24 October 2009

London Film Festival 2009

LONDON FILM FESTIVAL: ARTISTS’ FILM & VIDEO
London BFI Southbank
24-25 October 2009

The London Film Festival’s annual weekend dedicated to artists’ film and video will take place on 24-25 October 2009.

The programme presents a varied selection of international works ranging from the contemporary ethnography of Mirza/Butler to Jim Trainor’s witty, naïve animation of ancient civilisations. Gustav Deutsch introduces FILM IST. a girl & a gun, a battle of the sexes told through footage from early cinema, and a special event featuring new prints of films by Hollis Frampton complements the recent publication of his collected writings.

Established filmmakers Lewis Klahr, Mara Mattuschka and Matthias Müller are shown alongside younger artists Paul Abbott, Jana Debus, and Laida Lertxundi, who are screening in the festival for the first time. Continuous installations by Laure Prouvost and Victor Alimpiev will be presented in the BFI Southbank Studio.

Curated by Mark Webber for The Times BFI 53rd London Film Festival.

PLEASE NOTE: More tickets for “sold out” screenings will be released in the days leading up to the weekend & limited numbers are usually available on the door immediately before each programme.

Monolog (Laure Prouvost, 2009)

Saturday 24 October 2009, from 12-7pm, Studio, FREE
MONOLOG

MONOLOG
Laure Prouvost | UK-France 2009 | 12 min (continuous loop)
A new work made for the Festival turns its attention to the viewer and the room itself. ‘Come inside, I’m going to explain a few things. Just about you and the space we’re in. It’s quite warm in here, you should take off your jacket …’

(nostalgia) (Hollis Frampton, 1971)

Saturday 24 October 2009, at 2pm, NFT3
& Thursday 29 October 2009, at 6:30pm, NFT3
HOLLIS FRAMPTON: HAPAX LEGOMENA

Hollis Frampton, a key figure of the American avant-garde, was an artist and theoretician whose practice closely resonates with contemporary discourse. The series of seven films known as Hapax Legomena is, alongside Zorns Lemma, one of his most distinguished achievements, and will be presented in its entirety on new preservation prints. Predating Magellan, the ambitious ‘metahistory’ of film left unfinished by his early death in 1984, Hapax Legomena traces Frampton’s own creative progression from photographer to filmmaker. It dissects sound/image relationships, incorporates early explorations of video and television, and looks forward to digital media and electronic processes. Though notoriously rigorous, Frampton’s films are infused with poetic tendencies and erudite wit, sustaining a dialogue with the materials of their making, and the viewer’s active participation in their reception.

‘Hapax legomena are, literally, ‘things said once’ … The title brackets a cycle of seven films, which make up a single work composed of detachable parts … The work is an oblique autobiography, seen in stereoscopic focus with the phylogeny of film art as I have had to recapitulate it during my own fitful development as a filmmaker.’ (Hollis Frampton)

(NOSTALGIA)
Hollis Frampton | USA 1971 | 36 min
As a sequence of photographs is presented and slowly burned, a narrator recounts displaced anecdotes related to their production, shifting the relationship between words and images.

POETIC JUSTICE
Hollis Frampton | USA 1972 | 31 min
A ‘film for the mind’ in which the script is displayed page by page for the viewer to read and imagine.

CRITICAL MASS
Hollis Frampton | USA 1971 | 16 min
Frampton’s radical editing technique disrupts and amplifies the already impassioned argument of a quarrelling couple.

Ordinary Matter (Hollis Frampton, 1972)

TRAVELLING MATTE
Hollis Frampton | USA 1971 | 34 min
‘The pivot upon which the whole of Hapax Legomena turns’ uses early video technology to interrogate the image.

ORDINARY MATTER
Hollis Frampton | USA 1972 | 36 min
This ‘headlong dive’ from the Brooklyn Bridge to Stonehenge is a burst of exhilarated consciousness.

REMOTE CONTROL
Hollis Frampton | USA 1972 | 29 min
‘A ‘baroque’ summary of film’s historic internal conflicts, chiefly those between narrative and metric/plastic montage; and between illusionist and graphic space.’

SPECIAL EFFECTS
Hollis Frampton | USA 1972 | 11 min
Stripping away content leaves only the frame. ‘People this given space, if you will, with images of your own devising.’

Total running time approximately 210 min (including intermission)

Hapax Legomena has been preserved through a major cooperative effort funded by the National Film Preservation Foundation and undertaken by Anthology Film Archives, MoMA, the New York University Moving Image Archiving and Preservation Program, and project conservator Bill Brand.


Passage Briare (Friedl vom Gröller, 2009)

Saturday 24 October 2009, at 7pm, NFT3
HUMAN NATURE

PASSAGE BRIARE
Friedl vom Gröller | Austria 2009 | 3 min
A meeting of friends in a Paris backstreet, and an unexpected revelation.

HOTEL ROCCALBA
Josef Dabernig | Austria 2008 | 10 min
In a subtle choreography, the occupants of a small Alpine hotel pass a lazy afternoon. Not much happens, but all may not be as it appears.

