Seeing Sound: Lightning Strikes the Optic Nerve

Date: 17 October 2001 | Season: Cinema Auricular

SEEING SOUND: LIGHTNING STRIKES THE OPTIC NERVE
Wednesday 17 October 2001, at 7:30pm
London Barbican Cinema

Optical sound on 16mm film – a lightbulb reads a strip of amorphous black emulsion on clear celluloid and it somehow makes sound sense. Since the 1930s artists have examined and exploited the possibilities of drawing or printing a soundtrack. Two senses combined and confounded, both musical and cacophonous. Can you see what you hear?

Oskar Fischinger, Ornament Sound, 1932, 7 min
Norman McLaren, Dots (Points), 1948, 3 min
Barry Spinello, Soundtrack, 1969, 10 min
Richard Reeves, Linear Dreams, 1997, 7 min
Pierre Rovere, Black and Light, 1974, 8 min
Lis Rhodes, Dresden Dynamo, 1974, 5 min
Chris Garrett, Exit Right, 1976, 3 min
Jun’ichi Okuyama, My Movie Melodies, 1980, 7 min
Guy Sherwin, Musical Stairs, 1977, 10 min
Peter Tscherkassky, L’Arrivée, 1998, 3 min
Taka Iimura, Shutter, 1971, 22 min

Screening introduced by filmmaker Guy Sherwin.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Peter Kubelka: What is Film

Date: 8 November 2001 | Season: London Film Festival 2001 | Tags: , ,

PETER KUBELKA: WHAT IS FILM?
8-14 November 2001
London National Film Theatre

“Peter Kubelka is the perfectionist of the film medium” (Stan Brakhage)

A series of four public lectures in which films from Lumière to the present day will be used to celebrate cinema as a cultural phenomenon, whilst defining film as an independent medium and distinguishing it from those arts that existed before it, and the new media (such as television and the internet) that have become dominant in recent years.

Peter Kubelka will demonstrate the unique and indispensable qualities of film through detailed analysis of those works that best represent the essence of the cinema. In this extraordinary series of events, he will expose the mechanics and grammar of film that are otherwise hidden from the public. After viewing the films, the audience will have an opportunity to look over his shoulder in a situation similar to that of seeing the filmmaker at the editing table. Using a projecting Steenbeck, Kubelka will analyse, letter by letter, the language that cinema speaks. He will argue that as each mode of communication induces its own world-view, the vital and autonomous experience of cinema cannot be transferred to other media without loss of content or the understanding of the artist’s original intentions. Film is a tool that is able to create new thoughts and Peter Kubelka will bring forth the hardcore of cinema: those ideas and concepts that cannot be touched by any other art form.

“Kubelka’s cinema is like a piece of crystal, or some other object of nature: it does not look like it was produced by man.” (P. Adams Sitney)

Peter Kubelka is one of the most distinguished figures in the history of 20th century independent filmmaking. His films, made between 1955 and 1977, are an innovative demonstration of cinematic possibilities and now reside in the collections of many world-renowned museums. Moreover, his practice is not only limited to filmmaking: as an artist or theoretician he has also worked in architecture, literature, music, painting and cooking. During his time as co-director of the Austrian Film Museum in Vienna, which he founded in 1964, he has passionately dedicated himself to other artistic practices. His formation of the ensemble Spatium Musicum led to an intensive study of essential music, and his teaching on the topic of food preparation as an art form at the Frankfurt School of Fine Arts led to an extension of his title as Professor of Film to that of Film and Cooking. His design for an ideal cinema auditorium, The Invisible Cinema, has been realised in New York and Vienna. Over the past 40 years he has lectured at museums, universities and institutions throughout the world, and has been awarded the Austrian State Prize for his life’s work.

(Mark Webber)

PETER KUBELKA: WHAT IS FILM?
1:
THE FILMMAKERS VIEW: THE EVENT OF CINEMA
2:
THE MATERIAL OF FILM: TOOL AND PERSONALITY
3: THE LANGUAGE OF FILM: METAPHORS BETWEEN SOUNDS AND IMAGES
4:
THE REAL WORLD: A MYTH CREATED BY CINEMA


Peter Kubelka: What is Film 2

Date: 10 November 2001 | Season: London Film Festival 2001 | Tags: , ,

PETER KUBELKA: WHAT IS FILM? 2
Saturday 10 November 2001, at 4:15pm
London National Film Theatre NFT3

THE MATERIAL OF FILM: TOOL AND PERSONALITY

“Film is a transparent sculpture. The material is servant and teacher. Form cannot be transferred and therefore content cannot be transferred. The event of Cinema is unique.”

