Larry Jordan 1: Real Worlds Imagined (Live Action Films)

Date: 4 May 2001 | Season: Larry Jordan | Tags:

REAL WORLDS IMAGINED (LIVE ACTION FILMS)
Friday 4 May 2001, at 10:00pm

Oberhausen Lichtburg Filmpalast

Larry Jordan, Triptych in Four Parts, USA, 1958, 16mm, 12 min
A kaleidoscopic document of the West Coast in the beat era, and a search for spiritual adventure. 1 Portrait of artist John Reed; 2 & 3 The quest for the sacred peyote cactus; 4 The family of Wallace Berman. 

Larry Jordan, Waterlight, USA, 1957, 16mm, 7 min
The transition from land to sea, and from day to night and day again. The filmmaker embarks upon a personal journey of discovery, to find out what is actually in the world and not just in his own mind.

Larry Jordan, Big Sur: The Ladies, USA, 1964, 16mm, 3 min 
An impulsive cine-poem of the mostly nude ladies at the Big Sur Baths, set against the incredible California coastline. By editing entirely in-camera, the filmmaker preserves the exhuberance of the moment. A celebration of light, the sun, the joy of living.

Larry Jordan, Visions of the City, USA, 1957-79, 16mm, 9 min 
The poet Michael McClure emerges from the reflected image, only to be absorbed into the hard surface of the city. A hypnotic photo essay that captures the rhythmic and melodic essence of San Francisco, 1957.

Larry Jordan, Postcard from San Miguel, USA, 1997, 16mm, 10 min
Jordan’s most recently completed film is a poetic postcard of San Miguel de Allende, set to music by Gabriel Fauré. The atmosphere of the past is evoked through the town’s colonial architecture, punctuated by lines from Lorca.

Larry Jordan, The Old House, Passing, USA, 1966, 16mm, 45 min
A young couple and their daughter spend their night in an old house and become magnetically involved with the past life of its occupants. Slow moving and dark, this ghost-film revolves around an elusive plot that has been elliptically cut by experimental editing from memory. With the drama subverted, the film develops into a representation of a mood, as the human world merges with the spirit world.

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Larry Jordan 2: A Cavalcade of Wonder (Animated Films)

Date: 5 May 2001 | Season: Larry Jordan | Tags:

A CAVALCADE OF WONDER (ANIMATED FILMS)
Saturday 5 May 2001, at 10:00pm

Oberhausen Lichtburg Filmpalast

Larry Jordan, Our Lady of the Sphere, USA, 1969, 16mm, 10 min
A young boy’s travels through terror, death and the underworld. The flat space breaks into the illusory third dimension as the frame loses definition and threads of narrative fracture into impossible associations. True audio-visual power is conjured from the harmonic collision of ancient and modern.

Larry Jordan, Duo Concertantes, USA, 1961-64, 16mm, 9 min
1 The Centennial Exposition
2 Patricia Gives Birth to a Dream by the Doorway
A dream of pure inspiration, embracing aspects of resurrection, rebirth, ascension and the flight into higher spheres. Two separate films of nostalgia and reverie are combined into an exquisite sequence. Time is suspended as the animated engravings, liberated of meaning, transmit to the inner consciousness.

Larry Jordan, Orb, USA, 1973, 16mm, 5 min 
The undefinable circle rolls through a series of transformations and possibilities. Visual modulations provide a sense of day, night and eternal space without time.

Larry Jordan, Masquerade, USA, 1981, 16mm, 5 min 
Against a colourful, static background a tragic romantic scene unfolds. A man lies dying in the snow, perhaps suffering from a broken heart, the morning after a masked ball. Metamorphic figures and spirits appear, but Harlequin cannot escape death. 

Larry Jordan, Minerva Looks Out Into the Zodiac, USA, 1959, 16mm, 5 min
The hard and inflexible camera eye of Minerva surveys twelve static collages. Each scene represents a hidden entrance into the underworld, imaginary landscapes existing in an illusory dimension.

Larry Jordan, Pink Swine, USA, 1963, 16mm, 3 min
Suggestive images intended to provoke hallucinatory reactions and responses in the viewer. A fast moving, rhythmic animation of junk objects and flat layouts edited entirely in-camera, accompanied by the music of The Beatles. Stroboscopic layout substitution gives the illusion of separate images seen ‘simultaneously’ but without superimposition.

