California Sound/California Image

Date: 13 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

CALIFORNIA SOUND/CALIFORNIA IMAGE
13—19 June 2003
London Barbican Screen

From Hollywood to San Francisco: The West Coast and the Avant-Garde

A trip through 70 years of artists’ filmmaking in, on and around the American West Coast, featuring expressionist experiments, pioneering psychodrama, freewheeling Beat Culture and the psychedelic explosion. The post-war avant-garde began in Los Angeles with the revolutionary trance films of Kenneth Anger, Maya Deren and Gregory Markopoulos, but San Francisco soon established itself as a major centre in the 1960s when Bruce Baillie, Chick Strand and Bruce Conner founded Canyon Cinema, organising screenings and distribution. This unique season includes rare works by these filmmakers, and many others including Jordan Belson, Ernie Gehr, George Kuchar and Gunvor Nelson, plus Andy Warhol’s scenario based on the real-life arrest for shoplifting of Ecstasy starlet Hedy Lamarr.

CALIFORNIA SOUND/CALIFORNIA IMAGE is curated by Mark Webber for Barbican Screen and LUX.


West Coast Beat

Date: 13 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

WEST COAST BEAT
Friday 13 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

The cellular, celluloid merger of the literary and artistic underground, featuring Michael McClure, Jack Hirschman, Henry Jacobs, Jay DeFeo, Wallace Berman, Christopher MacLaine. Beat Poets + Beat Artists = Beat Cinema.

Larry Jordan, Visions of a City, 1957/78, sepia, sound, 7 min
Frank Stauffacher, Sausalito, 1948, b/w, sound, 10 min
Wallace Berman, Untitled (Aleph), 1958/76, colour, silent, 10 min
Bruce Conner, The White Rose, 1967, b/w, sound, 7 min
Jane Belson, Odds and Ends, 1958, colour, sound, 5 min
Christopher MacLaine, The End, 1963, b/w & colour, sound, 35 min
Henry Hills, Kino Da!, 1981, b/w, sound, 4 min

PROGRAMME NOTES

Hollywood Be Thy Name

Date: 14 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

HOLLYWOOD BE THY NAME
Saturday 14 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

Four of the avant-garde’s most momentous flirtations with the glamorous world of The Movies. The dark shadow of Tinseltown looms large on the horizon.

Robert Florey & Slavko Vorkapich, The Life and Death of 9413 – A Hollywood Extra, 1927, b/w, silent, 15 min
George Kuchar, I, An Actress, 1978, b/w, sound, 10 min
Andy Warhol, Hedy (The Shoplifter), 1966, b/w, sound, 66 min
Kenneth Anger, Puce Moment, 1949/70, colour, sound, 7 min

PROGRAMME NOTES

Film Time / Film Motion

Date: 15 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

FILM TIME / FILM MOTION
Sunday 15 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

West Coast structuralism meets avant-garde vagary as time is lapsed, stretched, condensed and compressed using the methods and mechanics of motion pictures.

Morgan Fisher, The Director and His Actor Look at Footage Showing Preparations for an Unmade Film: 2, 1968, colour, sound, 15 min
Gary Beydler, Pasadena Freeway Stills, 1974, colour, silent, 6 min
Ernie Gehr, Eureka, 1974, b/w, silent, 30 min
Michael Rudnick, Panorama, 1982, colour, sound, 13 min
Bruce Baillie, Castro Street, 1967, b/w & colour, sound, 10 min
Owen Land (formerly known as George Landow), A Film of their 1973 Spring Tour commissioned by Christian World Liberation Front of Berkeley, California, 1974, b/w, sound, 11 min

PROGRAMME NOTES

In Between Moments

Date: 17 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

IN BETWEEN MOMENTS
Tuesday 17 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

Personal emotions and experiences are documented and disclosed in three intimate films of private moments. Luminous glances at everyday life and a sensitive affirmation of female sensuality.

Nathaniel Dorsky, Variations, 1992-98, colour, silent, 24 min (18fps)
Chick Strand, Soft Fiction, 1979, b/w, sound, 54 min
Warren Sonbert, Noblesse Oblige, 1981, colour, sound, 25 min 

PROGRAMME NOTES

Los Angeles in the Forties

Date: 18 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

LOS ANGELES IN THE FORTIES
Wednesday 18 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

Trance and psychodrama, Surrealist montage, symbolism and sexual longing: The beginnings of the modern avant-garde and a new creative film language.

Maya Deren, Meshes of the Afternoon, 1943, b/w, silent, 14 min
Curtis Harrington, Fragment of Seeking, 1946, b/w, sound, 14 min
Kenneth Anger, Fireworks, 1947, b/w, sound, 15 min
Gregory Markopoulos, Psyche, 1947-48, colour, sound, 25 min

“In Los Angeles in 1947, while Kenneth Anger was editing Fireworks, Gregory Markopoulos began to shoot Psyche, the first film of his trilogy Du Sang de la Volupté et de la Mort. […] A few months before he began shooting Psyche, he had assisted Curtis Harrington in making his first film, Fragment of Seeking, where a young man pursues an elusive blonde woman through a maze of corridors reminiscent of Maya Deren’s pursuit of the mirror-faced figure in Meshes of the Afternoon. —P. Adams Sitney, Visionary Film

PROGRAMME NOTES

California Consciousness

Date: 19 June 2003 | Season: California Sound/California Image

CALIFORNIA CONSCIOUSNESS
Thursday 19 June 2003, at 7pm
London Barbican Screen

The California Dream became a psychedelic hallucination when eastern mysticism fused with drug-fuelled fantasy in the heady 60s & 70s. Transcend trance end.