Featuring selections from the following works:

Emile Cohl, Le Cerceau Magique, France, 1908, 6m
Len Lye, Free Radicals, USA, 1958, 4m
Stan Brakhage, Mothlight, USA, 1963, 3m
Owen Land (Formerly Known As George Landow), Film in which there Appear Sprocket Holes, Edge Lettering, Dirt Particles, etc., USA, 1965-66, 5m
Karin Hörler, Frisch, Germany, 1987, 2m
Bruce Conner, Valse Triste, USA, 1979, 6m
Frères Lumière, Voltiges, France, 1898, 1m
Frères Lumière, Indochine, Enfants Anamites, France, 1898, 1m
Frères Lumière, La Course en Sacs, France, 1898, 1m
Stan Brakhage, Window Water Baby Moving, USA, 1962, 12m
Paul Sharits, T:O:U:C:H:I:N:G, USA, 1968, 12m

The complete list of films in the repertory, and the themes covered, may be subject to spontaneous change during the course of the presentations.


Harlot + Screen Test #2

Date: 24 February 2002 | Season: Andy Warhol Tate

HARLOT + SCREEN TEST #2
Sunday 24 February 2002, at 3:00pm
London Tate Modern

Early sound films from the Silver Factory.

Andy Warhol, Harlot, USA, 1964, 67 min
Andy Warhol, Screen Test #2, USA, 1965, 67 min

Harlot was Warhol’s first sound film, but subversively the sound is disconnected and consists of an out of frame discussion between Ronald Tavel, Billy Name and English poet Harry Fainlight. On screen four superstars (and a cat) eat bananas in an exotic tableaux vivant. Tavel directs Screen Test #2, commanding the transvestite star Mario Montez, who executes a tragic but convincing performance in the face of mockery and scorn.


Shoot Shoot Shoot: Seminar

Date: 4 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

SHOOT SHOOT SHOOT: SEMINAR
Saturday 4 May 2002, at 2pm
London Tate Modern

A symposium and gathering which will re-examine the period in which many British artists embarked on radical experiments with non-illusionist filmmaking and made important innovations in multi-screen and expanded cinema projection. Discussions will address the emergence of an underground movement, its international significance, and the relations between avant-garde film and mainstream cinema, experimental video, painting, sculpture, performance and photography.

Speakers include David Curtis from the AHRB Centre for British Film and Television Studies, film historians Ian Christie, Al Rees, and others. An artists’ panel featuring Peter Gidal, Anthony McCall, Lis Rhodes and Chris Welsby will be chaired by Michael Newman (Principal Lecturer in Research, Central Saint Martin’s School of Art). Plus selected special screenings. Many of the filmmakers whose work is featured in the season will be present and encouraged to contribute.

Presented by Tate Modern in collaboration with the School of Art at Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design.

This event will be webcast at www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/webcasting/


London Underground

Date: 5 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

LONDON UNDERGROUND
Sunday 5 May 2002, at 3:00pm
London Tate Modern

As equipment became available for little cost, avant-garde film flourished in mid-60s counter-culture. Early screenings at Better Books and the Arts Lab provided a vital focus for a new movement that infused Swinging London with a fresh subversive edge.