GREGOR ALEXIS
Jana Debus | Germany 2009 | 20 min
The filmmaker’s schizophrenic brother recounts personal experiences, slipping between first and third person. The locations chosen for this portrait – a desolate apartment and a wasteland littered with abandoned machinery – are indicative of the condition of someone potentially as vulnerable as the insects that collect on his windowsill.

THE DISCOVERY
Ken Jacobs | USA 2008 | 4 min
Tom’s dextrous parlour game attracts unwanted attention. A stolen moment, frozen in time, now re-animated for all to see.

THE PRESENTATION THEME
Jim Trainor | USA 2008 | 14 min
As primitive Magic Marker drawings illustrate the myths and rituals of the ancient Moche civilisation, a disparaging narrator describes the tormented trials of a hapless creature amongst goblets of blood, fanged men and a sacrificial priestess.

BURNING PALACE
Mara Mattuska, Chris Haring | Austria 2009 | 32 min
This new collaboration between Mattuschka and Vienna’s Liquid Loft takes us behind the velvet curtains of the Burning Palace, whose peculiar inhabitants have an itch they just can’t scratch.

Total running time approximately 90 min


My Absolution (Victor Alimpiev, 2008)

Sunday 25 October 2009, from 12-7pm, Studio, FREE
MY ABSOLUTION

MY ABSOLUTION
Victor Alimpiev | Russia-Netherlands 2008 | 8 min (continuous loop)
Victor Alimpiev’s work imbues the simplest gestures with mystery and consequence. An actress performs a sequence of enigmatic actions towards the nape of a second woman’s neck in a performance that creates an almost sculptural tension which is never quite released.


Me Broni Ba (Akosua Adoma Owusu, 2008)

Sunday 25 October 2009, at 2pm, NFT3
THE EXCEPTION AND THE RULE

ME BRONI BA (MY WHITE BABY)
Akosua Adoma Owusu | USA-Ghana 2008 | 22 min
Driven by the pulsing sounds of Afrobeat and American soul, this spirited study of Ghanaian hair salons questions representations of beauty and ethnicity. While teams of women weave elaborate styles, children practice braiding on the blonde hair of white baby dolls, surplus stock exported from the West.

MY TEARS ARE DRY
Laida Lertxundi | USA-Spain 2009 | 4 min
A song of heartache, an afternoon’s repose and the eternal promise of the blue California sky.

THE EXCEPTION AND THE RULE
Karen Mirza, Brad Butler | UK-Pakistan-India 2009 | 38 min
Shot primarily in Karachi, The Exception and the Rule employs a variety of strategies in negotiating consciously political themes. Avoiding traditional documentary modes, the film frames everyday activities within a period of civil unrest, incorporating performances to camera, public interventions and observation. This complex work supplements Mirza/Butler’s Artangel project ‘The Museum of Non Participation’.

Total running time approximately 75 min


FILM IST. a girl & a gun (Gustav Deutsch, 2009)

Sunday 25 October 2009, at 4pm, NFT3
& Thursday 29 October 2009, at 4pm, NFT2
FILM IST. a girl & a gun

FILM IST. a girl & a gun
Gustav Deutsch | Austria 2009 | 97 min

Taking its cue from DW Griffith via J-L Godard, the latest instalment of the FILM IST series is a five-act drama in which reclaimed footage is interwoven with aphorisms from ancient Greek philosophy. Beginning with the birth of the universe, it develops into a meditation on the timeless themes of sex and death, exploring creation, desire and destruction by appropriating scenes from narrative features, war reportage, nature studies and pornography. The Earth takes shape from molten lava, and man and woman embark upon their erotic quest. For this mesmerising epic, Deutsch applies techniques of montage, sound and colour to resources drawn from both conventional film archives and specialist collections such as the Kinsey Institute and Imperial War Museum. Excavating cinema history to tease new meanings from diverse and forgotten film material, he proposes new perspectives on the cycle of humanity. The film’s integral score by long-term collaborators Christian Fennesz, Burkhardt Stangl and Martin Siewert incorporates music by David Grubbs, Soap&Skin and others.


Mount Shasta (Oliver Husain, 2008)

Sunday 25 October 2009, at 7pm, NFT3
WHIRL OF CONFUSION

AND THE SUN FLOWERS
Mary Helena Clark | USA 2008 | 5 min
‘Notes from the distant future and forgotten past. An ethereal flower and disembodied voice guide you through the spaces in between.’ (Mary Helena Clark)

SHOT FILM
Greg Pope | UK-Norway 2009 | 4 min
Taking the expression ‘to shoot a film’ at face value, this 35mm reel has been blasted with a shotgun.

CONTRE-JOUR
Matthias Müller, Christoph Giradet | Germany 2009 | 11 min
My Eyes! My Eyes! Flickering out from the screen and direct to your retina, Contre-jour is not for the optic neurotic. Take a deep breath and try to relax as Müller and Girardet conduct their examination.

