Vom
Innen; von Aussen
Albert
Sackl
(2006, 16mm, silent, 20min, 24fps, Austria)
"This film is a wonderfully unnerving, scrutinized,
study of the human body within the context of its environment. Implications
of the revolution within man's own self image and man's historic world
view seem to be the larger conceptual concerns of the work."
- Noah Manos, TIE
LIGHT TIME!
Whirl
Scott Banning (in-person)
(2007, 16mm, live sound, 8min, 24fps, USA)
"A whirl of carnival lights beckon; stirring memories of the
first time you let your feet leave the ground. Ephemera, fear and
wonder linger."
(View still here.)
Artifices #1
Alexandre Larose (in-person)
(2008, super-8, cassette sound, 4min, 18fps, Canada)
"Artifices is a visual research that studies the kinetic
potential of light. In this super-8 experiment, I attempted to disintegrate
static and dynamic light sources into flux."
(View
still here.)
Kids
& Pets
Frank Biesendorfer
(2008, regular-8mm, silent, 19min, 18fps, USA)
"Images to help me to remember. life and art, or life as art."
- Frank Biesendorfer
"It's kids and pets."
- Micki Tschur
Passing
by Harry
Jim Prange (in-person)
(2006, 16mm, optical, 2min, 24fps, USA)
"Jim Prange presents a true enigma to the world of avant-garde
cinema with his film Passing By Harry. The film subverts
many time-honored characteristics of the branch of experimental cinema
known as personal cinema, in a way that is, paradoxically, satirical
and wholly sincere. The film exalts a car-based voyage to America’s
heartland. The filmmaker’s objective for the trip is to commune
with the birthplace of our 33rd president. Prange narrates in the
early part of the film in the vein of a local tour guide. We see Truman’s
boyhood residence, and the home where he lived out his days after
his tenure in The White House. Images of Old Glory contribute to the
film’s patriotic tone. The music in Passing By Harry deserves
special consideration as it acts as its own character in the film."
-Noah Manos, TIE
Keep
the Home Fires Burning
Ryan O'Toole
(2008, 16mm, optical, 8min, 24fps, USA)
This stunningly emotional film is about duty, heroism, pride and loss
as seen in the home movies of a military family. The piece takes you
on a journey inward, towards family and identity. Although it might
seem preoccupied with loss, in its pensive music it is actually a
song of hope – a wish for the future.
(View
still here.)
Nocturne
No. 2
Sheri
Wills
(1999, 16mm, optical, 4min, 24fps, USA)
Sheri
Wills holds an MFA in filmmaking and an MA in modern art history,
theory and criticism from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Her work has been exhibited around the world, including the Museum
of Modern Art in New York. In Nocturne No. 2, wills creates
a beautiful and melancholic journey that is both abstract and reminiscent
of a warm kindling fire and sparkling Christmas spice.
Clip
from Colorado Springs Home of Champions
Jim Prange (in-person)
(1968, 16mm, sound on nagra, 6min, 18fps, USA)
"Peggy Fleming. 1968. Broadmoor Ice Arena. Shot on 7241 Ektachrome
Commercial low-contrast stock, hi-speed processed at Hollywood Lab.
Recently, Jim polished the film with Pledge. Removed scratches. Now
Peggy skates on the slippery, shiny ice, better than ever before.
This beautiful 5-minute piece revels in an extraordinary filmic delicacy."
- Christopher May, TIE
PARKOUR
Various
works from Film (Parkour)
Cine Parkour (Christopher May
(in-person)
(2008, 16mm & Super-8, sound & silent, 24fps & 18fps,
USA & Argentina)
"We know that this is the first time in history that this type
of Parkour material makes it into film; and this project does an incredible
job at highlighting the deepest values that move our lives, leaving
behind all superficiality."
-Walter
Bongard, founder PKA, Asociación Argentina de Le Parkour
"Triumphant!...capturing traceurs' in their element, playing
and human, rather than objects of advertisement ....a slight undercurrent
of sensuous intimacy.. the lens found and lingered on the traceurs'
genuine smiles, the tip of the ear or the playfulness in both movement
and pause."
- Michelle Duer, writer
SECRETS
IN THE SURFACE
Serial
Metaphysics
Wheeler
Winston Dixon
(1984-1986, 16mm, optical, 20min, 24fps, USA)
"Wheeler Dixon is a masterful film editor. His sensitivity
to the movement within the frame and of the camera itself allows
for a fluidity in his editing that is exuberant and refreshing.
He is skillful not only in manipulating the flow of images but the
flow of ideas as well. He has assembled his images mostly from television
commercials and juxtaposed them in such a way that their very ordinary
nature suddenly becomes extraordinary. Through the editing process
he reveals secrets of our culture that have always been sitting
on our television screens but we have never seen them before. It
is as though his film taps into our collective unconscious by exploring
the surface realities that permeate our air waves. Magical realms,
pubescent fantasies, dreams of wish fulfillment, all so innocuous
and tame on the television set, assume strangely mythic proportions
through Wheeler's editing and even the mundane world we accept so
readily begins to look somehow dreamlike and unreal. This fusing
of dream and waking consciousness creates the magic of Serial
Metaphysics."