Larry Jordan, Ein Traum der Liebenden (A Dream of Lovers), USA, 1964, 16mm, 7 min
White silhouette figures of man and beast perform airy feats against shifting colour backgrounds. “I wished to show new incidents in the lives of the Greek gods, not included in the mythology passed down to us. I had read all the myths and wanted there to be more.”

Larry Jordan, Finds of the Fortnight, USA, 1959-80, 16mm, 9 min
Surreal titles by Jess Collins are rapidly alternated with animated images. Using flicker-superimposition, Jordan conducts an experiment in perceptual overload. Sometimes the eye is lost in the flashing barrage of words and pictures.

Larry Jordan, The Visible Compendium, USA, 1990, 16mm, 17 min
An attempt to engage what is unknown in the mind, rather than what has been seen and known a thousand times over. “I wanted to constructed enigmas for the viewer to puzzle on and delight in.” A catalogue of visible possible experiences, which the filmmaker considers the pinnacle of his achievements as an animator.

Larry Jordan, Carabosse, USA, 1980, 16mm, 5 min
Blue figures perform a compact, jewel-like opera in surreal form on black-space. Set to the contemplative music of Erik Satie. Compounding its fragility, the film is sometimes presented on a very small scale.

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The Somnambulist’s Retreat

Date: 5 May 2001 | Season: Miscellaneous | Tags:

THE SOMNAMBULIST’S RETREAT
Saturday 5 May 2001, at midnight

Oberhausen Festival Lounge

Peter Hutton, New York Near Sleep For Saskia, 1972, 10 min
Subtle refractions of light bring a heightened perception. We are slowly drifting away.

Steve Dwoskin, Alone, 1964, 13 min
Maybe her finger is only her finger. And no dreams live as she waits in her bed alone.

Willard Maas, Image In The Snow, 1948, 29 min
Spiritual journey through the landscape of a dream leads to a world of violence and disillusionment.

Kenneth Anger, La Lune Des Lapins, 1950-70, 14 min (long version)
The moon is a symbol of the unattainable. A lunar dream of Pierrot and the magic lantern.

Stan Vanderbeek, Newsreel of Dreams 1 & 2, 1963-64, 9 min (2 screen)
Synthetic videographic collage of history as dream events that disappear inside each other.

Paul Winkler, Chants, 1975, 15 min
A cross moves endlessly in the black void: go toward it, reach out to your own higher consciousness.

Jordan Belson, World, 1970, 6 min
Fall deeper into the ultimate meditation. A cosmic abstraction of sound and image. An inner universe.

Plus pre-recorded dream music played by Mark Webber and Gregory Kurcewicz.

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The Joy of Subversion: Blonde Cobra & No President

Date: 13 July 2001 | Season: Miscellaneous | Tags:

 

THE JOY OF SUBVERSION: BLONDE COBRA & NO PRESIDENT
Cambridge Arts Picturehouse
Friday 13 July 2001, at 10:30pm

Two underground archetypes, born of a deep disgust with existence, finding rapture in the rubbish dumps. Ken Jacobs and Jack Smith, doyens of the downside, were united by the gloom that saturated their everyday lives. With their shared horror of Technicolor America, they rose from the cesspool to revel in the garbage heap.

Not so much non-narrative as anti-narrative, these films constantly defeat and undermine their own success through their editing and structure. Private and social taboos are cast aside in two manic paeans to hopelessness.

Some people call it independent, experimental, avant-garde, underground, beat, trash, degenerate, incomprehensible, absurdist baloney. Some people don’t understand and some people don’t deserve to understand. Cinema of parody or cinema of paradise? Take these jewelled offerings, these fragments of true FREE CINEMA and run with it. (You might never catch up.)

Ken Jacobs & Bob Fleischner, Blonde Cobra, 1959-63, 33 min
Jack Smith, No President, 1967-70, 50 min

Screening as part of the 21st Cambridge Film Festival.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Cinema Auricular: Cinema of the Ear

Date: 13 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

CINEMA AURICULAR: CINEMA OF THE EAR
13 October – 21 October 2001
London Barbican Centre & Tate Modern

A season of film and video as part of the ELEKTRONIC festival at the Barbican.

