Date: 28 May 2002 | Season: Shoot Shoot Shoot 2002 | Tags: Shoot Shoot Shoot
THE EPIC FLIGHT: MARE’S TAIL
Tuesday 28 May 2002, at 6:30pm
London Tate Modern
“From one flick of the mare’s tail came an unending stream of images out of which was crystalised the milky way. Primitive, picaresque cinema.” (David Larcher)
An extended personal odyssey which, through an accumulation of visual information, builds into a treatise on the experience of seeing. Its loose, indefinable structure explores new possibilities for perception and narrative.
David Larcher, Mare’s Tail, 1969, colour, sound, 143 min
Reinforcing the idea of the mythopoeic discourse and the historically romantic view of the artist-filmmaker, Mare’s Tail is a legend, consisting of layers of sounds and images that reveal each other over an extended period. It’s a personal vision, an aggregation of experience, memories and moments overlaid with indecipherable intonations and altered musics. The collected footage is extensively manipulated, through refilming, superimposition or direct chemical treatment. The observer may slip in and out of the film as it runs its course; it does not demand constant attention, though persistence is rewarded by experience after the full projection has been endured.
While studying at the Royal College of Art, David Larcher made a first film KO (1964-65, with soundtrack composed by Philip Glass), which was subsequently disassembled and small sections incorporated in Mare’s Tail (a recurrent practise that continues through his later works). Encouraged by contact with true independent filmmakers like Peter Whitehead and Conrad Rooks, Larcher set out on to document his own life in a quasi-autobiographical manner.
Though financed by wealthy patron Alan Power, Mare’s Tail was, in its technical fabrication, a self-sufficient project made before the Co-op had any significant workshop equipment. At times, Larcher was living in a truck, and stories of films processed in public lavatories in the Scottish Highlands do not seem far from the truth. His relationship to the Co-op has always been slightly distanced, though his lifestyle impressed and influenced many of the younger, more marginal figures.
His next film, Monkey’s Birthday (1975, six hours long), was shot over several years’ travels across the world with his entourage, and this time made full use of the Co-op processor to achieve its psychedelic effect.
Screening introduced by David Larcher.
PROGRAMME NOTES
THE EPIC FLIGHT: MARE’S TAIL
Tuesday 28 May 2002, at 6:30pm
London Tate Modern
MARE’S TAIL
David Larcher, 1969, colour, sound, 143 min
“Now you see it, now you don’t. Waiting room cinema from the mountain top to the car park, an alternative to television. The good, the bad and the indifferent. Some consider it self-indulgent but me has a duty to itself. Bring what you expect to find. Not structural but starting in the beginning from the beginning…organic…prima materia…impressionable massa confusa…out of which some original naming and ordering processes spring…they are not named, but rather nailed into the celluloid. “Please don’t expect me to answer the question I’m having a hard time not falling out of this chair” syndrome.” —David Larcher, Arts Council Film-Makers on Tour catalogue, 1980
“Mare’s Tail is an epic flight into inner space. It is a 2 and 3/4 hour visual accumulation in colour, the film-maker’s personal odyssey, which becomes the odyssey of each of us. It is a man’s life transposed into a visual realm, a realm of spirits and demons, which unravel as mystical totalities until reality fragments. Every movement begins a journey. There are spots before your eyes, as when you look at the sun that flames and burns. We look at distant moving forms and flash through them. We drift through suns; a piece of earth phases over the moon. A face, your face, his face, a face that looks and splits into shapes that form new shapes that we rediscover as tiny monolithic monuments. A profile as a full face. The moon again, the flesh, the child, the room and the waves become part of a hieroglyphic language… Mare’s Tail is an important film because it expresses life. It follows Paul Klee’s idea that a visually expressive piece adds “more spirit to the seen” and also “makes secret visions visible”. Like other serious films and works of art, it keeps on seeking and seeing, as the film-maker does, as the artist does. It follows the transience of life and nature, studying things closely, moving into vast space, coming in close again. The course it follows is profoundly real and profoundly personal: Larcher’s trip becomes our trip to experience. It cannot be watched impatiently, with expectation; it is no good looking for generalization, condensation, complication or implication.” —Stephen Dwoskin, Film Is: The International Free Cinema, 1975
“A film that is almost a life style. Long enough and big enough in scope to be able to safely include boredom, blank-screens, bad footage. The kind of film that is analogous in a symbolic way to something like the ‘stream of life’ – no one would ever criticize looking out of the window as being boring sometimes. It’s not a film – more like an event composed of the collective ideas and attempts in film of several years. Like a personal diary: humorous, wry, sad, ecstatic. Concerned with texture, with seeing and not seeing, light and darkness, even life and death. Monumental not in size alone, but in its breadth of concept. Relaxed enough to be able to let one idea run on for twenty minutes before switching to another. The exact opposite of most film-making which attempts to keep the audience ‘interested’ by rapidly changing from one form or idea to another, to exclude boredom and participation. A ‘super-Le Grice’ in that it has inherent sensitivity and humanity, as well as superlative and highly inventive technique. It opens up film-making by including such self-conscious ethics as those propounded by Warhol etc. as a natural part of the film ethic as a whole.” —Mike Dunford, Cinemantics No. 1, January 1970
“Mare’s Tail is one of the finest achievements in cinema. It is a masterpiece that everyone in the country should get to see. To write about it is about as difficult as conveying the essence of magic, the meaning of existence, the quality of love or the shadows of a receding dream. For the film is pure myth, a living organism in its own right, a creation whose infinite complexity makes criticism of it a shallow irrelevancy (or at best a crude mythology). The achievement is that the film never looks like a mere catalogue of special effects – the vision is integrated, relaxed, spontaneous and too fluid for there to be any sense of contrivance in this staggering display of inventive curiosity. The immense diversity of technique runs hand-in-hand with a sustained simplicity of treatment. You’re aware of a mind that is open and loving toward everything: and this loving openness of response transfigures every image in the film, as it eventually transfigures the viewer too…” —John Du Cane, Time Out, 1972
“A film that is undoubtedly one of the most important produced in this country and that stands comparison with the best from the United States. It’s as if it were the first film in the world. When Mare’s Tail first appeared it was compared to Brakhage’s Art of Vision, as an examination of ways of seeing. The comparison can be taken further: as Brakhage is to the New American Cinema, it seems to me, so Larcher should be considered to the New English Cinema… Mare’s Tail is not only about vision but proposes an epistemology of film, particularly in its first reel: revealing basic elements of film in an almost didactic fashion: grain, frame, strip, projector, light. We see a film in perpetual process, being put together, being formed out of these attitudes. The first reel is a ‘lexicon’ to the whole film – to film in general – holding together what is essentially an open-ended structure to which pieces could be continually added and offering us a way to read that film. It is at once a kind of autobiography and a film about making that autobiography.” —Simon Field, “The Light of the Eyes”, Art and Artists, December 1972
“Pierre Boulez came to a screening of Mare’s Tail at Robert Street once. Simon Hartog said, “Oh, I sent my father to see Mare’s Tail”, his father was an impresario for people like Joan Sutherland and Pierre Boulez, and it turned out that Boulez came and was sat behind us. I’d been living in trucks and I’d just come up and it happened to be the same day. I went along and found this old tramp called Eric – this famous character who was around in those days, early ’70s – and took him along. We were sitting there and then I suddenly realised Boulez was behind. After half an hour he said, “C’est le perfection,” and walked out with Simon’s father!” —David Larcher, interview with Mark Webber, 2001
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Date: 21 August 2002 | Season: Infinite Projection | Tags: Jonas Mekas
JONAS MEKAS VIDEO SHOW
Wednesday 21 August 2002, at 7:30pm
London The Photographers’ Gallery
A rare opportunity to view videotapes by the legendary advocate of avant-garde film. His organisation Anthology Film Archives began to show videotapes by artists as early as 1974, and Mekas himself has been regularly using video since the mid-1980s, amassing footage and creating tapes which are largely unknown or unseen. Jonas Mekas will be in the UK for a retrospective at the Edinburgh Film Festival, and will join us to introduce this screening.
