01 November 2011

Plenty: Dichtung und Wahrheit

PLENTY: DICHTUNG UND WAHRHEIT
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 1 November 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY has proposed a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film was given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it. This is the last event in the series.

Dichtung und Wahrheit (Peter Kubelka, 2003)

Tuesday 1 November 2011, from 7pm
DICHTUNG UND WAHRHEIT

DICHTUNG UND WAHRHEIT (Poetry and Truth
Peter Kubelka, Austria, 2003, 16mm, colour, silent, 13 minutes

In cinema, as in anthropological study, the ready-made reveal ssome of the fundamental poetry and truth of our lives. Peter Kubelka unearthed sequences of discarded takes from advertising films and presents them, almost untouched, as documents that unwittingly offer valuable and humorous insights into the human condition.

“Peter Kubelka is the world's greatest filmmaker – which is to say, simply: see his films! … by all means/above all else … et cetera.” (Stan Brakhage)

Peter Kubelka (born 1933) is an artist, anthropologist, cook and teacher. Active as a filmmaker over five decades, his total output amounts to some sixty-two minutes of screen time in which he explores the essential qualities of cinema.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

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24 October 2011

Feel Flows: The Films of Phil Solomon

FEEL FLOWS: THE FILMS OF PHIL SOLOMON
London Tate Modern
24 & 27 October 2011

On his first visit to the UK, Phil Solomon presents two programmes of his alchemical film work. By treating the celluloid surface with a variety of substances and techniques, Solomon transforms images to construct an emotionally charged and deeply affecting cinema. Often elegiac in tone, his symphonic approach makes the personal profound.

The Snowman (Phil Solomon, 1995)
This survey of Solomon’s 16mm films also features Rehearsals for Retirement, a machinima work from the digital series In Memoriam (for Mark LaPore), made with imagery drawn from the Grant Theft Auto videogames. Programme two includes Seasons…, a collaboration with Solomon’s colleague, friend and mentor, Stan Brakhage.

“Although part of a long avant-garde tradition, Solomon makes films that look like no others I’ve seen. The conceit of the filmmaker as auteur has rarely been more appropriate or defensible – the liberating effect of Solomon’s work suggests a rather different realm: Film Meets Vision, Rejoice!” (Manohla Dargis, New York Times)

Curated by Mark Webber and presented in association with The 55th BFI London Film Festival. Solomon will premiere American Falls at BFI Southbank on Sunday 23 October.

The Exquisite Hour (Phil Solomon, 1989/94)

Monday 24 October 2011, at 7pm
PHIL SOLOMON: PROGRAMME 1

THE EXQUISITE HOUR
Phil Solomon, 1989/94, 16mm, colour, sound, 14 min
“… Partly a lullaby for the dying, partly a lament of the death of cinema … [it] is dedicated to the memory of my grandparents, Albert Solomon, who was a projectionist for Fox, and Rose Solomon, who took tickets at Lowe’s Paradise in the Bronx.” (Phil Solomon)

THE SNOWMAN
Phil Solomon, 1995, 16mm, colour, sound, 8 min
“A meditation on memory, burial and decay – a belated kaddish for my father.” (Phil Solomon)

CLEPSYDRA
Phil Solomon, 1992, 16mm, b/w, silent, 15 min
“Solomon has evolved his technique so that in his latest work (‘Clepsydra’ – ‘waterclock’) the textures are constantly changing and are often appropriate to each figure in metaphoric interplay with each figure’s gestural (symbolic) movement. He has, thus, created consonance with thought as destroyer/creator – a Kali-like aesthetic ‘There is a light at the end of the tunnel’ (Romantic); and it is a train coming straight at us: … (and, to balance such, perhaps, with a touch of Zen) … it is beautiful!” (Stan Brakhage)

PSALM III: “NIGHT OF THE MEEK”
Phil Solomon, 2002, 16mm, b/w, sound, 23 min
“It is Berlin, November 9, 1938, and, as the night air is shattered throughout the city, the Rabbi of Prague is summoned from a dark slumber, called upon once again to invoke the magic letters from the Great Book that will bring his creature made from earth back to life, in the hour of need. A kindertodenliede in black and silver on a night of gods and monsters.” (Phil Solomon)