Antony Balch, Towers Open Fire, 1963, b/w, sound, 16 min
Jonathan Langran, Gloucester Road Groove, 1968, b/w, silent, 2 min
Jeff Keen, Marvo Movie, 1967, colour, sound, 5 min
John Latham, Speak, 1962, colour, sound, 11 min
Stephen Dwoskin, Dirty, 1965-67, b/w, sound, 10 min
Stuart Pound, Clocktime Trailer, 1972, colour, sound, 7 min
Simon Hartog, Soul In A White Room, 1968, colour, sound, 3.5 min
Peter Gidal, Hall, 1968-69, b/w, sound, 10 min
Malcolm Le Grice, Reign Of The Vampire, 1970, b/w, sound, 11 min

Made independently on 35mm, in collaboration with William Burroughs, Towers Open Fire is rarely considered in histories of avant-garde film, despite its experiments in form and representation. It combines strobe cutting, flicker, degraded imagery and hand-painted film to create a visual equivalent to the author’s narration. Gloucester Road Groove, featuring Simon Hartog and David Larcher, is a spirited celebration of youthful exuberance, the excitement of shooting with a movie camera. Jeff Keen’s vision is a uniquely British post-war accumulation of art history, comic books, old Hollywood and new collage. Positioned between happenings and music hall, he performs dada actions in the “theatre of the brain”. Marvo Movie is just one of countless works that mix live action with animation, but is notable for its concrete sound by Co-op co-founder Bob Cobbing. Speak, with hypnotic flashing discs and relentless noise track, anticipated many of the anti-illusionist arguments that the Co-op later embodied. The film was made in 1962, but its advanced radical nature made it largely unknown until later screenings at Better Books brought Latham into contact with like-minded contemporaries. In Dirty, Dwoskin accentuates the dirt and scratches on the film’s surface while interrogating the erotic imagery through refilming. The systematic cutting of Stuart Pound’s film, and its cyclical soundtrack, derives from a mathematical process that condenses a feature length work (Clocktime I-IV) into a short ‘trailer’. Soul in a White Room is a subtle piece of social commentary by Simon Hartog, an early Co-op activist with a strong political conscience. Peter Gidal questions illusory depth and representation through focal length, editing and (seeming) repetition in Hall. Reign of the Vampire, from Le Grice’s paranoiac How to Screw the C.I.A., or How to Screw the C.I.A.? series, takes the hard line in subversion. Familiar “threatening” signifiers, pornography and footage from his other films is overlaid with travelling mattes, united with a loop soundtrack, to form a relentless assault.

Screening introduced by Stephen Dwoskin.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Structural / Materialist

Date: 12 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

STRUCTURAL / MATERIALIST
Sunday 12 May 2002, at 3:00pm
London Tate Modern

The enquiry into the material of film as film itself was an essential characteristic of the Co-op’s output. These non- and anti- narrative concerns were fundamentally argued by the group’s principal practising theorists Malcolm Le Grice and Peter Gidal.

Roger Hammond, Window Box, 1971, b/w, silent, 3 min (18fps)
Mike Leggett, Shepherd’s Bush, 1971, b/w, sound, 15 min
David Crosswaite, Film No. 1, 1971, colour, sound, 10 min
Mike Dunford, Tautology, 1973, b/w, silent, 5 min
Peter Gidal, Key, 1968, colour, sound, 10 min
John Du Cane, Zoom Lapse, 1975, colour, silent, 15 min
Malcolm Le Grice, Little Dog For Roger, 1967, b/w, sound, 13 min
Gill Eatherley, Deck, 1971, colour, sound, 13 min

In explaining their (quite different) ideas in some erudite but necessarily dense texts Le Grice and Gidal have in some ways contributed to misunderstandings of this significant tendency in the British avant-garde. (For example, It is not the case, as is often proposed, that films were made to justify their theories.) Le Grice was instrumental in acquiring, installing and operating the equipment at the Co-op workshop that afforded filmmakers the hands-on opportunity to investigate the film medium. His own work developed through direct processing, printing and projection, providing an understanding of the material with which he could examine filmic time through duration, while touching on spectacle and narrative. By contrast, Gidal’s cool, oppositional stance was refined to refute narrative and representation, denying illusion and manipulation though visual codes. His uncompromising position resists all expectations of cinema, even modernist formalism and abstraction. The artistic and theoretical relationship of these two poles of the British avant-garde, who were united in opposing ‘dominant cinema’, is a complex set of divergences and intersections.