Jonas Mekas, Self-Portrait, 1980, 11 min
Jonas Mekas, Remedy for Melancholy, 1993-97, 28 min
Jonas Mekas, Autobiography of a Man Who Carried his Memory in his Eyes, 2000, 50 min
Jonas Mekas, Cinema is Not 100 Years Old, 1996, 5 min
“I got into video when a New York Sony representative decided to hand for free Sony 8 video cameras to ‘famous’ New Yorkers in exchange for a few minutes of video they would use then to promote the cameras. So I got one, and gave them my first very, very bad five minutes of video. They also gave one camera to Allen Ginsberg, who took it on his trip to Israel where it was stolen from him; Sony got no footage. Anyway, that was the beginning.
“That was in late 1987. The camera was Video 8. Later I switched to Video Hi-8, and that’s where I still am. Because I like to do all my editing at home and at weirdest and unpredictable hours, I cannot yet afford digital video due to the expensive editing equipment. But Hi-8 editing is cheap.
“Jokingly I say, when asked, that I use the video camera as I would use a tape recorder. There is some truth to it. It’s opposite to what I do with my Bolex. No single frames. No emphasis on colour. It’s more stress on mood, atmosphere, and you can’t get mood or atmosphere in single frames. Which means, in my video diaries I record a different aspect of reality than what I do with a Bolex or in my written poetry.
“I have collected by now, that is, by June 1st, 2002, c.750 hours of video material. During the next 12 months or so my intention is to prepare a c.24 hour video volume of my life in New York.”
(Jonas Mekas, 1st June 2002)
PROGRAMME NOTES
JONAS MEKAS VIDEO SHOW
Wednesday 21 August 2002, at 7:30pm
London The Photographers’ Gallery
SELF-PORTRAIT
Jonas Mekas, USA, 1980, colour, sound, 11 min
One twenty minute take, a soliloquy, myself talking about myself. Taped in collaboration with Robert Schoenbaum, at the house / porch of Sally Dixon, St. Paul.
REMEDY FOR MELANCHOLY
Jonas Mekas, USA, 1993-97, colour, sound, 28 min
Includes four sketches: With Peter Kubelka at St. Michel; our cat Apache and Nina Hagen; children of the School for Violin; the books of Ken Jacobs.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A MAN WHO CARRIED HIS MEMORY IN HIS EYES
Jonas Mekas, USA, 2000, colour, sound, 50 min
A condensed survey of my first 50 years in New York – physically and mentally.
CINEMA IS NOT 100 YEARS OLD
Jonas Mekas, USA, 1996, colour, sound, 5 min
The true history of the cinema is the hidden history of friends who meet to do what they love. For us the cinema starts with each humming of projector, with each new buzz of our camera, our hearts are projected forwards. My friends, cinema is not yet 100 years old.
We appreciate the help of Louis Benassi and the Edinburgh Film Festival in making this event possible. Thanks also to Jane Giles.
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Date: 14 October 2002 | Season: Oyvind Fahlstrom
ÖYVIND FAHLSTROM & SWEDISH AVANT-GARDE FILM
14 October–24 November 2002
Gateshead BALTIC Centre
Since the 1950s, the artist Öyvind Fahlström pursued an interest in the moving image. The use of illustration and collage in his paintings and graphic work show a clear affinity to cinema and the use of film as a means of artistic expression. He was an active member of Arbetsgruppen För Film (aka Filmform); an artist-led organisation dedicated to the production and promotion of avant-garde film, and made experimental tv documentaries, home movies and the radical feature film Du Gamla Du Fria (which takes its name from the Swedish national anthem).
One of the earliest films ever made by an artist was Symphonie Diagonale by the Swedish painter Viking Eggeling in the early 1920s, but independent film did not become established in Sweden until the post-war period, at which time personal psychodramas and city symphonies were made by filmmakers such as Gösta Werner, Peter Weiss and Nils Jönsson.
Avant-garde film flourished as a potent artform in the 1960s counterculture. The artists Åke Karlung and Erling Johansson made extraordinary films as part of their wider creative practice, using animation to assemble mixtures of painting, sculpture and live action. Other filmmakers, including Hans Esselius and Jan Håfström used cinema to make potent social commentary, attacking the modern political and industrial establishment. Fahlström himself made the satirical, psychedelic found-footage film U-barn for the Swedish Film Institute. In the 70s and 80s, Åsa Sjöström, Olle Hedman Anne-Sofi Sidén and others continued to experiment with the medium as a punk ethos brought the work back-to-basics.
The artist Gunvor Nelson lived and worked in San Francisco for many years, though she never lost her close connection to the culture and character of her birthplace. Gunvor will be at BALTIC to present two programmes of her work, featuring both her unique collage techniques and her deeply personal films about family relationships.
In this brief history of the Swedish avant-garde, examples of Fahlström’s own work will be shown alongside rare screenings of films by those who still remain widely unknown outside their homeland.
Date: 15 November 2002 | Season: London Film Festival 2002 | Tags: London Film Festival
PEGGY AND FRED IN HELL
Friday 15 November 2002, at 4pm
London National Film Theatre NFT1
Leslie Thornton, Peggy and Fred in Hell, USA, 2002, 100 min
Begun in 1984, Peggy and Fred in Hell originally existed as an open-ended sequence of episodes continually shown as works-in-progress. Leslie Thornton has now assembled this definitive feature-length videofilm; an unsettling glimpse into a strangely twisted world which is not so unlike our own. Peggy and Fred, two distinctly American children brought up on a diet of movies, television and junk food, permeate the film with a string of disconcerting dramatic or improvised vignettes, punctuated by carefully arranged found footage and re-appropriated (often instantly recognisable) soundtracks. This film is utterly peculiar, occasionally displaying whiffs of Jack Smith, David Lynch, Harmony Korine, Dogme and Science Fiction while retaining its own unique mystery and allure. As the two young protagonists wander though their surreal, post-apocalyptic world, nature and decay oppose technology in a cathartic manifestation of fractured modern life. It’s as though they were the only two people left alone on the planet, raising themselves in bewildered naiveté; free and spontaneous. Life can be strange: ‘Have a nice day alone’.
Also Screening: Saturday 16 November 2002, at 11pm, London NFT1
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Date: 18 November 2002 | Season: LUX Salon
LUX SALON: PHILIP HOFFMAN
Monday 18 November 2002, at 7pm
London Canada House
Philip Hoffman has long been recognized as Canada’s preeminent diary filmmaker. For over twenty years he has been straining history through personal fictions, using the material of his life to deconstruct the Griersonian legacy of documentary practice. As an artist working directly upon the material of film, Hoffman is keenly attuned to the shape of seeing, foregrounding the image and its creation as well as the manufacture of point-of-view. Hoffman’s films are deeply troubled in their remembrances; he dusts off the family archive to examine how estrangement fuels a fascination with the familiar surroundings of home.
