
2023 Program
Light Matter is Curated by James Hansen
Program One: Transparence
Friday Nov. 3rd, 4:30PM
ipse (I watched the Moon around the House)
Blanca García, Spain, 2022, 15 minutes
New York Premiere
Self-portrait, anchored in an imaginary tale — Emily Dickinson's 629 poem — where filming and editing enact a play between the immanence of recording and fictional embodiment. The narration of a visiting Moon, discovering her body, adventuring into a world of tactile light, as well as the soothing capture of oneself, appeased through the tangible reality of the indexical image and freed through imagination. A film about the mutable self, recognised only as reflection, as a glimpse — like the moon, like film itself — a fantasy perceived only if traversed by light and shadow, and yet never fully apprehended but as an instant, fleeting.
Bec0m1ng
Arash Akbari, Islamic Republic of Iran, 2023, 2 minutes
North American Premiere
Bec0m1ng speculates about a possible transcendental form of presence that can emerge from the causal freedom of probabilistic AI models. It consists of a digital environment with a fixed amount of matter and a group of AI agents. They have to collect and share the resources at the same time to keep the whole ecosystem in balance. This process enables a constant flux of becoming, formation, and transformation in which all is one. By prioritizing presence over cognition and logic, this project imagines a possible interaction of AI with the world, in which a non-dominant coexistence is established within an assemblage of everything. Inspired by Persian philosopher Suhrawardi’s Ishraqi doctrine, instead of material bodies (al-barzakh) that represent the mechanical appearance of the AI agents, the environment and the agents were designed using luminous forms (immaterial entities). As Suhrawardi argued that “beings can be distinguished by their degree of light, or otherwise of darkness. Light may be understood here as “existence” in the sense of actus essendi, whereby light is the only single reality. This identification of Light and Being is possible when light is understood as universal matter—material prima universalis.” The real-time virtual environment is an audio-visual interpretation of the presence of these non-human beings and an exploration of the emerging aesthetics of behavioural patterns that result from their active agency. The causal soundscape of the piece is a spatial composition that results from the motor activities of AI agents. This continuous becoming creates a speculative soundscape which can be defined as the territorialization of space by nonhumans. This posthuman soundscape is indifferent to human sensibilities and aesthetic apprehensions, yet there’s a potentiality “to intersect the decoded milieu of space with an anthropic ‘zone of residence’” (Deleuze and Guattari, 1987, 315). Bec0m1ng depicts this possible scenario through a dialectic process of alienation and sensibility. Encountering technological beings that function without human-imposed telos is alienating. While this alienation brings forth an act of presence that reveals Being to allow Dasein to experience it without objectifying it. References • Deleuze, G., and F. Guattari (1987), A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, trans. R. Hurley, M. Seem, and H. R. Lane. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. • Mahmoud, Samir. “From ‘Heidegger to Suhrawardi’: An Introduction to the Thought of Henry Corbin.” MPhil, Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge, England, UK, n.d.
The Enlightenment
Stephanie Barber, USA, 2023, 12 minutes
New York Premiere
THE ENLIGHTENMENT, s. barber 16mm, 2023 Listing dangerously into poetry, philosophy and sound art, Barber's new film (distributed by Video Data Bank) finds Yon and Payola in a Victorian conservatory. They are companionable, disoriented and petulant––they whip wildly through these disembodied states. Payola reads an excerpt of their experimental essay on the age of enlightenment. Payola's research, and presentation of this research, is a purposeful affront to empirical data, the scientific method and other enlightenment ideals, while reveling in the desire for the revolution and intellectual expansion those thinkers championed. The concepts are undermined by the form and register of their delivery OR the concepts are strengthened by the poetry through which they are presented. The soundtrack for The Enlightenment was originally commissioned by the Diffusion Festival for multi-channel sound work, curated by M.C. Schmidt for High Zero.
Ertunken
Friedl vom Gröller, Austria, 2022, 3 minutes
“Als sie ertrunken war und hinunter schwamm von den Bächen in die größeren Flüsse" ["Once she had drowned and started her slow descent / Down the streams to where the great rivers broaden.”] In her touching, untrained voice, the filmmaker sings this Brecht/Weill song from the 1920s. No atmosphere, this song is happening in a different space. Plants on the shore, swayed by flowing water. The hand of the person filming holding the title ERTRUNKEN DROWNED. Friedl vom Gröller consistently crosses over the invisible wall between person recording and object/subject being filmed. Gestural. What connection, what dialogue materializes here during the filming, what acts of self-assurance, shared rhythm; what solution?