James Whitney, Lapis, 1963-66, colour, sound, 10 min
Scott Bartlett, 1970, 1972, colour, sound, 29 min
James Broughton, This is it, 1971, colour, sound, 9 min
Jordan Belson, Re-Entry, 1964, colour, sound, 6 min
Pat O’Neill, 7362, 1965-67, colour, sound, 10 min
Gunvor Nelson, Take Off, 1972, b/w, sound, 10 min
Charles I. Levine, Apropo of San Francisco, 1968, colour, sound, 4 min

PROGRAMME NOTES

LUX Salon: Courtney Hoskins & Mary Beth Reed

Date: 26 June 2003 | Season: LUX Salon

LUX SALON: COURTNEY HOSKINS & MARY BETH REED
Thursday 26 June 2003, at 7:30pm
London LUX

LUX is pleased to present the first UK show by Courtney Hoskins and Mary Beth Reed, two young American filmmakers whose films combine photographed footage with hand-painted film and manipulation of the optical printer. Both studied with Stan Brakhage and Phil Solomon at the University of Colorado in Boulder, and their works were included in the recent Brakhage fundraiser and tribute at The Other Cinema. Courtney Hoskins uses various optics techniques to create her film worlds. Using the properties of the light waves themselves (twisting and bending certain wavelengths), she develops an otherworldly palette that shows the complexities and surprises found in the seemingly mundane objects of our daily lives. Mary Beth Reed mixes animation and abstraction into a kaleidoscopic flow of hand painted and optically printed film. She creates films of exquisite colour and imagery that dance across the screen with a mesmerising and unique rhythmic quality. The programme will be in two discreet parts, with a short interval, and both Courtney and Mary Beth will be here to discuss their work.

Courtney Hoskins, The Galilean Satellites (Europa, Io, Ganymede, Callisto), 2003
Courtney Hoskins, Munkphilm, 2001
Courtney Hoskins, Gossamer Conglomerate, 2001
Courtney Hoskins, Snow Flukes, 2002
Courtney Hoskins, Les Vitraux de St. Chappelle, 2003
Mary Beth Reed, Sunday Afternoon
Mary Beth Reed, Sand Castle, 2000
Mary Beth Reed, Pink Film, 2000
Mary Beth Reed, Montessori Sword Fight, 2002
Mary Beth Reed, Floating Under a Honey Tree, 1999
Mary Beth Reed, Moose Mountain, 2002
Mary Beth Reed, Moose Mountain 2


Kinetica 3: Hy Hirsh and the Fifties / Jazz and Abstraction in Beat Era Film

Date: 2 July 2003 | Season: Kinetica 3

KINETICA 3: HY HIRSH AND THE FIFTIES / JAZZ AND ABSTRACTION IN BEAT ERA FILM
Wednesday 2 July 2003, at 7pm
London Other Cinema

Kinetica 3 celebrates the San Francisco ‘Beat Generation’ film scene, with a special focus on abstract mystery-man Hy Hirsh. Hirsh was a professional cinematographer and technical innovator, his films combine elaborate layers of colourful images using home-made special effects. Much of his life is shrouded in mystery, but it is known that the last years of his life were spent in Paris, where he died of an apparent heart attack in 1961. Upon finding cannabis in one of his film cans, the French police impounded his films for many years.

Abstract Expressionism, Jazz, Zen and Beat Culture all come together in this selection of 1950s American abstract films, which features newly preserved prints of the rarely seen films of Hy Hirsh. The programme also includes rare works by his contemporaries Jordan Belson, Harry Smith, Mary Ellen Bute, Patricia Marx and the Whitney Brothers. Animations flow with the rhythm of jazz in the heady, smoky atmospheres of Bop City and late-night San Franciscan beatnik bars.

Robert Breer, A Man and His Dog Out for Air, 1957, 3 min
Hy Hirsh, Chasse des Touches, 1959, 4 min
Jordan Belson, Caravan, 1952, 4 min
Hy Hirsh, Eneri, 1953, 7 min
Patricia Marx, Things to Come, 1953, 3 min
Hy Hirsh, Autumn Spectrum, 1957, 7 min
Shirley Clarke, Bridges Go Round, 1958, 4 min
Mary Ellen Bute, Mood Contrasts, 1956, 7 min
Harry Smith, Film #3, 1949, 4 min
Hy Hirsh, Scratch Pad, 1961, 7 min
John Whitney, Sr., Catalog, 1961, 7 min
Jordan Belson, Mandala, 1953, 3 min
James Whitney, Yantra, 1957, 8 min
Hy Hirsh, Defense d’Afficher, 1958, 8 min
Hy Hirsh, La Couleur de la Forme, 1961, 7 min

The films of Hy Hirsh were preserved by The iotaCenter with a grant from The National Film Preservation Foundation, with additional support from The Academy Film Archive and The Whitney Museum of American Art. James Whitney’s Yantra was preserved thanks to a grant from the NFPF. Thanks to the NFPF for their ongoing support of our preservation activities which made the presentation of many of these films possible.


Protected: Kinetica 3: Bardo and the Contemporary Program

Date: 3 July 2003 | Season: Kinetica 3

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