Mortality forms the absent centre of Philip Hoffman’s oeuvre, a body of films that seems to foreshadow a penultimate loss that will take the maker to the outer and inner reaches of grief. Through the repeating figure of death – whether a boy lying on a Mexican roadside, the death of an elephant at the Rotterdam Zoo, or his uncle’s legacy of insanity and death in passing through/torn formations – Hoffman approaches the limits of representation and the ethical burdens of vision and reproduction. (Karyn Sandlos, Toronto Images Festival, 2001)
Please Note: Opening Series 2 consists of 12 segments, each segment in its own hand- painted film canister. Through the visual references on the canisters, the audience, prior to the screening, orders the flow of the film.
Philip Hoffman, Kokoro is for Heart, 1999, colour, sound, 7 min
Philip Hoffman, passing through / torn formations, 1998, b/w & colour, sound, 43 min
Philip Hoffman, Chimera, 1996, colour, sound, 15 min
Philip Hoffman, Opening Series 2, 1993, colour, silent, 7 min
Date: 29 April 2003 | Season: Miscellaneous | Tags: Stan Brakhage
A SNAIL’S TRAIL IN THE MOONLIGHT: STAN BRAKHAGE 1933-2003
Tuesday 29 April 2003, at 7pm
London The Other Cinema
Memorial screening and fundraiser organised by LUX and the Other Cinema, London
An evening of screenings and talk to celebrate the life and work of one of the founding fathers of the modern avant-garde film. Over the course of 50 years and 400 plus films he mapped out a highly personal and passionate alternative history of motion pictures which looms large in the history of American post-war modernism. It is impossible to express all aspects of his work in one screening so instead we aim to present a small sample of works that were important to him, by himself and friends, as well as rare interviews and home movies. A celebration of his life and his remarkable creativity.
Stan Brakhage, Songs 4–7, 1966, 8mm, 10 min
Stan Brakhage, The Dante Quartet, 1987, 8 min
Stan Brakhage & Phil Solomon, Concrescence, 1996, 3 min
Stan Brakhage, Yggdrasill: Whose Roots Are Stars In The Human Mind, 1997, 17 min
Marie Menken, Notebook, 1962-63, 10 min
Bruce Baillie, Rolls, 1967-70, 7 min
Mary Beth Reed, Moonstreams, 2000, 10 min
Courtney Hoskins, Gossamer Conglomerates, 2001, 5 min
Stan Brakhage, Mothlight, 1963, 4 min
Ken & Nisi Jacobs, Keeping an Eye on Stan, 2003, 8 min (excerpt)
Pip Chodorov, A Visit to Stan Brakhage, 2003, 15 min
Colin Still, Brakhage on Brakhage, 1996/2002, 9 min
Phil Solomon, Stan Editing “Panels for the Walls of Heaven”, 2003, 7 min (excerpt)
There will also be selections from audiotapes made by Stan Brakhage for his friends and acquaintances, including the poetry of James Thompson BV and music by Charles Ives and Erik Satie. Speakers will include Pip Chodorov and Al Rees.
PROGRAMME NOTES
A SNAIL’S TRAIL IN THE MOONLIGHT: STAN BRAKHAGE 1933-2003
Tuesday 29 April 2003
London The Other Cinema
PROGRAMME
Selections from audio tapes made for friends by Stan Brakhage, c. 1990s
Introduction by Pip Chodorov
Pip Chodorov, A Visit to Stan Brakhage, 2003, 15 min
Stan Brakhage, Mothlight, 1963, 4 min
suggested by Jonas Mekas
Marie Menken, Notebook, 1962-63, 10 min
Bruce Baillie, Rolls, 1967-70, 7 min
suggested by P. Adams Sitney
Colin Still, Brakhage on Brakhage, 1996/2002, 9 min
Stan Brakhage, Songs 4 – 7, 1966, 8mm, 10 min
Words from A.L. Rees
Stan Brakhage, The Dante Quartet, 1987, 8 min
suggested by Phil Solomon
Phil Solomon, Stan Editing “Panels for the Walls of Heaven”, 2003, 7 min (excerpt)
Stan Brakhage & Phil Solomon, Concrescence, 1996, 3 min
Stan Brakhage reading “The City of Dreadful Night” by James Thomson (BV)
Courtney Hoskins, Gossamer Conglomerates, 2001, 5 min
Mary Beth Reed, Moonstreams, 2000, 10 min
suggested by Ken Jacobs and Pip Chodorov
Ken & Nisi Jacobs, Keeping an Eye on Stan, 2003, 8 min (excerpt)
Stan Brakhage, Yggdrasill: Whose Roots Are Stars In The Human Mind, 1997, 17 min
Charles Ives “General William Booth Enters Into Heaven”
suggested by Peter Kubelka
…
Announcement of Stan Brakhage’s Death, and Statement on his Life
Written by Marilyn Brakhage and released March 10, 2003.
Brakhage, James Stanley (Stan). Died Sunday afternoon, March 9, 2003, about 2:10 PM Pacific Time at Victoria Hospice in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, after a brave and difficult struggle with cancer. His wife, Marilyn, was with him.
Born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1933, Stan grew up chiefly in Denver, Colorado and lived for many years in Rollinsville and later in Boulder, Colorado, as well as spending earlier periods in both New York City and San Francisco. Most recently of Victoria, British Columbia, Stan was a world-renowned artist, a creative genius whose complex, brilliant and amazingly prolific body of work in both film and writing earned him a place of prominence within the American avant-garde film movement as well as the entire contemporary art world. With major collections of his work at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Oesterreichisches Filmmuseum, Vienna, the Museo Nazionale del Cinema, Turin, and other museums, universities, and private collections around the continent and the world, Stan has been an inspiration to countless students, fellow artists, and so many others, through his films, his writings, his lectures and public appearances, and his work as Instructor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Most especially, Stan has been an enormous presence in the lives of all who knew him, “a giant among us,” as a friend said. His great love for family and friends, and unending wonder at the world, the strength of his physical presence, the challenge of his mind, the integrity of his being, the light in his eyes, the amazing life-force that he was, will be a huge loss for all of us.
True to form, Stan spent his final weeks and days scratching on film and drawing pictures of his visions, both internal and external, as he worked through his illness. He expressed much love and kindness, and gratitude to others, and said, “I’ve had a really good life,” and “Life is great.” He worried for the world, and he continued to care for and to protect his art, and that of others.
In his well known Metaphors on Vision of 1963, Stan had written of film artists creating “where fear before them has created the greatest necessity,” and that “They are essentially preoccupied by and deal imagistically with — birth, sex, death, and the search for God.” Speaking recently of his life, he stated that most of all he had wanted to GIVE something to people — through the arts, through music and painting. He said, “I wanted to give them God.”
Stan is survived by seven children and 14 grandchildren. He will be deeply missed by his wife, Marilyn, and sons Anton and Vaughn, and by his first wife, Jane, and their five children, Myrrena, Crystal, Neowyn, Bearthm and Rarc.
Funeral services will be held at St. Mary’s Anglican Church on Elgin Road, Victoria, British Columbia, on Friday, March 14, at 3:00 pm.
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Date: 31 May 2003 | Season: Essential Frame
THE ESSENTIAL FRAME: AUSTRIAN INDEPENDENT FILM 1955-2003
31 May—1 June 2003
London Film School
The Essential Frame is a two-day intensive programme of screenings and talks reflecting on the history and the present situation of independent filmmaking in Austria. The six sessions will provide a concise survey of those artists who chose to work specifically with film, and two of the most important figures active in the movement will appear in person to talk about their work.