Originally intended as a test strip, the first film produced at the Dairy on the Co-op step-printer was Mike Leggett’s Shepherd’s Bush, in which an obscure loop of abstract footage relentlessly advances from dark to light. The two short films by Roger Hammond and Mike Dunford concisely encapsulate an idea; while Window Box exploits the viewer’s anticipation of camera movement and shrewdly transforms a seemingly conventional viewpoint, the permanence of the cinematic frame is the focus of Tautology’s brief enquiry. By translating footage across different gauges, Crosswaite and Le Grice explore variations in film formats: Film No. 1 uses permutations and combinations of unsplit 8mm, while Little Dog for Roger directly prints 9.5mm home movies onto 16mm stock. In Key, Gidal plays on the ambiguity of an image to challenge and refute the observer’s interpretation of it, while intensifying disorientation through his manipulation of the soundtrack. Du Cane’s Zoom Lapse comprises dense multiple overlays of imagery, vibrating the moment, while Eatherley’s Deck re-photographs a reel of 8mm film, which undergoes a mysterious transformation through refilming, colour changing and printing.

Screening introduced by Roger Hammond.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Intervention & Processing

Date: 19 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

INTERVENTION & PROCESSING
Sunday 19 May 2002, at 3:00pm
London Tate Modern

The workshop was an integral part of the LFMC and provided almost unlimited access to hands-on printing and processing. Within this supportive environment, artists were free to experiment with technique and engage directly with the filmstrip in an artisan manner. By treating film as a medium in the same way that a sculptor might use different materials, the Co-op filmmakers brought a new understanding of the physical substance and the way it could be crafted.

Annabel Nicolson, Slides, 1970, colour, silent, 12 min (18fps)
Fred Drummond, Shower Proof, 1968, b/w, silent, 10 min (18fps)
Guy Sherwin, At The Academy, 1974, b/w, sound, 5 min
David Crosswaite, The Man With The Movie Camera, 1973, b/w, silent, 8 min
Mike Dunford, Silver Surfer, 1972, b/w, sound, 15 min
Jenny Okun, Still Life, 1976, colour, silent, 6 min
Lis Rhodes, Dresden Dynamo, 1971, colour, sound, 5 min
Chris Garratt, Versailles I & II, 1976, b/w, sound, 11 min
Roger Hewins, Windowframe, 1975, colour, sound, 6 min

Annabel Nicolson pulled prepared sections of film (which might be sewn, collaged, perforated) through the printer to make Slides. Fred Drummond’s Shower Proof, an early Co-op process film, exploits the degeneration of the image as a result of successive reprinting, intuitively cutting footage of two people in a bathroom. Guy Sherwin uses layers of positive and negative leader to build a powerful bas-relief in At The Academy, while Jenny Okun explores the properties of colour negative in Still Life. Considered and brilliantly executed, The Man with the Movie Camera dazzles with technique as focus, aperture and composition are adjusted to exploit a mirror positioned in front of the lens. For Silver Surfer, Mike Dunford refilms individual frames of footage originally sourced from television as waves of electronic sound wash over the shimmering figure. Contrasting colours and optical patterns intensify the illusion that Lis Rhodes’ Dresden Dynamo appears to hover in deep space between the viewer and the screen. Garratt’s Versailles I & II breaks down a conventional travelogue into repetitive, rhythmic sections. Roger Hewins employs optical masking to create impossible ‘real time’ events which, though prosaic, appear to take on an almost sacred affectation in Windowframe.

Screening introduced by Lis Rhodes.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Diversifications

Date: 21 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

LOCATION: DURATION
Tuesday 21 May 2002, at 6:30pm
London Tate Modern

Film is a unique tool for the investigation of time and space. The subjective time of the photographed image may be measured against the objective time of projection through the use of time-lapse, editing and duration.

John Smith, Leading Light, 1975, colour, sound, 11 min
Peter Gidal, Focus, 1971, b/w, sound, 7 min
Ian Breakwell & Mike Leggett, Sheet, 1970, b/w, sound, 21 min
Malcolm Le Grice, Whitchurch Down (Duration), 1972, colour, sound, 8 min
Chris Welsby, Fforest Bay II, 1973, colour, silent, 5 min
William Raban, Broadwalk, 1972, colour, sound, 12 min
David Hall, Phased Time2, 1974, colour, sound, 15 min