The water is rapid, quickly becoming dangerous. Someone is floating there. A form, carried by the water, just as brief and momentary as the song’s detailed telling of the duration of decay. The water’s plasticity, a glimmering on the edge. The foam on the water forms moiré patterns, in movement and dissolution, while the song turns more and more to the body’s decomposition. Foam and fermentation, organic micro- and macrostructures, enzymatic processes. To speak of transience would be euphemistic. The (un)touchable unity of the body, inside and out. Materially and metaphysically. In the end, Friedl vom Gröller appears in the final credits, her visage under water. (Madeleine Bernstorff)
I Started Selling Sadness
Wayne Koestenbaum, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
I made this film with found (bleached, tampered-with, handpainted) 16mm footage, 16mm blank leader, and many collage elements. I scanned and digitized the handmade, spliced-together reel of 16mm film at Negativeland Film Lab in Brooklyn, NY, and then added a digital soundtrack.
Clear Ice Fern
Mark Street, USA, 2023, 12 minutes
Images shot through architectural glass on Super 8 film in the dead of night in NYC. The title refers to one of the glass samples I used to frame up images of Times Square and other nightspots in NYC. The city peeks its head in as an off screen character, but the glass bends and twists it in its own warped and wonderful way.
Spoils
Luciana Decker, Bolivia, 2023, 8 minutes
New York Premiere
"Here between us, I want you to know the truth. There is in my sad loneliness desire to scream, run away, and ask what has happened to your life tuturururu". A collection of spring colors, food spoils, spoils of war, emptied creatures, and fossils. In-camera edit, a diary-like rhythm of first impressions of the US and its alienating culture.
It follows it passes on
Erica Sheu, Taiwan, 2023, 5 minutes
Incense yielded a little light and led the way to hide from the bomb. Broken dishes time travel. Imaginations of a post-war island, Kinmen, from familial anecdotes. Tracing the roots of cross-generational sentiments behind the glare of glasses, the display of a self-made museum. Lights reveal and conceal the stories.
Palinopsia
Lisa Gwillam & Ray Sweeten (DataSpaceTime), USA, 2021, 10 minutes
North American Premiere
DataSpaceTime's WebGL moving image works are rendered in a browser environment using a custom built WebGL application. These WebGL works are procedural or “real-time” experiences, not timeline/keyframe animations. The works explore the effects of physicality and fragmentation in a virtual space, as well as the simulation of light, depth and scale. At times planetary and infinite, and at others claustrophobic and enclosed, the works demonstrate the expansive characteristics of the medium and the potential inherent in simulated perspectives. "Analogue" materials such as video files, jpegs, and Mp3 files integrate aspects of the physical world from outside the WebGL environment. When juxtaposed with the purely digital elements generated by the program, these additional materials significantly affect the illusion of scale and atmosphere as the viewer attempts to contextualize recognizable forms, patterns and texture against rendered ones. The WebGL works document the dialog between machine and artist, a collaboration to engineer the structure of the work and compose the final piece. Automation and randomization are an integral part of building the works which could not exist without the use of programmed tasks. Once these complex three-dimensional environments are realized, the artist's job of framing what is being generated in real time becomes integral to defining or emphasizing specific experiences. In the infinitely generating presentations of DST's WebGL work, a "camera" stands in for the artist’s point of view. The angles and trajectories of this virtual camera are predetermined by the artists and computed by the program. Palinopsia delves further into the use of the noise algorithm and its effects on the operation of the vertex shader within the WebGL environment. In this work, the algorithm disrupts a highly abstract object file of a piece of carpet fuzz. The effect blows the densely rendered vertices apart, creating abstract chaos, augmented further by interacting reflective geometries. This work also leverages a glitch discovered in the program which feeds the reflection back into the program creating a hall of mirrors effect. The artist-captured composition enhances the perspective and sense of scale which develops over the arc of the piece.
Program Two: Body Party
Friday Nov. 3rd, 7:30 PM
Hither & Thither
Bridget Coderc, United Kingdom, 2022, 5 minutes
North American Premiere
The conjunction of the 2nd and 3rd millennia has always fascinated me. I am drawn to the imperfections of video technology from that time, especially VHS. The yellowish tint, saturated lines, fuzziness, and the occasional glitches that run through the tapes. Neglect means dust, and overuse leads to scratches. Just like our memories become distant and otherworldly, VHS cassettes decay over time. When you play an old tape, the picture is not the same, but watching it evokes a familiar feeling. This awareness is the base on which I created Hither & Thither. I distorted VHS footage from my mother’s archive of a dance festival in 2001. I embraced the video anomalies, rechoreographed the dance, and created an exaggerated sense of scale. I approach my archives with inquisitiveness and playfulness to reconstruct memories and reclaim the sense of awe I used to get from watching VHS cassettes in my childhood.