REHEARSALS FOR RETIREMENT
Phil Solomon, 2007, video, colour, sound, 10 min
“Had I known the end would end in laughter / I tell my daughter it doesn’t matter.” (Phil Ochs)

Nocturne (Phil Solomon, 1980)

Thursday 27 October 2011, at 7pm
PHIL SOLOMON: PROGRAMME 2

WHAT’S OUT TONIGHT IS LOST
Phil Solomon, 1983, 16mm, colour, silent, 8 min
“Adopting its title from a poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay, What’s Out Tonight Is Lost is an elegiac film sifting through the unrecoverable. The film is a reflecting pool where vision breaks up. The home we recognize is swallowed in the brume, the light barely penetrates; and the yellow school bus steals us away, delivering us into new clouds, embracing fear. The film has a surface of cracked porcelain and intaglio: the allergic childhood skin of cracks and bruises. This is a film of transubstantiations, the discorporation of human forms into embers. Air looms and blossoms into solidity and nearness … I hear it breathing …” (Mark McElhatten)

PSALM I: “THE LATENESS OF THE HOUR”
Phil Solomon, 2001, 16mm, colour, sound, 10 min
“A little Nachtmusik, a deep blue overture to the series. Breathing in the cool night airs, breathing out a children’s song; then whispering a prayer for a night of easeful sleep. My blue attempt at a sequel to Rose Hobart.” (Phil Solomon)

NOCTURNE
Phil Solomon, 1980, 16mm, b/w, silent, 10 min
“Its setting is a suburban neighbourhood populated by kids at play and indistinct but ominous parental figures. A submerged narrative rehearses a type of young boy’s night-time game in which a flashlight is wielded in a darkened room to produce effects of aerial combat and bombardment. A sense of hostility tinged with terror seeps into commonplace movements … Fantasy merges with nightmare, a war of dimly suppressed emotions rages beneath a veneer of household calm … In Nocturne, found footage is worked so subtly into the fabric of threat that its comes as a shock ploughed from the unconscious.” (Paul Arthur)

SEASONS ...
Phil Solomon & Stan Brakhage, 2002, 16mm, colour, silent, 15 min
“Brakhage’s frame by frame hand carvings and etchings directly into the film emulsion, sometimes combined with paint, are illuminated by Solomon’s optical printing, then edited by Solomon into a four part seasonal cycle‚. This film can be considered to be part of a larger work by Brakhage entitled “…”. Seasons… is inspired by the colours and textures found in the woodcuts of Hokusai and Hiroshige, and the playful sense of forms dancing in space from the filmworks of Robert Breer and Len Lye.” (Phil Solomon)

REMAINS TO BE SEEN
Phil Solomon, 1989/94, 16mm, colour, sound, 17 min
“In the melancholic Remains to Be Seen, dedicated to the memory of Solomon’s mother, the scratchy rhythm of a respirator intones menace. The film, optically crisscrossed with tiny eggshell cracks, often seems on the verge of shattering. The passage from life into death is chartered by fugitive images: pans of an operating room, an old home movie of a picnic, a bicyclist in vague outline against burnt orange and blue … Solomon measures emotions with images that seem stolen from a family album of collective memory.” (Manohla Dargis, Village Voice)

at

Starr Auditorium
Tate Modern, Bankside, London, SE1 9TG
Nearest Tube: Southwark / London Bridge / Blackfriars
MAP OF AREA

Tickets: £5 / £4 concessions, booking recommended
Box Office: 020 7887 8888
www.tate.org.uk

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21 October 2011

London Film Festival 2011

LONDON FILM FESTIVAL: EXPERIMENTA WEEKEND
London BFI Southbank
21-23 October 2011

The Experimenta Weekend is the London Film Festival’s annual survey of artist’s film and video. Over three days, from 21-23 October 2011, a unique sequence of programmes will offer a curated selection of outstanding work made around the world.

