smugglers haunt a phantasmagorical Portuguese mountain region in the cryptic Night without Distance (2015). Robert Flaherty’s long-lost film A Night of Storytelling (1935) captures the essence of Irish oral folklore. French-based Iranian filmmaker Arash Nassiri visualizes a conspiracy-driven monologue with a hallucinatory trip through the Paris catacombs in Darwin Darwah (2016). In Edward R. Feil’s The Inner World of Aphasia (1968) medical instructional film becomes a psychological horror film when a nurse becomes the patient.

    Dates: 

    Friday, January 27, 2017 - 19:00 to Saturday, January 28, 2017 - 18:55

    Venue: 

    Logan Center for the Arts - Chicago, Estados Unidos
  • Xcèntric: Things of my life: the ethnographic cinema of Chick Strand

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    Chick Strand, joint founder with Bruce Baillie of the Canyon Cinema cooperative in 1961, was a pioneering filmmaker with her poetic combination of documentary elements and experimental techniques. In the course of her 30-year career, she made several summer trips to Mexico, during which she made the ethnographic films that make up this session, some of the most important of the avant-garde cinema.

    Dates: 

    Sunday, January 22, 2017 - 18:30

    Venue: 

  • Guli Silberstein: Line of Violence

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    Until Sunday, January 29, you can watch films by renowned experimental filmmaker Guli Silberstein. Why does he deal with the theme of violence and how did he get to what he is doing? Read more in DAFilms' exclusive interview. The director has also commented on his films specially for DAFilms.

    Dates: 

    Wednesday, January 18, 2017 (All day) to Sunday, January 29, 2017 (All day)
  • Mirage. The Films of Ana Mendieta

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    My art is grounded in the belief of one universal energy which runs through everything from insect to man, from man to spectre, from spectre to plant, from plant to galaxy. My works are the irrigation veins of this universal fluid. […] My art comes out of rage and displacement. — Ana Mendieta

    Dates: 

    Thursday, February 2, 2017 - 19:00 to Friday, February 3, 2017 - 18:55

    Venue: 

    Harvard Film Archive - Cambridge, United States
  • Millennium Film Journal: Image Machines

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    The title of the Fall 2016 issue of Millennium Film JournalImage Machines – invites readers to consider artists’ moving image as an interplay between the activities and intentions of filmmakers and the variety of machines and methods employed in the creation of their works. Through disarming voice-overs, archival excavations, and personal interventions, these digital and photo-chemical works chart the leaky tensions between interior and exterior landscapes.

    Dates: 

    Wednesday, January 25, 2017 - 19:30

    Venue: 

    Anthology Film Archives - New York, Estados Unidos

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