It might seem logical to suppose a historical and natural link between electronic music and abstract or impressionistic films, but there are surprisingly few examples of films that were made in direct collaboration between filmmakers and composers or musicians. However, there is a significant body of films that ‘borrow’ or re-appropriate recordings of contemporary music, and a number of works for which their makers have assembled soundtracks which may, if separated from the visuals, be heard as extraordinary electronic compositions. In such films, electronic, tape music, noise, primitive sampling and musique concrete come together in chaos or harmony to accompany astounding visual constructions.

The film series of the Elektronic festival will present screenings in which the sound and image complement each other on the highest level. It will feature an international selection of historic and contemporary works by Bruce Conner, Malcolm Le Grice, Peter Tscherkassky and others, and a live music and film concert by Phill Niblock. Composers whose unique works may be heard of the soundtracks include Edgar Varese, Christian Fennesz, Terry Riley and Karlheinz Stockhausen.

The series will open with an informal screening in the Barbican Pit Theatre on the afternoon of Saturday 13th October. Between the films, Mark Webber and Gregory Kurcewicz will be playing recordings of rare and wonderful electronic music. Come down to our level and see what you’re in for.


Of Synthesis and Synthetics

Date: 13 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

OF SYNTHESIS AND SYNTHETICS
Saturday 13 October 2001, at 3:00pm
London Barbican Pit Theatre

Sounds emanating from the early electro-acoustic studios and the primitive/pioneering synthesisers of Robert Moog and Don Buchla. An informal film screening punctuated by recordings of scarce and wonderful electronic music through the ages played by Mark Webber and Gregory Kurcewicz. Including Mick Jagger’s mind-bending score for Kenneth Anger’s Invocation of My Demon Brother and rare recordings of Varese and Ussachevsky. Come hang out, watch films, listen to music, drink coffee, pretend to stroke your beard (though that’s an entirely inappropriate thing to do).

Note: Where the soundtrack is not by the filmmaker, the composer’s name is in square brackets

William Pye, Reflections, UK, 1972, colour, sound, 17 min
David Ringo, Balconies One, USA, c.1968, b/w, sound, 6 min [Edgar Varese]
Ian Hugo, Aphrodisiac I, USA, 1971, colour, sound, 6 min [David Horowicz]
Adam Beckett, Heavy-Light, USA, 1973, colour, sound, 7 min [Barry Schrader]
Hollis Frampton, Special Effects (Hapax Legomena VII), USA, 1972, b/w, sound, 11 min [Don Buchla & Victor Grauer]
Lloyd Williams, Two Images For A Computer Piece (With Interlude), USA, 1970, b/w, sound, 10 min [Vladimir Ussachevsky]
Ed Emshwiller, Thermogenesis, USA, 1972, colour, sound, 12 min [Robert Moog & Jeff Slotnik]
Tom De Witt, AtmosFear, USA, 1966, colour, sound, 6 min
Kenneth Anger, Invocation Of My Demon Brother, USA, 1969, colour, sound, 11 min  [Mick Jagger]
Norman McLaren, Synchromy, Canada, 1971, colour, sound, 7 min
David Rimmer, Migration, Canada, 1969, colour, sound, 12m [Phil Werren]


Phill Niblock Live Performance

Date: 14 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

PHILL NIBLOCK LIVE PERFORMANCE
Sunday 14 October 2001, at 6:15pm
London Barbican Pit Theatre

Intermedia artist Phill Niblock (USA) presents a concert of live and pre-recorded microtonal music with simultaneous triple video projection of sections from his long running Movement of People Working film series, shot in Mexico, Peru, Brasil, and China. Niblock makes thick, loud drones of music, filled with microtones of instrumental timbres that generate a multitude of difference tones in the performance space.