Phil Solomon, renowned for his exquisite 16mm films, will make his first appearance in the UK to introduce the epic American Falls. In a triptych of images, waves of chemically treated celluloid reflect the aspirations and tragedies of the American dream.

Two festival regulars return with debut features: Lewis Klahr’s elliptical narrative The Pettifogger further develops his distinctive cut-out animation techniques; Ben Rivers’ Two Years at Sea mixes fact and fantasy in an extended study of a marginal outsider. Observational filmmaker Robert Fenz and Portuguese artist Gabriel Abrantes are featured in solo screenings.

Contemporary moving image owes much to the pioneering generation of avant-garde filmmakers that appear in Pip Chodorov’s documentary Free Radicals. Jonas Mekas, a central figure in that movement’s history, will present two new works of his own: Sleepless Night Stories and Correspondence (in collaboration with José Luis Guerin). The visionary films of West Coast pioneer Chick Strand, which combine experimental, collage and ethnographic styles, can be rediscovered in newly preserved prints.

The Experimenta Weekend is curated by Mark Webber, with assistance from Adam Pugh and Marina Ribera.

Outside the weekend programme, the Festival also includes James Benning's Twenty Cigarettes, plus new preservations of Roberto Rossellini’s The Machine That Kills Bad People and Nicholas Ray’s experimental project We Can’t Go Home Again. See The 55th BFI London Film Festival for full details.

Due to the popularity of the Experimenta Weekend, we now offer several repeat screenings. If programmes are listed as “sold out”, please keep trying as additional tickets are released in the days leading up to the weekend & limited numbers are usually available on the door immediately before each programme begins.

Free Radicals (Pip Chodorov, 2010)
Friday 21 October 2011, at 6:30pm, NFT3
& Monday 24 October 2011, at 4:15pm, NFT3
& Monday 24 October 2011, at 7pm, STUDIO
FREE RADICALS: A HISTORY OF EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA

FREE RADICALS: A HISTORY OF EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA
Pip Chodorov | France 2011 | 82 min

Free Radicals scratches the surface of the history of avant-garde cinema in Europe and the USA, from early post-war pioneers through to the founding of New York’s Anthology Film Archives, a museum whose screen is the exhibition space. Director Pip Chodorov is well-placed to chronicle the movement – he established the Re:Voir label to distribute tapes and DVDs of artists’ films, and counts many key exponents amongst his friends. In this personal journey through experimental movies, he surveys a generation of artists who pushed the boundaries of the medium. Working without compromise, and without financial rewards, they were forced to create their own support structures in an expression of solidarity. Whilst not claiming to be a definitive documentary, Free Radicals is a discerning introduction to the field, and its informal nature provides a privileged glimpse at the personalities involved. Archival footage of Hans Richter, Nam June Paik and Stan Vanderbeek (drawn from TV programmes made by the filmmaker’s father) supplements new interviews with Chodorov’s distinguished acquaintances (Jonas Mekas, Peter Kubelka, Robert Breer, Ken Jacobs) and generous excerpts from the films themselves.


Two Years at Sea (Ben Rivers, 2011)
Friday 21 October 2011, at 9pm, NFT1
& Monday 24 October 2011, at 1:30pm, NFT1
TWO YEARS AT SEA

TWO YEARS AT SEA
Ben Rivers | UK 2011 | 88 min

Using old 16mm cameras, artist Ben Rivers, who has been nominated for the Jarman Award and has won a Tiger Award at Rotterdam, creates work from stories of real people, often those who have disconnected from the normal world and taken themselves into wilderness territories. His new long-form work extends his relationship with Jake, a man first encountered in his short film This Is My Land. The title refers to the work Jake did in order to finance his chosen state of existence. He lives alone in a ramshackle house, in the middle of the forest. It’s full of curiosities from a bygone age, including a beloved old gramophone. We see his daily life across the seasons, as he occupies himself going for walks in all weathers, and taking naps in the misty fields and woods. Endlessly resourceful, he builds a raft to fish in a loch. Jake has a tremendous sense of purpose, however eccentric his behaviour seems to us. The presence of the camera is irrelevant to him; he has no desire for human contact, and is completely at home in his environment, the nature around him and his constructed abode. Rivers’ gracefully-constructed film creates an intimate connection with an individual who would otherwise be a complete outsider to us. (Helen de Witt)