First tracing sunlight moving around a room, then a static study of illumination around a night-time window. The formal Leading Light might surprise those familiar with the more humorous works of John Smith. Peter Gidal uncharacteristically used the mechanics of an automated camera to construct the loop-like rhythm of Focus, which zooms through the “static reality” of a mysterious apartment. With an electronic score by Anthony Moore. Sheet develops from a conceptual basis and could be viewed as documentation of an event. The eponymous object is seen in different locations, making this one of the few experimental films that offer us incidental glimpses of London during this period. Le Grice’s film Whitchurch Down (Duration) takes three views of a landscape and combines them with pure colours and intermittent sound in progressive loop sequences and freeze-frames, positing duration as a concrete dimension. Shot to a pre-planned structure, Welsby’s dynamic Fforest Bay II uses speed as the instrument with which he demonstrates the disparity between the cinematic view and the film surface. Via time-lapse, manual exposure and refilming, Broadwalk by William Raban ranges from serenity to rigour. The perceptible traces of human movement appear as ghosts in the tranquil walkway. David Hall, a pioneer of video art, displays a command of the cinematic medium in the layers of superimposition that make up Phased Time2, building up aural and visual ‘chords’ while mapping out a room on the flat screen.

Screening introduced by Ian Breakwell.

This programme adapts its title from Malcolm Le Grice’s “Location? Duration?” exhibition of films and paintings at the Drury Lane Arts Lab in 1968.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Diversifications

Date: 26 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags:

DIVERSIFICATIONS
Sunday 26 May 2002, at 3pm
London Tate Modern

From personal montage through to exploration of the cinematic process, the work was sensuous and playful. As a creative group, the Co-op covered vital aesthetic ground and resisted categorisation. This programme does not pursue a single theme or concept, rather it demonstrates the broad range of work that was produced during this time.

The exposition section of Annabel Nicolson’s Shapes reveals its tactile evolution, as visible dirt is made evident by the step-printing technique. Moving into real time, the multiple layers of superimposition present strange spatial dimensions as the filmmaker toys with light, moving among the paper structures in her room. Footsteps engages the camera (viewer) in a playful game of “statues”. The film was often presented as a live performance in which Marilyn Halford crept up on her own projected likeness. Le Grice’s Talla adopts an almost mythical pose. Images slowly encroach on the frame as the visual tension rises, later to explode in spectacularly bending, twisting single-frame bursts. The brief, rapid-fire collage White Lite by Jeff Keen is made up of baffling layers of live action, stop-motion, obliteration and assemblage. Anne Rees-Mogg’s Muybridge Film, in homage to the pioneer of motion photography, constructs a playful film by breaking down a sequence into its constituent frames. Moment is an unmediated look, erotic but not explicit, as saturated as its celluloid. It’s a key work of Dwoskin’s early sensual portraits of solitary girls, in which the returning stare challenges our objective / subjective gaze. Chris Welsby’s Windmill II is one of a series in which propeller blades rotate in front of the camera, acting as a second shutter, controlled by an unpredictable and natural force. In this instance, the blades are backed with a reflective material that offers a glance back at the recording device intermittent with the zoetropic view of the park. In The Girl Chewing Gum, by John Smith, the narration appears to direct everyday life before breaking down, causing the viewer to question the accepted relationship between sound and image, the suggestive power of language. Chinese images and slogans are transformed by split-screen, ingrained dirt and hand-held photography to create a visual pun in Ian Kerr’s film, from “Persisting in our struggle” to Persisting in our vision.

Annabel Nicolson, Shapes, 1970, colour, silent, 7 min (18fps)
Marilyn Halford, Footsteps, 1974, b/w, sound, 6 min
Malcolm Le Grice, Talla, 1968, b/w, silent, 20 min
Jeff Keen, White Lite, 1968, b/w, silent, 2.5 min
Anne Rees-Mogg, Muybridge Film, 1975, b/w, silent, 5 min
Stephen Dwoskin, Moment, 1968, colour, sound, 12 min
Chris Welsby, Windmill II, 1973, colour, sound, 10 min
John Smith, The Girl Chewing Gum, 1976, b/w, sound, 12 min
Ian Kerr, Persisting, 1975, colour, sound, 10 min

Screening introduced by Marilyn Halford

PROGRAMME NOTES