The event begins with a ‘remote lecture’ prepared by media-artist Valie Export, a pioneer of film performance and one of the most influential artists of recent decades. Contemporary filmmakers Martin Arnold and Peter Tscherkassky will present and discuss selections of their films. The screening programme includes a cycle of films by Dietmar Brehm plus works by Peter Kubelka, Marc Adrian, Kurt Kren, Peter Weibel, Gustav Deutsch, Linda Christanell, Lisl Ponger, and many others.
Perhaps more than any other national independent or avant-garde cinema, Austrian filmmakers have paid particular and precise attention to The Frame – and it goes two ways – into the frame (and the space between two adjacent frames) as the essential component of film (and apparent motion), and outwards, testing the limits of the frame, pushing the boundaries of expanded cinema and film actions.
This concentrated weekend focuses on those films in which the material and mechanics of cinema are essential to the form and content of the final work. It is not all-inclusive and there are some notable omissions: it does not feature the works made in documenting the performances of the Viennese Actionists, the exploratory early video works by Export, Weibel and others, or the thriving digital video scene of contemporary Vienna. There is plenty more out there to be discovered, but an essential framework is here.
The Essential Frame is curated by Mark Webber for the Austrian Cultural Forum, London. The event in London will be followed by a two-programme UK tour.
READ MORE
COUNTING THE WAVES: A SUMMARY OF ACTIVITY
1950s
Independent filmmaking emerged in Austria in the early 1950s. For a long period after the Second World War, artists in its capital city Vienna, deep within central Europe, were isolated from the developing artistic cultures of the western world. With no domestic tradition of auteur cinema, the idea of film as means of personal expression was rooted more in the country’s history of radicalism in painting, architecture, literature, music and philosophy.
Mosaik im Vertrauen (1955) by Peter Kubelka is widely acknowledged as the first truly avant-garde film to be made in Austria. Though earlier films by Herbert Vesely (beginning with und die kinder spielen so gern soldaten, 1951) and Kurt Steinwendner & Wolfgang Kudrnofsy (Der Rabe, 1951) started to move in this direction, Mosaik certainly represented a giant leap in cinematic thinking. Ferry Radax, a Surrealist photographer who assisted on that film, subsequently worked for several years on the surreal, quasi-narrative Sonne Halt! (1959-62). Marc Adrian and Kurt Kren (working individually and in collaboration) began to experiment with coloured leader and pre-composed editing scores in 1956-57. As the decade ended, Kubelka established his theory of ‘metric film’ with Adebar (1957), Schwechater (1958) and Arnulf Rainer (1960). These three works explore rhythm and formal composition from a fundamental position that cinematic articulation occurs in the space between two adjacent frames.
1960s
During the 1960s, Vienna’s most active group of artists were the Wiener Aktionisten, whose unprecedented, provocative actions shocked contemporary society by engaging with the ‘politics of experience’. Using nudity, ritual and violence (and quantities of raw meat, blood and other seminal fluids) they confronted modern taboos and challenged conventional attitudes toward the human body. Many of these happenings were documented, notably in key works by Kurt Kren, who developed a hard, rapid editing style that astutely translated these uncompromising activities onto film (e.g. Mama und Papa (1964), Leda mit dem Schwan (1964), Selbstverstümmelung (1965)). Artists Günter Brus, Otto Mühl, Rudolf Schwarzkogler and Otmar Bauer also shot or participated in their own films of the ‘actions’.
With Kren as the direct connection to the first wave, a second generation of filmmakers began to investigate the medium, contributing to what would later become the international structural / materialist film debate (here directly connected to the material actions of the Aktionisten). 1967 was an intensely productive year: Kren made Sinus , TV and 20. September (the legendary “eating, drinking, pissing, shitting film”), Hans Scheugl made Wien 17 Schumanngasse and Hernals, and Ernst Schmidt Jr. made Filmreste and began the Farbfilm trilogy. The following year, Gottfried Schlemmer made his own uncompromising statement by shooting a 10-minute fixed view of a primitive digital clock in 8h01-8h11.
At the Palais Palffy nightclub on 26 January 1967 a film screening gave birth to Austrian expanded cinema as Peter Weibel, with no conventional films to show, presented Action Lecture No. 1 and Nivea, combining projection and performance. ‘Film happenings’ were innovative and spontaneous, often relatively inexpensive to present and in vogue with the cultural landscape of the underground. Valie Export and Peter Weibel, working either together or alone, embraced this new genre, building their performances on political and theoretical frameworks, with communication and technology at the core of many projects. Tapp- und Tastkino, Cutting and the more whimsical Exit and Ping Pong date from 1968. There was a distinct sense of one-upmanship in the conception of many expanded works: Hans Scheugl attempted to make the final statement with zzz: hamburg special – a length of thread wound through the projector for any format (preferably 35mm CinemaScope).
Export, Kren, Scheugl, Schlemmer, Schmidt Jr. and Weibel founded the Austria Filmmakers Cooperative in early 1968, fired up with enthusiasm generated by the international festival at Knokke-Le-Zoute that New Year. They began to regularly exhibit abroad, participating at festivals and on the flourishing cooperative circuit. But by 1969, the movement was already losing impetus as the Coop lost key distributing members to Karlheinz Hein’s semi-commercial Progressive Art Productions (based in Munich), and several moved out of Austria. To continue the activities in Vienna, Franz Fallenberg (aka Falmbigl) founded the Kuratorium Neue Österreichischer Film, organising screenings and alternative distribution.
Outside of the Coop circle, Franz Novotny, Michael Pilz and Gerhard Rühm were among those also making films during this period. Marc Adrian used early computers to bring randomisation into his working practice, and made several films with text as the only visual content. In the late 1960s he entered a period of formalist diary films that had psychoanalytic bias. He has taught in Austria, Germany and the USA and continued to work consistently through to the present day. Peter Kubelka worked for five years on the precise sound and image editing of Unsere Afrikareise (1966) and subsequently made his first journey to the USA, where he became a central figure in the international avant-garde and co-founder of Anthology Film Archives. Together with Peter Konlechner, Kubelka had already established the Österreichisches Filmmuseum in 1964, in direct opposition to the policies of the state Filmarchiv. This film museum, whose exhibition space was the screen, collected and exhibited the great works of cinema with particular emphasis on avant-garde history.
1970s
The next decade brought lean years for Austrian filmmaking. There were a few, almost resigned, pieces of expanded cinema in 1971 – Schmidt Jr. made Umweltschutz (Environmental Protection) which was sent to a festival with the instruction that it be thrown away (it was) and Kren shot the funeral of his friend Klemmer and threw the exposed reel into the open grave – but overall, the tide of enthusiasm and activity that dominated the late 1960s was soon dissipated around the turn of the decade.
Kren continued to make many short films, settling first in Germany in 1971 before relocating to the USA in 1978. Weibel began to work with video before becoming a multi-media installation artist and theoretician. Valie Export was likewise multi-disciplinary; her evolving performance activity incorporated developments in video and live transmission, though she also continued to make film. Having created … Remote… Remote… and Mann & Frau & Animal, (two radical affirmations of female sexuality exploring her body and physical/emotional reaction to pleasure and pain, both 1973), she was the first recipient of a new funding scheme which allowed her to make Unsichtbare Gegner (1976), the initial part of a trilogy of feature films. Schmidt Jr., also received such an award from the Bundesministerium für Unterricht und Kunst and, working together with many friends, produced the documentitive collage Wienfilm 1896-1976 in 1977. In 1974 Hans Scheugl and Schmidt Jr. published an extensive two-part lexicon of the international underground and experimental film movement. The long out-of-print “Subgeschichte des Films” (Subhistory of Film) is still widely coveted.