Trypps 7 (Badlands) (Ben Russell, 2010)
Saturday 22 October 2011, at 2pm, NFT3
& Thursday 27 October 2011, at 3:45pm, STUDIO
ALTERED STATES

TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS)
Ben Russell | USA 2010 | 10 min
The mirror crack’d: As a young woman, high on LSD, looks toward the camera, the doors of perception swing open for both viewer and subject.

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING
Mary Helena Clark | USA 2010 | 9 min
‘This is your life. It rides like a dream.’ (MHC)

SANS TITRE
Neil Beloufa | France 2010 | 15 min
In a reconstruction of a villa occupied by terrorists during the Algerian War, onlookers speculate on the activities that took place.

THE PIPS
Emily Wardill | UK 2011 | 4 min
A gymnast performs, and everything begins to fall away …

…THESE BLAZEING STARRS!
Deborah Stratman | USA 2011 | 14min
Watch the skies! Throughout history, comets have heralded events of grave significance and change; today it is thought that they can reveal facts about the formation of the universe.

THESE HAMMERS DON’T HURT US
Michael Robinson | USA 2010 | 13 min
‘Tired of underworld and overworld alike, Isis escorts her favourite son on their final curtain call down the Nile, leaving a neon wake of shattered tombs and sparkling sarcophagi.’ (MR)

Total running time approximately 70 min


The Return (Nathaniel Dorsky, 2011)
Saturday 22 October 2011, at 4pm, NFT3
& Tuesday 25 October 2011, at 8:45pm, NFT2
NATHANIEL DORSKY / BEN RIVERS

PASTOURELLE
Nathaniel Dorsky | USA 2010 | 17 min
‘A pastourelle and an aubade are two different forms of courtship songs from the troubadour tradition. In this case, the film Pastourelle, a sister film to Aubade, is in the more tumultuous key of spring.’ (ND)

THE RETURN
Nathaniel Dorsky | USA 2011 | 27 min
‘Like a memory already gone, this place of life.’ Dorsky has created a poetic form of cinema in which the screen becomes a site for reverie or transfiguration. In his most recent film, he seems to move towards a more abstract representation of light and being.

SACK BARROW
Ben Rivers | UK 2011 | 21 min
The march of time claims another casualty. Sack Barrow documents (and laments) the out-dated, but functioning, technology of a family owned electroplating factory in the weeks around its closure – its old ways now unsustainable in the modern world.

Total running time approximately 70 min


Palácios de Pena (Gabriel Abrantes, 2011)
Saturday 22 October 2011, at 7pm, NFT3
& Tuesday 25 October 2011, at 1:15pm, NFT2
GABRIEL ABRANTES

LIBERDADE
Gabriel Abrantes & Benjamin Crotty | Portugal-Angola 2011 | 16 min
Liberdade sketches episodes in the relationship between a domineering Chinese immigrant and her Angolan boyfriend with lavishly cinematic panache. Travelling through spectacular locations in and around Luanda, they navigate the complications of their burgeoning identities and the different cultures they represent.

PALÁCIOS DE PENA (PALACES OF PITY)
Gabriel Abrantes & Daniel Schmidt | Portugal 2011 | 56 min
Gabriel Abrantes and his collaborators use the tropes of mainstream cinema to make works that are by turns comical, thought-provoking and transgressive. In a parable on guilt and oppression, which alludes to aspects of Portuguese colonial history, two cousins are potential heirs to their grandmother’s fortune. A new generation may be oblivious to the past, but inherits it nonetheless.