FIEBRE
April Lin, 2 minutes
North American Premiere
FIEBRE comes from a desire of creating an intimate, inceptive space where three dancers progressively explore the possibilities of a viscous and sentimental apparatus. Moving through trajectories of physical states, erotic togetherness, sexuality, sincereness and rawness. FIEBRE intents to imagine other ways of being together for thresholding and transformation. Eroticism becomes a source of empowerment where desire, disgust and alienation are free to coexist and feed each other. FIEBRE is built on cooperation and care, the work relies essentially on the group. Re-framing the inherited hierarchies of the different parts of labor in such a work and their respective visibilities aiming to shake up structural ways of putting cheer to the singular author.
RAVE
S4RA, Portugal, 2023, 9 minutes
North American Premiere
a̶r̶t̶i̶f̶i̶c̶i̶a̶l̶ safe space, where collective practices are amplified through a̶n̶ ̶i̶n̶n̶e̶r̶ monologue invoking other bodies that explore diversity & non-normative s̶e̶x̶u̶a̶l̶ practices ironizing capitalism as a form of libidinal pleasure.
The Halo is a Symbol of Our Death
Lorelei d’Anriole, USA, 2023, 8 minutes
World Premiere
“The Halo is a Symbol of Our Death” is a video artwork that delves into the intersections of technology, trans experience, and the juxtaposition of Christian iconography with queer liberation. The work centers around a deeply personal act: the injection of estrogen by the artist, a trans woman, capturing an intimate and transformative moment. The video unfolds through a dynamic interplay of two camera angles, seamlessly interwoven with animations generated by AI using the artist’s action art prompts for trans becoming. The screen is awash with vibrant shades of pink. Distorted human figures, generated by the AI animation and evoking the fluidity of gender and identity, traverse the screen. As the artist self-administers the injection, the details of the act are camouflaged within the visual tapestry, prompting viewers to engage in a deeper level of observation, engaging the audience in a delicate dance between visibility and ambiguity. While some details are brought to the forefront, others remain shrouded, underscoring the nuance complexities of representation. The title itself serves as a metaphor, drawing attention to the unsettling trend observed by the artist of younger queer artists using Christian iconography as symbols of liberation. Through titling this work as such, the work demands contemplation on the fraught relationship between the church and its relationship to queer persecution, while raising questions about the reclamation of symbols and narratives. There is intentionally no reference to the title to be found in the work, as the artist is not convinced that the Christian church and its language, as a cultural force has anything to offer queer people. This work is the beginning of a new series of scholarship and art that focuses on contemporary loneliness and eradication of community spaces by examining cultural trends of taking communal ritual and turning it into individual practice in pursuit of enlightenment or self-care in context of late-stage Capitalism and the United States.
Interspecies Robot Sex
Miriam Simun, USA, 2023, 20 minutes
New York Premiere
As bee colonies face global collapse, human farm laborers in China and ROBOBEE engineers in the US attempt to take over the labor of pollination from bees, with human-hand and robot labor. Labor costs in China are becoming too expensive, so pear-producing towns turn to pear-blossom tourism as a way to survive. Meanwhile we learn that the ROBOBEE is too expensive for agricultural use, and is rather doomed for military 'search and rescue.' We observe the transition of capital extraction from nature first as nutrition (agriculture), then as representation (tourism), and finally as evolutionary design (engineering). As the meaning of the word 'drone' moves from male bee to flying robot to bee-inspired-flying-robot, the metaphor folds back in on itself.
Exterior Turbulence
Sofia Theodore-Pierce, USA, 2023, 11 minutes
Seizure dreams, horses, and long distance conversations from bed. Loose reenactments from Marguerite Duras Baxter, Vera Baxter. A year of stormy weather and temporal rupture recalled in fragments. Featuring my mother and other star crossed lovers.
Ashes of Roses
Sasha Waters, USA, 2023, 12 minutes
This movie is about loving things that are embarrassing and people who are inappropriate. It's an essay film reflection on popular trash; football parties; older men; adolescent desire and the outrageous yet mundane humiliations of being a teenage girl in the 1980s. With sound design by Kevin T. Allen and performance cameos by filmmakers Roger Beebe and Jason Livingston.
OR 119
Ahwesh/Goss, USA, 2022, 55 minutes
A theoretical musical about the scientist and social thinker Wilhelm Reich, shot in his home and laboratory in Rangeley, Maine. In this playfully performative piece, the writing and work of Freud's favorite student are put to melody and into conversation with contemporary feminist writers.
Program Three: Luther Price Slides & Book Release
Saturday Nov. 4th, 1:00 PM
Program Four: Blurred Lines
Saturday Nov. 4th, 2:30 PM
’PROTOTIPO
Tina Frank, Austria, 2022, 4 minutes
North American Premiere
’Prototipo is an audiovisual piece based on two live recordings by General Magic ∞ Tina Frank in 2022 in Vienna and London. In ’Prototipo, General Magic’s music is moving fast and merges seamlessly with Tina Frank’s visual odyssey.