Phill Niblock, Hurdy Hurry (for Hurdy Gurdy)
Phill Niblock, A Y U Live (aka As Yet Untitled) (for Baritone Voice)
Phill Niblock, Guitar Too, For Four (for Electric Guitar)
Phill Niblock, Pan Fried 25 (for Bowed Piano)

Guitar Too, For Four will be augmented by a live electric guitar quartet featuring Jem Finer, Robert P. Lee, Matt Rogalsky and Mark Webber.


Transcendent Power: Electronic Elevation and System Stimulation

Date: 15 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

TRANSCENDENT POWER: ELECTRONIC ELEVATION AND SYSTEM STIMULATION
Monday 15 October 2001, at 7:30pm
London Barbican Cinema

Going beyond direct experience into the spiritual and ecstatic realms, reaching outwards / inwards / upwards toward perception. Beginning with a film that “plays directly on the mind through programatic stimulation of the central nervous system” and ending with Bruce Conner’s amazing hallucinogenic journey. Rarely seen works by the abstract masters Davis and Belson, plus Kirchhofer’s stunning dematerialization of celluloid and Vegter’s captivating computer piece.

Note: Where the soundtrack is not by the filmmaker, the composer’s name is in square brackets

Standish Lawder, Raindance, 1972, 16 min [Robert Withers]
James Whitney, Yantra, 1950-57, 8 min [Henk Badings]
James Davis, Energies, 1957, 10 min [Norman De Marco]
Patrice Kirchhofer, Densité Optique 1, 1977, 27 min
Daina Krumins, The Divine Miracle, 1973, 5 min [Rhys Chatham]
Bart Vegter, Nacht Licht, 1993, 13 min [Kees van der Knaap]
Jordan Belson, Allures, 1961, 7 min
Bruce Conner, Looking For Mushrooms, 1961/96, 15 min [Terry Riley]

PROGRAMME NOTES

Currents of Chaos: Electro-Shock Cinema

Date: 16 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

CURRENTS OF CHAOS: ELECTRO-SHOCK CINEMA
Tuesday 16 October 2001, at 6:15pm
London Barbican Cinema

Confusion … delusion … retribution. Electronic feel flows as your nervous system careens into overdrive. From the chaotic Outer Space to the sublime #11, five films plugged directly into the National Grid to give maximum audio-visual pleasure (or pain). Throbbing, shouting, screaming, smashing … This is not for the faint-hearted, but what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.

Note: Where the soundtrack is not by the filmmaker, the composer’s name is in square brackets

Peter Tscherkassky, Outer Space, 1999, 10 min
Hollis Frampton, Critical Mass, 1971, 25 min
Martin Arnold, pièce touchée, 1989, 15 min
Paul Sharits, Axiomatic Granularity, 1972-73, 20 min
Joost Rekveld, #11 (Marey<->Moiré), 1999, 21 min [Edwin van der Heide]

PROGRAMME NOTES

New Age Voltage: Contemporary Digital Sound and Vision

Date: 17 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

NEW AGE VOLTAGE: CONTEMPORARY DIGITAL SOUND AND VISION
Wednesday 17 October 2001, at 6:00pm
London Barbican Prompt Corner

The sounds of the analogue versus the digital, burning a cathode ray hole direct through your retina. A video programme of recent audio-visions from Vienna and other painfully modern assemblages from UK, France and Canada. Having broken sound and image down to its constituent blips and pixels, these contemporary filmmakers are reconstructing matter in beguiling new ways.

Note: Where the soundtrack is not by the filmmaker, the composer’s name is in square brackets

Billy Roisz & Dieter Kovacic, smokfraqs, 2001, 4 min
Steven Ball, Sevenths Synthesis, 2001, 7 min
Myriam Bessette, Azur, 2001, 3 min
Jurgen Moritz, Instrument, 1997, 5 min [Christian Fennesz]
Ben Pointeker, Overfart, 1999, 6 min [General Magic]
Nicolas Berthelot, Chrominances, 2000, 6 min
ReMI, comp.tot4: Zarakesh, 1999, 10 min [Renata Oblak]
[n:ja], track 09, 2001, 4 min [Shabotinski]
Herwig Weiser, Entrée, 1999, 9 min
Michaela Schwentner, Transistor, 2000, 6 min [Radian]
Karoe Goldt, ILOX, 2001, 3 min [Rashim]

PROGRAMME NOTES