OLYMPIA I & II
Gabriel Abrantes & Katie Widloski | Portugal-USA 2008 | 7 min
Mimicking the composition of Manet’s notorious painting, the artists play out two possible scenarios: between a prostitute and her gay brother, and between a wealthy transsexual and his devoted maid.

Total running time approximately 80 min


Sleepless Nights Stories (Jonas Mekas, 2011)
Saturday 22 October 2011, at 9pm, NFT3
& Tuesday 18 October 2011, at 9pm, VUE3
& Thursday 20 October 2011, at 7pm, STUDIO
SLEEPLESS NIGHTS STORIES

SLEEPLESS NIGHTS STORIES
Jonas Mekas | USA 2011 | 114 min

Jonas Mekas’ opening confession that he suffers from insomnia will come as no surprise to anyone aware if his singular contribution to cinema. Over 50 years he has established and promoted a viable culture for truly independent and avant-garde filmmaking, and his recent acceptance by the art world has brought a long overdue wave of attention and success. Sleepless Nights Stories is the latest in the series of long-form diary films that Mekas has been making since his arrival in the USA in 1949. Eating, drinking, singing and dancing with friends, the tireless octogenarian is full of life and wonder, casually weaving together contemporary folk tales collected during travels across the globe. Marina Abramovic fantasizes about domesticity, Lee Stringer recounts an episode from his crack-addicted past, and the protagonist toasts the ‘working class voice’ of Amy Winehouse. Louis Garrel, Björk, Harmony Korine and Patti Smith also appear. Treating significant and inconsequential moments with equal import, Mekas’ modern day saga presents the first episodes from his ambitious ‘1001 Nights’ project.


Mosori Monika (Chick Strand, 1970)
Sunday 23 October 2011, at 2pm, NFT3
INTIMATE VISION: FILMS BY CHICK STRAND

As one of the instigators of Canyon Cinema, Chick Strand (1931-2009) was at the heart of 1960s West Coast avant-garde. Her film work, comprising of found footage and personally photographed material, has been rarely seen in the UK and is presented now in newly preserved prints. Strand’s camera is almost continually in motion, catching details in kinetic close-up to convey celebrations of intimacy and the joys of living.

‘For most of her filmmaking career, the integrity of Strand’s vision lay aslant of prevailing fashions, so that only belatedly did the full significance of her radically pioneering work in ethnographic, documentary, feminist, and compilation filmmaking – and above all, in the innovation of a unique film language created across these modes – become clear.’ (David James, The Most Typical Avant-Garde)

CARTOON LE MOUSSE
Chick Strand | USA 1979 | 15 min
In her collage films, Strand uses the magic of editing to conjure surreal humour from the connections between disparate fragments.

MOSORI MONIKA
Chick Strand | USA 1970 | 20 min
The impact of American missionaries on the Warao Indians in Venezuela is considered from the viewpoints of women from each side.

ANGEL SWEET BLUE WINGS
Chick Strand | USA 1966 | 3 min
A multi-layered cine-poem apropos life and vision.

LOOSE ENDS
Chick Strand | USA 1979 | 25 min
Found footage is used to convey the effect of information overload, finding wit and pathos in the complicated synthesis of personal experience and media assault.

ARTIFICIAL PARADISE
Chick Strand | USA 1986 | 13 min
‘The anthropologist’s most human desire: the ultimate contact with the informant. The denial of intellectualism and the acceptance of the romantic heart, and a soul without innocence.’ (CS)

KRISTALLNACHT
Chick Strand | USA 1979 | 7 min
‘Dedicated to the memory of Anne Frank, and the tenacity of the human spirit.’ (CS)

Total running time approximately 90 min

Loose Ends was preserved by Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley. All other films preserved by Pacific Film Archive and Academy Film Archive, Los Angeles, with support from the National Film Preservation Foundation.