The Best Lover
Nini Korkalo, Finland, 2023, 13 minutes
North American Premiere
The Best Lover is a short film about loving yourself. It plays with the myths of love in pursuit of the revolutionary power of self-love. Feminist humor bubbles and confuses as artificial intelligence mines the definition of the best lover, and the retired Queen of the Galaxy addresses the inhabitants of Earth. As in a love scene, the image focuses on sunsets and waterfalls, shifting the act of love towards nature. The most important thing is to swear an oath of love – naturally to yourself.
KOMPROMAT
Mandy Eugeniou, United Kingdom, 2023, 7 minutes
North American Premiere
Experimental film made exclusively from images from the Commons which speaks to myth-making in an age of algorithmic image profusion, exploring the role of viewer-witness and developing themes that focus on the ideological gaze, proximity, danger and embodied time. www.mandyeugeniou.com
A.I. made me do it: Ophelia
Gioula Papadopoulou, Greece, 2023, 2 minutes
New York Premiere
The work "AI made me do it: Ophelia" (2023) is an experimental video, made entirely with images created using the AI system Dalle-2 (OpenAI), with variations of one single image. The initial image was created by Dalle-2 using a text prompt asking the program to generate an Ophelia in the water with flowers. The rest of the images are variations of this first image, as created by the AI generator following different paths of variations each time. The sound was created by AI platform Melobytes, turning that same first image of Ophelia to sound. The final result is based on the randomness and fluidity of the AI generators used, leading to a surreal animation where a classic theme character (Ophelia) meets with weird dreamlike mutations and unexpected futuristic scenes. Ophelia changes identities, gender, attributes and constantly moves away from her stereotypical image and fate, in a fantasy world where everything is possible.
NYC RGB
Victoria Schmid, Austria, 2023, 8 minutes
NYC RGB is part of a series of works in which Viktoria Schmid deals with historical color film processes. Using a special technique of color separation through RGB filters, the real temporal dimension can be concentrated on a cinematic triple exposure. The film strip was sent through the camera three times, exposing the material with a different color filter on each pass. First red, green, then blue. This method borrows from historical color film processes and corresponds to a separation of color by the photoreceptors in the eye. The temporally staggered recording of the color separations generates perceptual patterns in the condensation on a single film strip that go beyond a human experience of time and the perception of the human eye. What becomes visible in the color overlays, respectively in the repetitions and the resulting differences, celebrates the past moment in its uniqueness. Viktoria Schmid succeeds in demonstrating in the filmic reproduction that each moment has never been there before and will never return. With the triple exposure, real time is condensed and a new cinematic time level is generated. The film was shot over a period of several months from the 20th floor of an atelier apartment in New York City, where the artist lived in 2020 during the initial phase of the pandemic, and finally again in 2022. Schmid's work explores everyday perceptions and how they can be sharpened through her art. Musician Liew Niyomkarn composed a sound design from field recordings made on site and synthesizer triads that are the acoustic counterpart to the RGB colors of the film.
Haxan: Reducida
Michael Mersereau, USA, 2023, 6 minutes
New York Premiere
"Haxan: Reducida" is an abridged recreation of the 1922 silent documentary horror film "Haxan." Using new machine learning / AI videography, and English to Spanish translators, select scenes from "Haxan" are recreated in the style of a lost middle class, leisure, and vacation. This film reinterprets the phantasmatic beliefs of witchcraft in the Middle Ages and applies them to modern contemporary environments, such as the motel, the home, and the vacation spot. All of these sites become fully out of reach in the new era of growing class differences and irreversible destruction. However, in this world of “Haxan: Reducida”, it is in the superstitious present that enjoyment is still considered possible but unsustainable.
The Perfect Human
Lilan Yang, China, 2023, 13 minutes
New York Premiere
Inspired by Jørgen Leth's Black and White cult classic The Perfect Human (1968) which raises many simple yet philosophical questions about who the perfect human is, what it means to be human, or perfect, this animation The Perfect Human by Lilan Yang applies unsupervised machine learning and experimental filmmaking techniques to reexamine and question the contested notion of perfection in the eyes of artificial intelligence. Later the remake of the computer-generated moving images are transformed from digital recreation to an analog artifact of transparencies which completed the cycles from analog film to digital video and back to 16mm format, from motion pictures to still images, and then latent-space interpolation, from a proxy of human memories to the machine learning construct.
AI Lobotomy
Ian Haig, Australia, 2023, 2 minutes
North American Premiere
AI lobotomy refers to the hypothetical scenario where an AI system is deliberately limited or "lobotomized" in terms of its cognitive abilities in order to prevent it from developing consciousness or becoming a threat to human beings. This concept is often discussed in the context of concerns about the potential dangers of advanced AI systems that could surpass human intelligence and become autonomous. AI lobotomy refers to the process of intentionally limiting or removing certain functions or abilities from an artificial intelligence system. This can be done for various reasons, such as reducing the complexity of the system, improving its performance, or ensuring that it adheres to certain ethical or regulatory guidelines. With the ultimate goal to produce an AI system more compliant and less likely to question authority.