There were few new filmmakers creating short films during this time. The painter Maria Lassnig made a succession of personal animations in the USA throughout the 1970s, later returning to Vienna where she taught and founded the Studio für Experimentelle Animation in 1982. In the documentary field, Wilhelm Gaube created portraits of Austrian artists and Alfred Kaiser reappropriated Nazi newsreel footage in the sardonic compilation film Ein drittes Reich (1975). Under the influence of a fatal cocktail of Andy Warhol’s Factory, the Velvet Underground and Iggy Pop, Dietmar Brehm started work in Linz in 1974, commencing a monumental body of work in 8mm and 16mm. Many were turning to the newly accessible super-8 format by the end of the decade, kickstarted by the rough and ready punk aesthetic of do-it-yourself. One of the most productive was Robert Quitta, who made Film ist Fest, a series of 150 short films, between 1977-79.
1980s
Throughout the 1980s, a third wave began to appear, including Linda Christanell, Gustav Deutsch, Norbert Gmeindl, Renate Kordon, Wolfgang Lehner, Bady Minck, Bärbel Neubauer, Lisl Ponger, Johannes Rosenberger and Arnold Schicker, many of them working in the smaller gauge. To harness this new surge of activity, a revitalised Austria Filmmakers Cooperative was initiated by Hans Scheugl, Moucle Blackout and others in 1982. Inspired by the active super-8 scene he observed in Berlin, Peter Tscherkassky began filmmaking, captivated by the grainy image produced by the format. Using repetition, recycling footage and often manually exposing and printing the filmstrip, he dives straight to the core of the medium, making Urlaubsfilm (1983), Motion Picture (1984), Manufraktur (1985) and tabula rasa (1987-89).
Valie Export realised the short Syntagma (1983) and a third feature Die Praxis der Liebe (1984), as well as producing several documentary projects for Austrian television. Mara Mattuschka’s films, such as Kugelkopf, Der Untergang der Titania (both 1985) and Es hat mich sehr gefreut (1987), are performance based, sharing some surface similarities to the earlier work of Export and Aktionismus. Appearing in character as Mimi Minus, language and the female body are at the centre of her filmic inquiry. In 1989, Martin Arnold made pièce touchée, the first of a celebrated trilogy of films in which he applied analytical step-printing to ‘found’ Hollywood footage, bringing hidden meanings from apparently benign material. Kurt Kren abandoned filmmaking and worked as a guard at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Ernst Schmidt Jr. died destitute in Vienna, 1988.
1990s
Sixpack Film was established in 1990 to promote the work of Austrian filmmakers to international film festivals, in many ways as a direct response to the present state of the Austrian Coop at that time. The founder members Martin Arnold, Brigitta Burger-Utzer, Alexander Horwath, Lisl Ponger and Peter Tscherkassky recognised the need for a more stable and proficient distribution outlet following the phenomenal success of pièce touchée on the festival circuit. The organisation soon expanded into a distribution outlet and started to organise events, fostering a new surge of activity throughout the decade. This in turn inspired the next wave of filmmakers including Joseph Dabering, Thomas Korschil, Hannes Langeder, Thomas Steiner and Virgil Widrich. Many who emerged in the 1990s were students of the Hochschule für angewandte Kunst Wien and Kunsthochschule Linz including Alexander Curtis, Gerhard Ertl & Sabine Hiebler, Siegfried Fruhauf and Norbert Pfaffenbichler.
Meanwhile, in Frankfurt, students of Peter Kubelka’s classes at the Städelschule (including Kerstin Cmelka, Thomas Draschan, Albert Sackl, Bernhard Schreiner, Georg Wasner and Günther Zehetner) develop into an active group, absolutely committed to the film medium. In 1999 Peter Weibel became director of the ZKM centre for new media in Karlsruhe, Germany, while Valie Export continues to lecture at the Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln. Kren had returned to Vienna in 1990 and died there in 1998.
Dietmar Brehm assembled his magnum opus Schwarzer Garten (1987-99), a brooding sequence of horror films utilising his ‘pumping screen’ technique. Tscherkassky continued his exploration of process with Parallel Space: Inter-View (1992), Happy End (1996) and then his multiple award winning CinemaScope trilogy L’Arrivée, Outer Space and Dream Work (1998-2001). With the Film Ist. project of tableaux films and live events that reappropriate footage from the early years of cinema, Gustav Deutsch became a major presence on the international scene.
Johannes Rosenberger and friends founded Navigatorfilm in 1992 as an independent production company for the development of creative documentary films. Joerg Burger, Andreas Horvath and Martina Kudlacek and are also active in the documentary genre, while Tizza Covi, Rainer Frimmel and Kathrin Resetarits make a more personal style of film essay.
A mid-1990s retrospective film series curated by Steve Anker for San Francisco Cinematheque toured extensively, prompting a worldwide revival of interest in the pioneering work of Austrian filmmakers. Independent filmmaking went through another incredibly productive period, built upon the foundation of its rich history, impassioned teaching and comprehensive critical writing, and often subsidised by the forward-thinking .KUNST bundeskanzleramt funding body.
The Present
While many artists continue to work with film material as an aesthetic choice, by the end of the 1990s young students of film and media were embracing the now affordable and rapidly advancing digital video technology. Michaela Grill, Jürgen Moritz, [n:ja], reMI (Renate Oblak & Michael Pinter), Billy Roisz and Michaela Schwentner are innovators of this energetic new field. These contemporary artists have developed a dynamic movement that is respected on an international scale. Their works, often created in collaboration with electronic musicians such as Christian Fennesz, Radian and Martin Siewert, are collectively celebrated in the series of “Audiovisions” touring packages from Sixpack. Martin Arnold has also created digital work, applying compositing technology to ‘industrial’ cinema in the context of his Deanimated installations at Kunsthalle Wien. Independent filmmaking activity will continue, though the variety of mediums used by the artists will doubtless become more diverse.
Mark Webber, 2003
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Date: 31 May 2003 | Season: Essential Frame
VALIE EXPORT. EXPANDED CINEMA: REMOTE LECTURE
Saturday 31 May 2003, at 3pm
London Film School
Using film, photography, video, television and live action, Valie Export has pursued a complex feminist critique of the social and political body. As one of the world’s foremost performance and multi-media artists, she confronts erotic hypocrisy, invoking a new image of ‘womankind’. With her pioneering work in the field of expanded cinema and installation art, technology, semantics and notions of reality are scrutinised through space and time.
Valie Export is unable to come to London at the present time, but has prepared a special ‘remote lecture’ which will include documentation of performances, descriptions of projection events and a selection of short films.
Valie Export, Interrupted Line, 1971-72, 3 min
Valie Export, Mann & Frau & Animal, 1970-73, 8 min
Valie Export, … Remote … Remote …, 1973, 10 min
Valie Export, Syntagma, 1984, 18 min
PROGRAMME NOTES
VALIE EXPORT. EXPANDED CINEMA: REMOTE LECTURE
Saturday 31 May 2003, at 3pm
London Film School
The lecture text, which has been especially prepared by Valie Export, will be read by Andrea Luka Zimmerman.