American Falls (Phil Solomon, 2010)
Sunday 23 October 2011, at 4pm, NFT3
& Tuesday 25 October 2011, at 4pm, NFT3
PHIL SOLOMON’S AMERICAN FALLS

‘Should anyone imagine that the art of alchemy died with the Middle Ages, Phil Solomon’s American Falls testifies to the contrary: both to the possibilities of photographic and digital transformation and to the magical emanations of their fusion.’ (Tony Pipolo, Artforum)

AMERICAN FALLS
Phil Solomon | USA 2010 | 60 min
In his sublime 16mm films, Phil Solomon chemically alters photographic imagery to create a thick celluloid impasto that infuses footage with profound emotional resonance. For American Falls, Solomon rifles through a collective memory fashioned from both fact and fiction, mixing elements from newsreels, actualities and narrative films in a monumental retelling of American history which draws parallels with and reflects upon the current state of the nation. Houdini, Harold Lloyd, Keaton and King Kong commingle with presidents, gold-diggers, railroad barons and the civil rights movement. ‘My project is ultimately one of great hope, stemming from a life-long love for this American experiment of ours … but it is also necessitated by my deepest concern for its present and future directions.’ Originally conceived as a 360-degree installation around the walls of the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s rotunda, the work has been reconfigured for the cinema as a panoramic view in triptych, with surround sound mix by composer Wrick Wolff.

WHAT’S OUT TONIGHT IS LOST
Phil Solomon | USA 1983 | 8 min
‘The film began in response to an evaporating relationship, but gradually seeped outward to anticipate other imminent disappearing acts: youth, family, friends, time … I wanted the tonal shifts of the film’s surface to act as a barometer of the changes in the emotional weather.’ (PS)
Preserved by Academy Film Archive, Los Angeles.

Total running time approximately 80 min

Phil Solomon will present screenings of his earlier films at Tate Modern on 24 & 27 October 2011.


The Pettifogger (Lewis Klahr, 2011)
Sunday 23 October 2011, at 7pm, NFT3
& Tuesday 25 October 2011, at 7pm, STUDIO
THE PETTIFOGGER

THE PETTIFOGGER
Lewis Klahr | USA 2011 | 65 min
The first feature-length work by Lewis Klahr takes a unique approach to a familiar genre. Ostensibly a thriller that traces events in the life of an American gambler and con man circa 1963, The Pettifogger is described by the filmmaker as ‘an abstract crime film and, like many other crime films involving larceny, a sensorial exploration of the virulence of unfettered capitalism.’ Characters lifted from comic books move through an impressionistic landscape of textures, photographs and drawings, populating a story whose narrative is suggested but not strongly defined. Employing a range of iconography and appropriated audio to expand his signature style of collage animation, Klahr recycles symbols of popular culture to address themes of the loss of innocence and the irresistible allure of wealth.

APRIL SNOW
Lewis Klahr | USA 2010 | 10 min
A love story about cars and girls, carried away by songs from the Shangri-La’s and The Boss.

Total running time approximately 80 min


Correspondence (Robert Fenz, 2011)
Sunday 23 October 2011, at 9pm, NFT3
& Monday 24 October 2011, at 2pm, NFT3
ON THE ROAD WITH ROBERT FENZ

Robert Fenz’s films explore cultural diversity and the human condition with a keen eye reminiscent of his tutors Peter Hutton and James Benning. Mixing improvisation with luminous photography, he offers a poetic but political worldview. An associate of Robert Gardner’s Studio7Arts, Fenz has collaborated with musician Wadada Leo Smith and worked as cinematographer for Chantal Akerman.

THE SOLE OF THE FOOT
Robert Fenz | USA 2011 | 34 min
Filmed in France, Israel and Cuba. ‘Borders (and all the politics attending the drawing of borders) exist to keep some people in (citizenship) and others out. This film is an attempt to capture the presence of people otherwise denied the political right to be at home in some place that is their home, where they have their roots, where they have their being.’ (RF)

CORRESPONDENCE
Robert Fenz | USA 2011 | 30 min
For Correspondence, Fenz travelled to places where the pioneering ethnographic filmmaker Robert Gardner shot three of his best-known films – West Papua (Dead Birds), Ethiopia (Rivers of Sand) and India (Forest of Bliss). While documenting present conditions in these locations, Fenz also constructs an elegy for a form of image-making that is now in decline.