FILM FOR INVISIBLE INK CASE NO. 142: ABBREVIATION FOR DEAD WINTER (DIMINISHED BY 1,794)
David Gatten | USA 2008 | 13 min
‘A single piece of paper, a second stab at suture, a story three times over, a frame for every mile. Words by Charles Darwin.’ (David Gatten)

WOLF’S FROTH / AMONGST OTHER THINGS
Paul Abbott | UK 2009 | 15 min
By chance or circumstance, wolf’s froth’s covert syntax refuses to be unpicked. Entangling anxious domesticity with the spectre of aggression, it conjures a mood of underlying discomfort and intrigue.

FALSE AGING
Lewis Klahr | USA 2008 | 15 min
Klahr’s surreal collage journeys through lost horizons of comic book Americana and is brought back down to earth by Drella’s dream. And nobody called, and nobody came.

MOUNT SHASTA
Oliver Husain | Canada 2008 | 8 min
What is ostensibly a proposal for a film script is acted out, without artifice, in a bare loft space as Mantler plays a plaintive lament. A puppet show like none other that will leave you bemused, befuddled and bewildered.

Total running time approximately 80 min



Advance booking highly recommended
Standard ticket price is £9.00

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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11 November 2007

Hollis Frampton: Magellan

HOLLIS FRAMPTON: MAGELLAN
London National Maritime Museums
Sundays 11 & 18 November 2007, at 12:00pm

A screening, over two consecutive Sundays, of Hollis Frampton’s monumental film sequence MAGELLAN, which uses Ferdinand Magellan’s circumnavigatory voyage as a metaphor for a meditation on the history and language of cinema, and the phenomena of perception.

Hollis Frampton portrait by Marion Faller, 1975

“A series of shaped observations that include portraits, cadaver footage, re-stagings of Lumière films, visits to slaughterhouses, double exposures, a field of peaceful dairy cattle, allusions to Muybridge, electronic imagery, industrial pictures, a state fair – a kind of capsule version of the twentieth century that might have been placed on the Voyager spacecraft as it soared out of the solar system to worlds unknown.” (Robert Haller, Anthology Film Archives, New York)

In composing his metahistory of cinema, Frampton often refers to other films and filmic modes, quotes liberally from early cinema (specifically the paper print collection of the Library of Congress) and explores countless possibilities for montage and the relationship between sound and image.

Originally intended as a 36-hour sequence in which individual titles would be shown on specific days in a calendar of one year and four days, it was left unfinished when Frampton died in 1984. The surviving 8 hours of material, comprising of almost 30 individual films, will be screened together for the first time in the UK.

The schedule of 4 x 2-hour programmes, structured by Michael Zryd (who will introduce the first programme), is based on the 1978 version of Frampton’s “Magellan Calendar” and the last work-in-progress screenings presented by the artist at the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York) in January 1980.

The Red Gate (Hollis Frampton, 1976)

Hollis Frampton, one of the key filmmakers of his generation, was also a noted photographer and theorist, whose remarkable writing was published frequently in Artforum and October.

“Frampton is generally understood, in his words, as an artist ‘of the modernist persuasion,’ not only for his aesthetics, but for his close personal association with such figures as Ezra Pound, Carl Andre, Frank Stella, and Stan Brakhage. Certainly, Frampton conceived of Magellan as a utopian artwork in the monumental tradition of James Joyce and Sergei Eisenstein. In a grant application, he hoped to realize the project as ‘the notion of an hypothetically totally inclusive work of film art as epistemological model for the conscious human universe’.” (Michael Zryd, York University, Toronto)

Straits of Magellan: Drafts and Fragments (Hollis Frampton, 1974)

HOLLIS FRAMPTON’S MAGELLAN

Sunday 11 November 2007

12-2pm THE BIRTH OF MAGELLAN (introduced by Michael Zryd)
Cadenza I and XIV (1977-80), Mindfall I (1977-80), Matrix (1977-79), Palindrome (1969), Mindfall VII (1977-80), Noctiluca (1974)

3-5pm THE STRAITS OF MAGELLAN I
Public Domain (1972), Straits of Magellan: Drafts and Fragments (1974), Ingeimm Vibis Ipsa Pvella Fecit (1975), Summer Solstice (1974), Pas de Trois (1975)

Sunday 18 November 2007

12-2pm THE STRAITS OF MAGELLAN II
Autumnal Equinox (1974), Winter Solstice (1974), Straits of Magellan: Drafts and Fragments (1974), The Red Gate (1976), The Green Gate (1976)

3-5pm THE DEATH OF MAGELLAN
Apparatus Sum (1972), Otherwise Unexplained Fires (1976), Quaternion (1976), Yellow Springs (1972), For Georgia O'Keefe (1976), More Than Meets The Eye (1976), Not The First Time (1976), Tiger Balm (1972), Procession (1976), Gloria! (1979)

The screening of MAGELLAN at the National Maritime Museum is curated by Mark Webber. Presented in association with LUX.


at

National Maritime Museum
Park Row, Greenwich, London, SE10 9NF
Nearest Trains: Cutty Sark DLR / Greenwich BR / Maze Hill BR
MAP OF AREA

Tickets: £5 per day
Box Office: 020 8312 8560
Email: bookings@nmm.ac.uk

www.nmm.ac.uk

Images courtesy Anthology Film Archives. © Estate of Hollis Frampton.

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