Laberint Sequences
Blake Williams, Canada, 2023, 20 minutes
At the Laberint d’Horta in Barcelona, the film charts several journeys into the garden in search of its centre, where a statue of Eros waits. As the film navigates the maze’s false pathways, its recursive structure begins to crack, and a mysterious underworld floods its gates.
Program Five: Chaos
Saturday Nov. 4th, 4:30 PM
Growing Up Absurd
Ben Balcom & Julie Niemi, USA, 2022, 15 minutes
Growing Up Absurd is assembled from interviews conducted remotely with key members of the Tolstoy College community that speak to the ethos and history of the college, from its founding in 1969 to its dissolution in 1985. College F, known colloquially as Tolstoy College, was an anarchist educational community which operated within the University at Buffalo between 1969 and 1985. At once a sweeping portrayal of the college’s meeting places and the state of the campus today, Growing Up Absurd layers memories and traces of history to convey the lived experiences of its participants.
Mechanisms Common to Disparate Phenomena #59
Joost Rekveld, Belgium, 2023, 79 minutes
North American Premiere
#59 is an abstract animated science-fiction film that takes the experiences shared by humans and electronic circuits as its starting point. Our computing technology emerged during the Cold War as a byproduct of the development of atomic weapons and their associated planetary surveillance systems. In 1961, at what was perhaps the coldest point of this period, Edward Lorenz and Yoshisuke Ueda independently discovered deterministic chaos in their computers. In film #59, humans, aliens and electronic devices vacillate between these poles of a human fever dream of planetary control on the one hand, and lively machinic chaos on the other. All images in the film were produced as analog electronic signals, in a re-enactment of antiquated ways of computing. These signals were generated using period equipment, including an analog computer from 1963, early sonar and radar oscillators, and bits from military flight simulators. This film is an attempt to liberate these technologies from their problematic origins. Narrative elements derived from Cold War era science fiction films set the tone, while references to radar and television scanning result in images that evoke very early computer graphics. These progressively unfold into organic calligraphies, in which the negative space between the patterns becomes one of the protagonists. Resemblances with manmade phenomena are gradually left behind, and the film evolves into a nonverbal meditation on material processes and the arrow of time. What would circuits do without people?
Program Six: Paradise
Saturday Nov. 4th, 7:30 PM (Part One) - The Floating Gardens to Vision in Paradise
Saturday Nov. 4th, 9:30 PM (Part Two) - Kolaswvt Vfulles to End
Cellula Filia
Piibe Kolka, Estonia, 2022, 22 minutes
North American Premiere
A conversation through time between a woman and her great grandmother. Piibe Kolka uses PXL2000 toy camera to record pixelated visuals and various messages on audio cassettes in an attempt to establish a time travelling communication. The film probes an epigenetic hypothesis that individual life experiences could influence biological inheritance and gene expressions. The result is a science fictional play between generations, addressing life histories, inherited doubt and the search for possible adventures.
Dream of Splendor
Getong Wang, China, 2022, 8 minutes
New York Premiere
Dream of Splendor synthesizes footage from the 1962 Hong Kong film The Magnificent Concubine with footage of a souvenir store located in Chicago Chinatown to create a mysterious and at times melancholy exploration of the Chinatown chronotope.
Refraction
Eduardo Gutierrez, Perú, 2023, 9 minutes
World Premiere
It evokes the absence of limits and hierarchies, showing how a new collectivity emerges from otherness. It is an intersectional film that proposes unity based on new images, thanks to the resolved coexistence between four videos previously independent.
FORMations
Jude Abu Zaineh, Canada/Palestine, 2022, 5 minutes
North American Premiere
FORMations reflects the natural ecology of food and flora in the region. Sampling the earth, indigenous and collected plant species, and leftover foods, FORMations examines the constant evolution within an ever-shifting cultural and geographical landscape; the petri-dish environment makes visible the invisible by providing a medium of growth for the microbial and bacterial communities that naturally exist within food and our overall surroundings. This enclosed environment gives metaphorical and visual connections to the often ignored or erased narratives and the layered complexities of hybrid existences that many newcomer (human and nonhuman species) experience in their respective, evolving habitats. The work gives a visual nod to the artist’s cultural heritage in referencing geometric forms found in South West Asia and North African architecture and Islamic art, while acknowledging the larger landscapes, foods, resources, and diverse ecosystems that make-up Southwest Ontario & region.