Total running time approximately 65 min


...

Advance booking is highly recommended
Standard ticket price: £10.50
Weekday screenings before 5pm: £7.00
Concessions for weekday screenings before 5pm: £6.00

Book online at www.bfi.org.uk/lff
Telephone Box Office: 020 7928 3232
Book in person at BFI Southbank

For full booking info see www.bfi.org.uk/lff

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30 August 2011

Plenty: Unnamed Film

PLENTY: UNNAMED FILM
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 30 August 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

Unnamed Film (Naomi Uman, 2008)

Tuesday 30 August 2011, from 7pm
UNNAMED FILM

UNNAMED FILM
Naomi Uman, Ukraine, 2008, 16mm, colour, sound, 55 minutes

Naomi Uman stepped into the Ukranian time machine in 2006. 100 years after her grandparents emigrated to the USA, the filmmaker made the reverse journey and settled in a remote village. Her film diary documents her assimilation into the customs of an ageing community, and observes a rural way of life that has changed little over the centuries.

“A hybrid of lyrical and documentary forms, hers is a cinema equally attuned to the unique textures of small-gauge celluloid and the subtleties of cultural difference.” (Light Industry)

Naomi Uman’s work addresses themes of labour, geography, immigration, language and love. She continues to live in the Ukraine, where she makes films, paints, and grows vegetables and flowers.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

26 July 2011

Plenty: Bouvier and Prusakova

PLENTY: BOUVIER AND PRUSAKOVA
London X Marks The Bökship
Tuesday 26 July 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

Bouvier and Prusakova (Marya Alford, 2005)

Tuesday 26 July 2011, from 7pm
BOUVIER AND PRUSAKOVA

BOUVIER AND PRUSAKOVA
Marya Alford, USA, 2005, 16mm, colour, sound, 25 minutes

To accompany images of cherry blossom against a radiant blue sky, a voice reads an autobiographical account of a relationship. The text is excerpted from the Warren Commission testimony of the wife of Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of President John F. Kennedy. Titled by the maiden names of their widows, the film parallels the lives of both women. Screening to coincide with the 70th birthday of Marina Oswald Porter.

Marya Alford (born 1979) studied at Otis College and USC, Los Angeles. She works primarily in photography and installation. Bouvier and Prusakova is her only film to date.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

X Marks The Bökship
210/3 Cambridge Heath Road, Bethnal Green, London, E2 9NQ
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Train: Cambridge Heath
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

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20 June 2011

Plenty: Joseph Cornell

PLENTY: JOSEPH CORNELL
London Event Gallery
Monday 20 June 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

A Fable for Fountains (Joseph Cornell & Rudy Burckhardt, 1957)

Monday 20 May 2011, from 7pm
JOSEPH CORNELL

THE AVIARY / NYMPHLIGHT / A FABLE FOR FOUNTAINS
Joseph Cornell & Rudy Burckhardt, USA, 1955-57, 16mm, b/w & colour, sound, 19 minutes

A trilogy of films, united on a single reel, which offer a magical glimpse at New York long since passed. In each, a young woman drifts through the city’s streets and parks, embodying the artists’ distinctive qualities of melancholia and childlike wonder.

“Joseph Cornell describes the marginal area where the conscious and the unconscious meet.” (P. Adams Sitney, Visionary Film)

The artist Joseph Cornell (1903-72) is best known for his enigmatic box constructions. His films likewise used found materials, but on occasion he employed filmmakers Rudy Burckhardt, Stan Brakhage or Larry Jordan to photograph original footage under his direction.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

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31 May 2011

Plenty: Filmmakers' Holiday

PLENTY: FILMMAKERS HOLIDAY
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 31 May 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

Filmmakers' Holiday (Johan van der Keuken, 1974)

Tuesday 31 May 2011, from 7pm
FILMMAKERS' HOLIDAY

VAKANTIE VAN DE FILMER (FILMMAKERS' HOLIDAY)
Johan van der Keuken, Netherlands, 1974, 16mm, b/w & colour, sound, 39 minutes

During a family holiday in the South of France, the filmmaker reflects on his life and career, interweaving excerpts from previous works, fragments of poetry, and the wartime memories of elderly neighbours. As he discovers the world through his son’s eyes, the film veers from the intimate to explore the universal motif of the passage from life to death.