“The concept and the intention of my early work in Expanded Cinema was to decode reality as it was manipulated in film, to transport the cinematographic apparatus into the installation of time and space in order to break out of the two-dimensionality of the flat surface. The deconstruction of dominant reality, the deconstruction and abstraction of materials, the attempt to find new forms of communication and to realise them were also in the centre of my analysis. My work was concentrated on breaking with the traditional form in cinema, the commercial-conventional sequence of film production, shooting, montage, projection, and to replace them in part with aspects of reality, as new signs of the real. Presentation, product, production, reality form a unity in Expanded Cinema.” —Valie Export in conversation with Roswitha Müller, in her book Fragments of the Imagination, Indiana University Press, 1984
INTERRUPTED LINE
Valie Export, 1971-72, 16mm, colour, silent, 3 min
“A line is filmed through the windshield of a moving car and proceeds on the rear mirror. The movement coming from the other direction and the ongoing movement is visible, both only interrupted by the driving car. The shifting interruption on the space-time line has the size of a car. The cinema as a car, the car as a joint of time (curvature between future and past), the cinema as an interruption of the normal time.” —Valie Export
“The camera is stationed in the back of a moving car and focuses on the dividing line ahead. At the same time, the frame includes the rear-view mirror, in which the dividing line is continued behind the car. The car functions as the interruption of the space-time continuum, as “the seam of time, a bend between future and past”. Metaphorically, the car stands for the interruption of the everyday flow of time by the time of the film.” —Roswitha Müller
MANN & FRAU & ANIMAL
Valie Export, 1970-73, 16mm, b/w & colour, sound, 8 min
“Instead of the holy trinity: father, son, holy spirit, instead of the profane trinity: mother, family, state, instead of the social trinity: father, mother, children the film treats the real trilogy in 3 sections. What unites man and woman (not uniquely for sure, but what is being concealed) is the history of nature.” —Valie Export
“The earlier films of Valie Export, one feels, were motivated by the author’s desire and needs to investigate her own subjectivity, with the audience as a necessary part of the transference and polemic. Mann & Frau & Animal shows a woman finding pleasure in herself, the whole film a kind of assertion and affirmation of female sexuality and its independence from male values and pleasures. Thinking about my ‘quite erotic’ tag of that film, I realise that as a viewer I am experiencing a sexuality like that of childhood – one motivated by curiosity, a prosaic pleasure in looking, but free from fantasy. It is quite unlike the experience of ordinary pornography which is invested with the erotic almost exclusively through its symbolisation of power.” —Joanna Kiernan
… REMOTE … REMOTE …
Valie Export, 1973, 16mm, colour, sound, 10 min
“Human behaviour in contrast to machines (animals) is influenced by events in the past, as far back as these experiences may lie. Therefore there exists a psychic paratime parallel to the objective time, where the prayers of anguish and guilt, the inability to win, deformations which rip open the skin, becoming aware of oneself, have their constant effects. I demonstrate something which represents past and present.” —Valie Export
“… Remote… Remote… was one of the films categorised by a considerable number of women as typifying despicable excesses and extreme violence. People frequently reacted to the film with horror, incomprehension and scorn. In showing emotion, gentleness and sensitivity as female qualities, there was no place for aggression – cutting and violently opening were equated with male behaviour; having to penetrate in order to possess. When Valie Export shaves and trims herself, the sight of her provokes fantasies, revolving around acts done to the body. Yet there is nothing dreadful about a woman trimming her body, especially in the places where she enhances the glamour imposed on her body by the civilising influences of the world around her. And the fact that you have to suffer to achieve beauty has always brought a knowing smile to a woman’s lips. The way in which Valie Export grooms herself however, involves unconventional touching and violation which goes beyond the familiar sight of a woman ‘harmlessly’ doing herself up. This triggered, and continues to trigger, huge defensive reactions among many women. Such a reaction represents the easiest way of emphatically rejecting something that has got right under the skin. No-one is allowed to encroach into the recesses of our private existence, in which the damage suffered and our own self-mutilation remains safeguarded behind a front of normality.” —Renate Lippert
SYNTAGMA
Valie Export, 1984, 16mm, colour, sound, 18 min
“Syntagma is like a rigid gaze directed at oneself as if one were two persons; staring at oneself and the camera staring at oneself. Through these two eyes only the staring can be perceived, reflections of identity, the mirror as something impenetrable, like a veil being scrutinised. The more the mirror reflects, the more it moves into oblivion like an impenetrable object even if it makes imprints of itself on pictures.” —Valie Export
“The connection of the elements of a picture implies its structure and its possibility, its form of representation.” —Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus 2.15
“According to this view, the representing relationship which makes it a picture also belongs to the picture.” —Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus, 2.1513
“This short film consolidates not only the great variety of avant-garde techniques accumulated over two decades of work in Expanded Cinema, video and photography, but also the insights gleaned from her body work in performances, actions and installations. At the same time, feminism both as methodology and personal experiential stance, which had left an indelible mark on Export’s art during the 1970s, continued to be the single most important impulse and thematic source in her work in the 1980s. The reappropriation of the female body from its perceived sense of alienation has been at the forefront of Export’s feminist concerns. The female body, thus perceived, is in fragments, split and ruined, lacking cohesion, “the site not only of an anatomical but of discursive lack”.” —Roswitha Müller, quoting Kaja Silverman “The Acoustic Mirror”
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Date: 1 June 2003 | Season: Essential Frame
MARTIN ARNOLD. THE INTERRUPTED IMAGE.
Sunday 1 June 2003, at 3pm
London Film School
Martin Arnold will discuss his works including the well-known analytical trilogy plus three seldom screened short films and excerpts from his new digital video installation Deanimated: The Invisible Ghost, which was recently premiered at Kunsthalle Wien.
Martin Arnold, Remise, 1994, 1 min
Martin Arnold, Jesus Walking on Screen, 1993, 1 min
Martin Arnold, Don’t – Der Österreichfilm, 1996, 3 min
Martin Arnold, Deanimated: The Invisible Ghost, 2002, 56 min (excerpt)
Martin Arnold, pièce touchée, 1989, 16 min
Martin Arnold, passage à l’acte, 1993, 12 min
Martin Arnold, Alone. Life Wastes Andy Hardy, 1998, 15 min
“Martin Arnold’s films are merciless investigations of the historic and the present. They attempt to find within what has become strange through historical distance, something of our own, and to turn it into something else again. They ask that fundamental question regarding the nature of man and all things within a technological world which, according to Heidegger, embodies “utter transparency and, at the same time, the deepest obscurity”.” —Thomas Miessgang, in the exhibition catalogue Martin Arnold: Deanimated, Springer / Kunsthalle Wien, 2002
PROGRAMME NOTES
MARTIN ARNOLD. THE INTERRUPTED IMAGE.
Sunday 1 June 2003, at 3pm
London Film School
REMISE
Martin Arnold, 1994, 35mm, colour, sound, 1 min
Advertising trailer commissioned to promote the Kunsthalle Remise arts centre in Vienna.
JESUS WALKING ON SCREEN
Martin Arnold, 1993, 35mm, b/w, sound, 1 min
Advertising trailer commissioned for the “Jesus Walking on Screen: Jesus on Film 1898-1993” season at Stadtkino Wien.
DON’T – DER ÖSTERREICHFILM
Martin Arnold, 1996, 35mm, b/w, sound, 3 min
Arnold’s contribution to the “100 Years of Cinema” anniversary is based on footage from a bizarre post-war propaganda film that intends to demonstrate tradition and national pride in order to regain Austrian independence from the UFO flying ‘World Police’.