Superfund
Charles Kadkin, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
New York Premiere
Commissioned by Indiana University Libraries Moving Image Archive as part of Century of 16mm. A camera roll and investigation into the landscape of West Chicago, IL’s former Rare Earth’s Facility, Kress Creek and Reed-Keppler Park. The former Lindsay Light and Chemical Company owned production plant polluted and distributed radioactive mill tailings (thorium byproduct) throughout the community including dumping in a landfill where the Reed-Keppler Park now stands, near the West Chicago Community High School, as well as in the West Chicago Sewage Treatment Plant, which resulted in runoff into the West Branch of the DuPage River and into floodplains such as the yards of homeowners. Mill tailings are effectively radioactive sand that can easily be carried by wind into bodies of water, the air we breathe or onto food grown nearby. Clean up of the Superfund sites occurred from 2005-2012 but prior to this West Chicago reportedly had elevated rates of cancer. Thanks to the help of Hayley Diana for engineering our mattes, titles and shutter, Co-Cinematographers Alex Halstead and Andrew Skalak, and Colorist Christian Kozlowski.
de-composition
Laura Kraning, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
A textural macro collage of a rust belt landscape- scratched, splattered, dripping, cracking, and bursting to the surface. Photographed and meticulously edited over one year in Buffalo, NY, the reverberant tones of the New York Central rail line provide the rhythmic pulse to a rapid cascade of multi-hued material decay and metallic de-composition.
Konstantin
Hogan Seidel, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
New York Premiere
Konstantin is an experimental film shot on high-contrast black and white 16mm film using a single 100ft reel. The film is an in-camera edit with triple exposures, creating a layered and complex visual language. Through this aesthetic, the piece explores themes of queer love and queer ecology. It invites the viewer to enter a unique and poetic world, where the boundaries between the human and natural realms blur and merge. Pushing against human exceptionalism & into a world where there is no ‘natural’ or ‘unnatural.’ Can a walk in the forest, a kiss between lovers, a roll of film, the touch lichen, liberate ourselves from these hierarchies?
Reservoir
Micah Weber, USA, 2023, 8 minutes
Image—terror—sculpture—slaughterhouse—garden—animation. From the politics of the slaughterhouse to vanishing in the wilderness: An archive of images harmonize into an ambience of violence, disengagement, and disappearance. The tone of this work should be read as an object.
Vision of Paradise
Leonardo Pirondi, Brazil, 2022, 16 minutes
The great voyages to the "New World" were seen as expanding the frontiers of the visible and displacing those of the invisible, therefore, maps from that time render the real and imaginary. The film follows a voyage of the Brazilian Military in search of an imaginary island with the same name as their country. The myth from 1483 Brazil, or Hy-Brazil, is known to exist to the west of Ireland and above the Fortunate Islands. Vision of Paradise is an examination of the capacity of the human imagination and computer simulations to construct environments. Amidst the fine threshold of the real, simulated, and imagined, the film analyzes the contemporary ideas of virtual reality and their ambition to expand the frontiers of the physical world into a "New World".
Kolaswvt Vfulles
Arvcúken Noquisi, Muskvge Nation, 2023, 11 minutes
New York Premiere
Settler conceptions of NDN-ness bleed through from the future to the past to the present. There is no space for NDNs in tomorrow's utopia, as it refuses to know tomorrow's NDNs are limitless. In Kolaswvt Vfullēs, Star Trek is a proxy for examining the colonized science fiction landscape; a momentary inspection of the deep well of Indigenous futurisms.
The Stream XII-II
Hiroya Sakurai, Japan, 2022, 5 minutes
New York Premiere
Human beings act on nature in order to keep their lives. From their activities, several streams are generated and landscapes are transformed. I focus on the beauty of transformation created through the relation between human activities and nature, and want to express the beauty as a kind of visual ballet. In this film, I shot a scene of burning of reeds fields. When the reeds fields are burned carbon dioxide is generated, but newly generated carbon dioxide is absorbed by the spring reeds sprouts in their process of growth. Whole processes are carbon neutralized.
Muted Bridges
Wai Yin Yan, Hong Kong, 2023, 4 minutes
North American Premiere
Monolith braids found footage, documentary, experimental, 3D animation and narrative filmmaking devices to explore notions of collectivity, dissent, indigenous knowledge and time as a series of folds, splits, ruptures, loops, clusters, drifts, ascents, descents, vortexes, pulses, rhythms, linkages, aberrations, burials, and unearthings. This shape-shifting film addresses ongoing legacies of nationalist archives, archeology, and coloniality.
Swimming in a Sea of Trauma
Ogochukwu Azuya, Nigeria, 2022, 7 minutes
North American Premiere
A ghost story about the memories of the Biafran War. Chisom encounters Nkechi in a dreamscape; a girl with an otherworldly and strange demeanor. Through their encounter, Chisom learns that Nkechi is a wandering spirit who lived and died during the Biafran War/Nigerian Civil War.