“One of those small masterpieces one encounters by surprise.” (Jean-Paul Fargier, Cahiers du Cinéma)

The prolific documentary maker Johan van der Keuken (1938-2001) is also celebrated photographer. His 55 films, which have been shown in major retrospectives around the world, often explore themes of anthropology, ethnography and economics from a personal viewpoint.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

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12 April 2011

Plenty: Plastic Haircut

PLENTY: PLASTIC HAIRCUT
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 12 April 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

Plastic Haircut (Robert Nelson, 1963)

Tuesday 12 April 2011, from 7pm
PLASTIC HAIRCUT

PLASTIC HAIRCUT
Robert Nelson, USA, 1963, 16mm, b/w, sound, 15 minutes

Two actors perform absurd actions in sets composed of geometric shapes. Two experts try to explain what it all means. Goofing off in positive/negative space, Robert Nelson and collaborators William T. Wiley, Ron Hudson, R.G. Davis and Steve Reich construct a spirited work that invokes Alfred Jarry, Dada and improvised theatre.

“None of us knew anything about making movies, but we all knew about art (namely that it had something to do with having a good time).” (Robert Nelson)

Robert Nelson (born 1930) was a key figure of the post-war independent film scene and one of the founders of Canyon Cinema. His belief that filmmaking should be primarily a fun activity created some of the most entertaining and infectious works of the American underground.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

Labels: ,

08 March 2011

Plenty: O'er the Land

PLENTY: O'ER THE LAND
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 8 March 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

O'er the Land (Deborah Stratman, 2009)

Tuesday 8 March 2011, from 7pm
O'ER THE LAND

O'ER THE LAND
Deborah Stratman, USA, 2009, 16mm, colour, sound, 52 minutes

Marine Corps pilot William Rankin ejected from his jet into a severe thunderstorm, surviving lightening strikes in a 40-minute descent. 50 years later, his account is the starting point for O'ER THE LAND's contemplation of American national identity that takes in Revolutionary War re-enactments, high school football games, gun shows, firefighters and border patrols.

"Rarely since Werner Herzog’s STROSZEK has there been such a keen-eyed portrayal of all-American madness." (Jason Anderson, Eye Weekly)

Deborah Stratman (born 1967) is a Chicago-based artist working in photography, sound, drawing and installation. Her films use experimental and documentary techniques to explore an interest in landscapes, mythologies and systems.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

Labels: ,

08 February 2011

Plenty: Barbara's Blindness

PLENTY: BARBARA'S BLINDNESS
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 8 February 2011, from 7pm

The free screening series PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.

Barbara's Blindness (Joyce Wieland & Betty Ferguson, 1964)

Tuesday 8 February 2011, from 7pm
BARBARA'S BLINDNESS

BARBARA'S BLINDNESS
Joyce Wieland & Betty Ferguson, Canada, 1964, 17 minutes

Constructed from found and stock footage, Barbara's Blindness is a meditation on vision and adversity, drawing humour and pathos from a moralising educational film. “We started out with a dull film about a little blind girl named Mary and ended up with something that made us get crazy.”

Joyce Wieland (1931-88) was a pioneer of patriotic and feminist Canadian art. Though primarily known as a filmmaker, she was also a distinguished painter and mixed media artist. Wieland’s lifelong friend Betty Ferguson (born 1933) went on to make three found footage films of her own in the 1970s.

PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna. Supported by Arts Council England.


at

E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA

Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
Doors 7pm. Projection 7:30pm.

www.eventgallery.org.uk

Labels: ,