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Light Night 10 October 2008 Hyde Park Picture House Brudenell Road Leeds Doors: 10.05pm / Free Piano by Verd Etoria
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![]() Shadow Trap Greg Pope UK/Norway, 2007, 6min, 35mm. Shards of emulsion produced during an auto-destructive film performance have been layered and structured onto clear 35mm. Extending across the soundtrack area, the synaesthetic image creates an intense volley of sound and light. — Mark Webber ![]() My Name is Oona Gunvor Nelson USA/Sweden, 1969, 10min, 16mm, sound by Steve Reich, Patrick Gleeson "My Name is Oona captures in haunting, intensely lyrical images fragments of the coming to consciousness of a child girl. A series of extremely brief flashes of her moving through night-lit space or woods in sensuous negative, separated by rapid fades into blackness, burst upon us like a fairy-tale princess, with a late sun only partially outlining her and the animal in silvery filigree against the encroaching darkness; one of the most perfect recent examples of poetic cinema." (Amos Vogel)
Berlin Horse Berlin Horse is based on two sequences – one shot by Le Grice originally in 8mm and refilmed in 16mm – the other a piece of found early newsreel. The common subject is of horses the first a horse being exercised and the second horses being led from a burning stable. Both sequences were visually transformed and recoloured through various film printing techniques at the London Film Makers’ Cooperative.
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![]() Observando el Cielo Jeanne Liotta USA, 2007, 19min, 16mm, sound by Peggy Ahwesh Seven years of celestial field recordings gathered from the chaos of the cosmos and inscribed onto 16mm film from various locations upon this turning tripod Earth. This work is neither a metaphor nor a symbol, but is feeling towards a fact in the midst of perception, which time flows through. Natural VLF radio recordings of the magnetosphere in action allow the universe to speak for itself. The Sublime is Now. Amor Fati! (Jeanne Liotta)
Regarding the Pain of Susan Sontag (Notes on Camp) Steve Reinke Canada, 2006, 4 min, video A journey from schoolyard to graveyard, with author Susan Sontag as philosophical guide.
Runaway Standish Lawder USA, 1969, 6min, 16mm In Runaway Standish Lawder entraps a pack of Walt Disney's cartoon dogs in a seemingly endless four second mobius strip. Made using a homemade optical printer fashioned from a coffee can, the benign original is elevated into its own filmic reality through various degenerative processes and manipulations. An equally repetitive wurlitzeresque soundtrack affirms the perpetual urgency of the image. —William Rose
Ja/Nein (Vorhangfilm) (Yes/No (Curtain Film)) Ernst Schmidt jr. Austria, 1968, 3min, 16mm Expanded cinema with a real and a projected curtain. (This film is part of the 20 Action and Destruction Films.)
Attack on Silence Mark Fell, UK, 2008, 10min, video Attack on Silence is a series of works by British artist Mark Fell exploring the relationships between geometry, color, and waveform. These works have been shown around the world as performances, installations, and in print. Sacred geometries, and their sonic equivalents, are said to mirror the micro and macroscopic structures of the physical world; the complex harmonies of the Tibetan singing bowl, like the patterns of the Mandala, allow access to the deepest levels of the consciousness inducing meditative states that transform the very being of their participants. In the modern reciprocals of these technologies the shift is one of teleology. The sacred metals and antique art of the singing bowls give way to the magic of digital synthesis as sacred geometry gives proxy to psychophysiology and the cognitive neuroscience of brainwave entrainment. Drawn from these sources—with mutual ambivalence—and realized through a distinct aesthetic minimalism, intricate combinations of form, color and sound are projected through a series of transitions, sometimes gradual, sometimes abrupt, sometimes giving way to sustained tones and repetitions. In a process of ever-emerging horizon—an attack on silence and a space for silence—the potential arises to be ensconced or alienated, a space for enchantment, for anxiety, for profound boredom or for reverie. Are these phenomena affirmations or reconfigurations of the subject—routes to an authentic, spiritual or otherwise—or are they essentially physiological? Are they aesthetic distractions or intrusive technological interventions—pointers to dystopian possibilities?
O Come All Ye Faithful Stephen Sutcliffe, UK, 2007, 47secs, video Short video pairing/collaging footage of Christopher Logue reading his poem O come all ye faithful with an additional soundtrack, which acts as a contradictory undercurrent. |
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