Monolith
Teri Carson, Mexico, 2023, 14 minutes
New York Premiere
Monolith braids found footage, documentary, experimental, 3D animation and narrative filmmaking devices to explore notions of collectivity, dissent, indigenous knowledge and time as a series of folds, splits, ruptures, loops, clusters, drifts, ascents, descents, vortexes, pulses, rhythms, linkages, aberrations, burials, and unearthings. This shape-shifting film addresses ongoing legacies of nationalist archives, archeology, and coloniality.
The Far and Near
Justin Jinsoo Kim, Korea, 2023, 10 minutes
In 1995, an astronomer proposed a peculiar project. It was to use the Hubble Telescope to capture a small part of the universe that was then known to be a void. In 1447 in Chosun Dynasty, Prince Anpyeong had a dream of walking through a peach blossom forest shrouded in clouds and mist, and he asked the painter, Ahn Gyeon, to capture it in a painting. Through the juxtaposition of the two historical anecdotes, the film examines the images of ‘the far and near’ through printing, transforming, and distorting the photos from the NASA Image and Video Library.a rust belt landscape- scratched, splattered, dripping, cracking, and bursting to the surface. Photographed and meticulously edited over one year in Buffalo, NY, the reverberant tones of the New York Central rail line provide the rhythmic pulse to a rapid cascade of multi-hued material decay and metallic de-composition.
Program Seven (Part One): Un-Framing
Sunday Nov. 7th, 1:00 PM, Nevins Theater
Analytical Frame Study II
Paul Sharits, USA, 1976, 30 minutes
16mm
A set of short pure color studies, usually exploring one dominant hue. Most of these works were studies for longer projects. The last four "migraine" studies are rhythmically based around the five-cycle-per-second oscillation pulse of the typical fortification illusions preceding a migraine attack; this onset period, with its visually dynamic effects, is reported to be a quite vibrant and enjoyable state. 1. Modular Blue 2. Green Matrix 3. White Field 4. Orange Field 5. Pink Modulation A 6. Pink Modulation B 7. Temporal Frame A 8. Migraine Onset A 9. Migraine Onset B 10. Migraine Onset C 11. Migraine Onset D. (After titles, focus should be shifted to sharpen the edges of the screen).
Edges: Mirrors
Simon Payne, United Kigdom, 2018, 5 minutes
North American Premiere
Edges: 'Mirror' is one of a series of digital videos in which the edges of the frame are essential and the whole screen is animated in its entirety. This piece involved repeatedly re-videoing from a flat screen, the mirror-like qualities of which become increasingly apparent.
Diane (wrapped in plastic)
Joanna Byrne, United Kigdom, 2022, 4 minutes
North American Premiere
A super 8 hauntology. Reimagining a series of one-way conversations with the permanently off-camera Diane, foraged in fragments from the screen of a cathode ray TV - onto an expired Ektachrome 160 super 8 sound cartridge (best before 1990). The film was home-processed, then wrapped in plastic and buried in the woods in 2011 - excavated in 2021. ‘Diane…’ is a collaboration between the original source material, myself, the body of the film, and the earth it was buried in. The soundtrack was recorded directly onto the magnetic strip of the film, firstly through the camera whilst in-cartridge, secondly using a super 8 motorised editor after excavation- adding to the fragmentation and abstraction of the soundtrack into a multi-layered sonic collage (No additional digital editing has taken place). The film can be screened in its original form on a sound super 8mm projector, or as a digital video.
Trágame nube
Esperanza Collado, Spain, 2023, 13 minutes
Shot with Bruno Delgado Ramo and Paula Guerrero, ’Trágame, nube (el cuerpo establece el ritmo)’ revolves around some of the most persistent preoccupations about cinematic perception Spanish experimental filmmaker José Val del Omar (1904-1982) expressed in his writings and works. It consists in two twin films with an exact equal, complementary structure divided into three parts that explore an ‘other cinema’ that takes place during the intervals between frames. The first section of the film is a play tag shot at the Alhambra palace in Granada, an emblematic location charged with meaning in Val del Omar’s oeuvre and other experimental landmarks as Marie Menken’s 1961 ‘Arabesque for Kenneth Anger’. The second and central part is devoted to a selection of Val del Omar’s original documents held at the library of the MNCARS in Madrid, composed mostly of notes, project drawings, sketches, letters, written material for lectures and press clippings. This part is an attempt to penetrate the author’s writings and activate them in playful and plastic ways. The third section is a choreographed intervention in and around the film apparatus, where the syntax of cinema becomes sculpture and performance. The title ‘Trágame, nube’ is taken from a script Val del Omar wrote in the early forties for a documentary about gliding and its schools in Spain. It also refers to the press clippings unexpectedly found when delving into his documents, and became the basis of a series of collages that complement and expand the films.