“Don’t was commissioned for the 100 years of cinema celebrations in Austria. I don’t think it’s a great piece, it’s a bit too much like Bruce Conner, but I enjoyed playing with the footage. The original film was such a stupid movie. It’s called 1 April 2000 by Wolfgang Liebeneiner (1953), and was the first film produced in Austria after the war. I think the church and all kinds of institutions to get together some money for it. Back then, we still had the allied forces in Vienna; what we call the contract of the free state of Austria was signed in 1955. The film was shot in the period when the Austrian’s didn’t have any government, we were controlled by the allied forces and this fact is reflected in the film, people were already fed up because they wanted to have their own government. In the story they decide not to obey the allies any more, so the allied forces call upon the World Police for help, and the World Police are in flying saucers. The Viennese show the World Police how nice they are, how beautiful the women are here and how good the wine tastes, to convince the World Police they should be free again to make the allied forces leave. It’s so crazy it’s unbelievable!” —Martin Arnold
DEANIMATED: THE INVISIBLE GHOST
Martin Arnold, 2002, video, b/w, sound, 56 min (excerpt)
What remains of a feature film if the cast are removed ? What remains of the plot if the protagonists are removed ? Digital compositing techniques were used to erase characters from a 1950s murder mystery starring Bela Lugosi, creating a study of absence and the void.
“I had always wondered how an empty feature film would look; a feature film without actors. The idea was always on my mind, but with no possibility to do it. Nowadays, working with computers and graphic design software, it’s possible at a level where it’s affordable, though of course it meant I had to change my way of working. I had an invitation from Kunsthalle Wien, and so I told them about this erasure project and that it would be nice to set it up in an empty theatre. The idea is that you’re confronted by an almost empty screen, actors only show up from time to time, and I also wanted to have a space where you would have too many seats, to reinforce this feeling of emptiness. With only one or two people in the room, they would really feel alone, at an empty movie.” —Martin Arnold
PIÈCE TOUCHÉE
Martin Arnold, 1989, 16mm, b/w, sound, 16 min
The celebrated trilogy in which Arnold applies avant-garde techniques to found Hollywood footage. The dazzling frame-by-frame manipulations expose the unconscious psychology hidden deep within harmless ‘industrial’ cinema. At turns enlightening, intense, sexual and profoundly amusing.
“Arnold’s original material is a piece of ‘found-footage’ from the 1950s. 18 seconds long and very typical for the period. A quiet take: a living room, a woman in an armchair. Her husband opens the door, kisses her, then moves out of the picture accompanied by a disturbing pan, his wife follows him. In Arnold’s film the sequence takes 16 minutes. Cadre by cadre, it becomes an exiting tango of movements. But pièce touchée is more than just a matter of forms. The reflections, distortions and delays it displays challenge Hollywood’s stable system of space and time.” —Alexander Horwath
PASSAGE À L’ACTE
Martin Arnold, 1993, 16mm, b/w, sound, 12 min
“With passage à l’acte it was still done in an analogue way, this was still the time of non-linear editing systems became available. I was working on a flatbed and I had the image track with each frame numbered, and I had the magnetic sound with it. I tried to figure out what was going on in the image, let’s say between frames 10 and 15, and what’s going on in terms of the sound at that point, which noise comes up when. Essentially, I was always moving between the optical printer and the flatbed, to listen to the sound. I had to discard many things because sometimes the image was good but the sound didn’t work at all, and sometimes the sound was really nice but the image was boring. It was a long process to get the moments together where both sound and image made sense to me.” —Martin Arnold
ALONE. LIFE WASTES ANDY HARDY
Martin Arnold, 1998, 16mm, b/w, sound, 15 min
“In his new film Alone. Life Wastes Andy Hardy which, together with pièce touchée and passage à l’acte, forms a sort of trilogy of compulsive repetition, Arnold’s campaign of deconstruction of classic Hollywood film codes finally turns to film music. The process links in with the other two films. The family scenes, which in the original last only seconds and are not particularly notable, are surgically sectioned into single frames. Using repetition of these ‘single cells’ and a new rhythm – a kind of cloning procedure – Arnold then creates an inflated, monstrous doppelgänger of the original cuts lasting many minutes. The hidden message of sex and violence is turned inside out to the point where it simply crackles. In Alone… the crossing of three harmless teenager films gives birth to an Oedipal drama in which not only mother love mutates to sheer lust. Since passage à l’acte, and contrary to other found-footage filmmakers who choose to remove their work into the realms of silent nostalgia, Arnold has re-worked the soundtrack along with the image. Because of this what one hears in Alone… is the eerie, rasping “silence” of sound film, pregnant with suppressed tension. And exactly at the point where the illusion of full, living present is seemingly at its strongest – in the screen presence of Judy Garland singing – one senses the machine, and, implicitly, death, at work.” —Dirk Schaefer
The installation Deanimated: The Invisible Ghost will be exhibited at the Fact Centre, Liverpool from 4 July to 24 August 2003.
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Date: 1 June 2003 | Season: Essential Frame
RECENT HISTORY
Sunday 1 June 2003, at 5pm
London Film School
A selection of recent work demonstrating a more poetic and contemplative cinema. Through their awareness of the past and an engagement with the pioneering work of the 1950s and 1960s, these contemporary artists have developed original and dynamic approaches to the medium.
Gustav Deutsch, Tradition ist die Weitergabe des Feuers und nicht die Anbetung der Asche, 1999, 1 min
Siegfried A. Fruhauf, La Sortie, 1999, 6 min
Linda Christanell, Moving Picture, 1995, 11 min
Kurt Kren, 31/75 Asyl, 1975, 9 min
Kerstin Cmelka, Et In Arcadia Ego, 2000, 3 min
Lisl Ponger, Semiotic Ghosts, 1990, 17 min
Bernhard Schreiner, Dian, Paito, 2001, 6 min
Kathrin Resetarits, Ägypten, 1996, 10 min
Thomas Draschan & Stella Friedrichs, To the Happy Few, 2003, 5 min
Alexander Curtis, Opus 7, 1993, 4 min
PROGRAMME NOTES
RECENT HISTORY
Sunday 1 June 2003, at 5pm
London Film School
TRADITION IST DIE WEITERGABE DES FEUERS UND NICHT DIE ANBETUNG DER ASCHE
Gustav Deutsch, 1999, 35mm, colour, sound, 1 min
An elegy to nitrate film material. Image by Deutsch, sound by Fennesz.
“Some found footage – made of cellulose nitrate – the material
Fire – a threat to nitrate film – its theme
A quote – from Gustav Mahler – its message
The soundtrack – by Christian Fennesz – as the bridge” —Gustav Deutsch, 1999
LA SORTIE
Siegfried A. Fruhauf, 1999, 16mm, b/w, sound, 6 min
Reduction into abstraction though the printing process. In memory of the Lumière Brothers and the workers leaving the factory.