- Bruce Rubin, Associate Curator of Film,
Whitney Museum of American Art
Metaphysical
Education
Thad
Povey
(2003, 16mm, optical, 4min, 24fps, USA)
"Instead of using tape splices 16mm wide, this film was
edited by turning the splicer sideways to reveal the sprockets and
the soundtrack. The long cuts run diagonally across the screen and,
as the filmstrip slides by, the highest jumper shows the way to the
herd. Gravity and the desire to fly battle for a boy’s soul."
(View
still here.)
Transaension
Dan Baker
(2006, 16mm, optical, 7min, 24, USA)
"Heartbeat. Out of a sick morass of reds and yellows, blacks,
burns, and direct-to-film scratches, arises the (post) post-industrial
terror of our collective oil-stained subconscious. Only three color
tones are necessary to conjure up a veritable prehistoric nightmare
or The Element of Crime. The primordial fire gives way directly to
digital-age carnage and reinforced titanium imperialist ambition.
Dripping. Syrupy glimpses of fighter pilots. Glassy eyes. Spindly
towers waver in the nuclear breeze. Preparation for battle against
comet field super nova background. Image would be clearer without
the toxic pyro-fog. But instead, it's heat without season, drought
without cycle; this moment is the unforeseen arrival, the final annihilation.
Chirp your last, all precious consumer-constituent. Representation
becomes survival, as the farce of authority crumbles along with every
other vestige of a frantic, deluded civilization. The sun has burst
open wide and spills out a thick, sweaty mix of techno-warfare and
rich, fleshy industry. This is what man-made hell looks like. Echoes.
Sci-fi meets hearts of darkness. It's a vision for rapture obsessives.
But ecology replaces old time religion. Only no one's listening. We
are the Hindenburg, the Titanic, the World Trade Center. A figure
appears in the lower right corner, arms outstretched, a stand-in for
humanity: Welcoming?... Challenging?"
- J.T. Rogstad, TIE
(View still here.)
Shudder
(top and bottom)
Michael
Gitlin
(2001, 16mm, optical, 3min, 24fps, USA)
"The film is a kind of shuddering optical toy, with a dense,
collagist soundtrack that rubs against the complicated visual weave
of the images. It scratches at the fiction of the original footage,
leaving behind, in its phosphene-laden after-image, a throbbing world
of lonely danger."
(View
still here.)
BEYOND
GRASP
A
Hallow Kiss
Luther Price
(2008, 16mm, optical, 4min, 24fps, USA)
A song of light goes up a scale to eternity.
The haunted heart is like a honeycomb, a catacomb, unlocked by a stuttering
silence, a song of light sung in a skeletal key.
And
We All Shine On
Michael Robinson
(2006, 16mm, optical, 7min, 24fps, USA)
And We All Shine On is a machine-eyed vision of a post-apocalyptic
paradise. Frequently working with abjected imagery—forgotten
television, mid-century
magazines—and overly familiar pop songs, Robinson’s work
flirts with a resigned pessimism, yet dares to find hope in the very
heart of despair.
(View
still here.)
The
Crossing
Timoleon Wilkins
(2007, 16mm, silent, 6min, 20, USA)
"The film begins with a brief flash of molten-red grain followed
by a long scene of darkest night-blue sea ripples. Hexagonal refractions
and spectral rays puncture alluded-to landscapes—rivers, skies,
prairies, trees, mountains. Graphic (yet spatially free-floating)
imagery slices intently wrought rhythms of light and dark color fields,
producing afterimages. The title is derived from Cormac McCarthy's
novel The Crossing, the second installment in his Border Trilogy (1992-98).
The film was created while under the joyful influence of these sensuous
nature/ cowboy/ youth/ coming-of-age adventures, and is a cinematic
analogue to McCarthy's major area of exploration: the uncertain sense
of scale that permeates life-changing geographic and spiritual crossings."
(View
still here.)
Steifheit
1 & 2
Albert Sackl
(1997-2007, 16mm, silent, 6min 24fps, Austria)
A Caravaggio-esque lighted coming-of-age experiment. After 10 years,
Albert Sackl repeated the same experiment in front of the camera as
in 1997: how long could he maintain his erection?
(View stills here.)
I
KNOW; I DON'T KNOW
Cockleash
Jesse Kennedy
(2008, ssuper-8, silent, 4min, 18fps, USA)
Shot in black and white, the film’s inspiration is spun from
the following thought: When we become each other’s property
we become the property of the night. The dual ownership of a body,
or a part of it, begins to put identity in jeopardy.
The gentle 3-minute beginnings of a Sadean vacation.
My
Mess
Jesse Kennedy
(2007, super-8, silent, 4min, 18fps, USA)
"The three-minute long super-8 movie, is savage and jittery,
depicting anonymous hands jotting sentences that seem suspiciously
intended for a former partner or otherwise estranged loved one. Gory
imagery (including a mangled rabbit head) is tempered by a tenderness
that arises from the uncompromising (even if, tormented) sincerity
of the language. The perspective of the camera brings the viewer uncomfortably
close to the hands, but withholds the satisfaction of being! Sound
is unnecessary: the emotional charge of the piece is blaring. This
unrelenting process of incongruity, the clash of image and text, pasting
together the pieces of a narrative that add up only to greater tension,
is shattering. If a writer could teach us how to read in a film, and
a camera could be used to shoot in the most visceral sense, then Kennedy
with his Super 8 camera and diverse medley of intellectual interests
is ferociously, sensually, and innovatively redefining how we portray
and experience the emotive blows of a story."
- Rachel Cole, Dikeou Collection
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