“The first film of cinematographic history shows workers leaving a factory. The title of this work, which is 50 seconds long and bequeathed to us by the Lumière brothers, is La Sortie des Ouvriers de l’Usine. There are three known versions of the work. In the hardware and software of the cinematographic ‘machine’ resides much of the specifically mechanical charm of the industrial age. In one sense it is a paradox that the Lumières began film history with workers leaving the factory instead of giving place of honour to them working on the production lines. Over a hundred years later Siegfried A. Fruhauf has made a fourth version of La Sortie des Ouvriers de l’Usine. This remake gives short shrift to the unconscious irony of the Lumière films. Fruhauf needs six minutes to run through the current fate of industry. Fourteen workers are present here: five on the (optically) vertical axis, the rest cross the horizontal axis in the background. Their movements form a cross – a symbol of death as a ballet méchanique. The initial image is transformed into almost abstract black and white surfaces, harnessed Sisyphus-like to a lunatic dance of repetition. Fruhauf increases the acceleration of the striding workers in discrete steps until they are tearing along – the capacity of the film tested to its outer limits – until it can’t take any more. Maximum acceleration leads to stasis – after the acceleration throughout the film comes the logical consequence – the last frame – the freeze frame. Nothing more can happen. The model (literally) of progress collapses. And instead there is paralysis. A dead-end. The workers are motionless, and with them the factory. Rien ne va plus.” —Peter Tscherkassky)
MOVING PICTURE
Linda Christanell, 1995, 16mm, colour, sound, 11 min
Variations on a view from the filmmaker’s window mysteriously merge with a photo-portrait of Barbara Stanwyck. Film loaded with introspection, ageless like a box by Cornell.
“My starting point is the astonishing experience of the changes in one and the same picture. The motive of the film is the view out of my studio window in Schönlaterngasse. I have observed the transition from street to sky over a longer period. Changes in the day, the seasons and my inner psychological state bring movement to the frozen frame. The inner changes are a particular point of emphasis in the film. The experience of the freeze frame view is overlapped by material corresponding to the psychic layers of consciousness. I imagine various motives in the street – for example, glittering water with flying white seagulls, a portrait of Barbara Stanwyck, a scene from Berlin and one from San Francisco.” —Linda Christanell
31/75 ASYL
Kurt Kren, 1975, 16mm, colour, silent, 9 min
A pastoral scene fractured by a complex series of masks. Real time is superimposed in filmic time / real landscape is reconfigured into an artificial panorama.
“It was the first time that I had lived in the countryside and I didn’t like it that much. I was always a city slicker. Maybe I went slightly bonkers. Maybe I wanted to tear the whole thing apart. Technically, I shot the film in 21 days. Every day I would run the whole film through the camera, but as I said only once a day. In front of the lens there was a cut out mask with five holes in it. Through these holes the film was exposed. The holes changed with every day. All the holes together, throughout the 21 days would open up the full frame. In some holes it rains, in others the sun is shining, in others it snows. It was done in Saarland, close to the French border.” —Kurt Kren, interviewed by Hans Scheugl
ET IN ARCADIA EGO
Kerstin Cmelka, 2000, 16mm, colour, silent, 3 min
A secret garden, composed of dreams.
“Et In Arcadia Ego is a ‘painterly’ film, and even its title reinforces this impression. This formula and its variations “conjure up a vision of unsurpassable happiness which is turned backwards toward the past”, wrote Erwin Panofsky in his essay Et In Arcadia Ego. Poussin und das Elegische (1936), which traces the long tradition and gradual change in the significance of the Arcadia motif in fine arts from memento mori to a symbol of “melancholy pregnant with memory”.” —Isabella Reicher
SEMIOTIC GHOSTS
Lisl Ponger, 1990, 16mm, colour, sound, 17 min
Footage collected on travels around the world is assembled as a powerful inquiry into photographic language. “In my films I have confronted the question of what a frame is, what movement and light signify. There is no story, the story is the pictures.”
“In one interview about Semiotic Ghosts, Ponger once made the following comparison: “The narrative feature film compared to the associative film is like the verbally speaking human being compared to the one who uses sign language to communicate.” As an inspiration for Semiotic Ghosts she named a 19th Century Swiss book on the pedagogy of how to educate the deaf. To function as an equal to the spoken word, sign language, besides basic and distinctive meanings, must to go through a process of conventionalisation to establish itself. Therefore the myth of the universal and the ‘naturally given’ does not exist. But there is no doubt, that sign language makes use of shape, size and movement. It expresses itself imitatively and is therefore universal. It therefore has also greater iconic potential than the verbal language. The second shot of the film shows the 1st Egyptian Blind Women’s Orchestra. Only in the third take, the one of the ‘grim reaper’, the sound comes in. By privileging the image over the sound, it establishes the hierarchy of the senses from the outset. But on a closer look we have to learn that this is not the case. First of all the sound follows exactly the image in which the seeing became precarious, awkward (through watching the blind girls) and secondly Ponger uses a soundtrack which is appropriate, like no other, to transmit the idea of the ‘polytonal’. To the end of the film we hear the sounds produced by the tuning of the instruments for the Blind Women’s Orchestra. Each of the different instruments sound for themselves, representing the richness, the reservoir, the paradigms, only at the end, a sense of unity evolves.” —Gabriele Jutz
DIAN, PAITO
Bernhard Schreiner, 2001, 16mm, b/w, sound, 6 min
Personal notebook from a journey through Taiwan: the natural landscape and a visit with friends.
“Nomadic images, creatively free and influenced only by his own conventions, highlight the unusual effect of Bernhard Schreiner’s film. Schreiner records images and sounds of events of apparent secondary importance while he is travelling. In this way his films ‘describe’ the atmosphere. Often deserted spaces and squares are ‘registered’ in various ways: through brief, quick takes and successive alternating edits which lend the shots an almost tactile quality, Schreiner is able to pin down something that is impossible to describe in any other form, and this forms part of his artistic personality as well as the imaginative reality of the viewer. These moments of ephemeral beauty are perceived by Schreiner in a way that is both sensitive and cautious, filmed and edited in a way so they can turn back on the screen before the eyes of the viewer, intact and well-conserved. —Thomas Draschan
ÄGYPTEN
Kathrin Resetarits, 1996, 16mm, b/w, sound, 10 min
At first a sensitive essay about communication between the deaf; the gestural actions of signing are intimated for the uninformed. But by equating sign language with film language, Resetarits forges a quiet demonstration of the power of cinema.
“Ägypten is a film which is almost silent. A film about deaf mutes, or rather about their sign language – a language which, like the Egyptian hieroglyphs, links the symbolic terminology of words with the mimetic and analogous representations of graphic gestures. Sober black and white scenes show how ‘shark’, ‘widow’, ‘Marilyn Monroe’, a James Bond sequence, a Viennese song or the account of a treasure hunt undertaken by two holidaymakers looks in sign language. It is a very modest indication, an introduction to an unfamiliar way of experiencing the world, where one sees the sounds without hearing them.” —Drehli Robnik
TO THE HAPPY FEW
Thomas Draschan & Stella Friedrichs, 2003, 16mm, colour, sound, 5 min
The Splice is Right. A highly charged cosmic mandala, fusing found footage with Bollywood music.
“The film is structured around the mystical idea of the mandala, in this case pictures of (fake) suns, galaxies and planets. These images are in sync with an Indian Bollywood song to enhance the pseudo-psychedelic effects. The film material covers a very wide range of found footage from various sources and decades starting in the 1930s (invisible woman) until the end of the 1980s.” —Thomas Draschan, 2003
OPUS 7
Alexander Curtis, 1993, 16mm, colour, silent, 4 min
Composition and perspective are broken down as the camera view is flattened into its geometric forms. A magic lantern trick for viewer and projector.
“Film – Perspective – Geometry. An ironic self-portrait and a sentimental look back at the early and prehistory of Cinema” —Alexander Curtis
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