Recycling
Caique Poi, Brazil, 2018, 2 minutes
Dozens of files from computers recycle bin such as images, texts files, installers and files of all kinds undergo a forced transformation. All this digital garbage, through the subversion of software, is transformed into abstract sounds, images and videos, simulating a kind of recycling in the virtual environment. This process, which takes advantage of the software dysfunctions, forces the machine to generate random results. And with certain autonomy, the machine resignifies the data arbitrarily.
I Would’ve Been Happy
Jordan Wong, USA, 2023, 9 minutes
New York Premiere
"I Would've Been Happy" attempts to map a fraught relationship through the use of intricately coded pictographs and schematic abstractions applied onto glazed ceramic tiles and quilted cyanotype fabric. The aesthetics of architectural language are used to reconstruct memories of my family's domestic spaces in the hope to uncover logic or reason to a broken home.
Jews Harp or: Harpaud
Sam Taffel, USA, 2023, 7 minutes
North American Premiere
“If I held you any closer, I’d be on the other side of you” – Groucho Marx An examination of identity as seen through the lens of the Marx Brothers and Antonin Artaud’s “Theatre of Cruelty.” Appropriating sounds, images and theories from The Marx Brothers, Wayne Koestenbaum, Elaine May, and Artaud, “Jews Harp or: Harpaud” reflects on the nature of Vaudeville as a shared art form and cultural practice. The hand of the artist is revealed using analog video and editing processes to re-capture and manipulate film. Gesturing towards performance as a form of survival, the effect of mirroring becomes a means of finding wholeness.
Sin título
Ignacio Tamarit, Argentina, 2022, 2 minutes
North American Premiere
Taking on the theme of Health, this short film chooses some of the most compelling archival images from the Archivo de la Radio Televisión Argentina (RTA), with a visual and emotional impact, while adding voices and some personal footage, achieving a piece that, without exposing a message or story in a traditional way generates a strong contradictory and mobilizing feeling.
Hand Tinting
Joyce Wieland, Canada, 1967, 8 minutes
16mm
"...is the apt title of another short film made from outcuts from a Job Corps documentary which features hand tinted sections. The film is full of small movements and actions, gestures begun and never completed. Repeated images, sometimes in color, sometimes not. A beautifully realized type of chamber-music film whose sum-total feeling is ritualistic." Robert Cowan, Take One
It’s time to patch up my own soul
Oakley Mertes, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
North American Premiere
My goal with this film was to show some of the biggest issues that I've seen as a bi trans man in the LGBTQ+ community, specifically on the topic of dating cis men. The idea of conventional attraction/beauty standards revolving around cis gay men being muscular has impacted me for a long time-- I won't ever have their body type, especially when beauty standards of gay men have never included people who look visibly trans. I chose to make this film silent because of my own personal experiences of being assaulted (trans men have higher rates of domestic violence, sexual assault, etc. in their relationships) and feeling like I needed to stay silent/keep it to myself after it happened. This film is ultimately about my view of abuse and assault and how those memories became part of my identity.
WE DON'T TALK LIKE WE USED TO
Joshua Solondz, USA, 2023, 36 minutes
We Don't Talk Like We Used To continues Joshua Gen Solondz's loose series of addled diary films with a film that is part travelogue, part affective almanac, and part cinematic noise show. With stops in Hong Kong, New Hampshire, Japan, and Brooklyn, the film alloys obscured faces, oozing onscreen text, throbbing abstractions, solarized superimpositions, and the occasional dad joke into a vertiginous mosaic of encounters and eruptions that also reflects somberly on issues of aging and exile, love and artmaking, lust and wanderlust.
Program Seven (Part Two): Un-framing
Sunday Nov. 6th, 4:30 PM, Nevins Theater
Flame of the Spent Hour
Roger Deutsch, Hungary, 2020, 8 minutes
New York Premiere
Hour by hour the ancient face of repeated Beings changes, and hour by hour, Thinking, we get older. Everything passes, unknown, and the knower Who remains knows he knows not. But nothing, Aware or unaware, returns. Equals, therefore, of what isn’t our equal, Let us preserve, in the heat we remember, The flame of the spent hour. Ricardo Reis (Fernando Pessoa)
I Was Born in 1988
Yasaman Baghban, Iran, 2022, 9 minutes
New York Premiere
A series of executions of Iranian political prisoners began in the summer of 1988, following the end of the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq. For nearly three decades, I have been preoccupied with the coincidence of this massacre and my birth in August 1988. The prisoners had no specific graves and were all buried in mass graves, and the most significant mass grave was called Khavaran. The mothers of these prisoners are a symbol of resistance and freedom, and they are called the mother of Khavaran. This film is an experimental documentary and a personal essay based on these events.
Sightreading
Nicholas Christenson, USA, 2023, 2 minutes
World Premiere
16mm
My first 16mm, Sightreading, was shot in August 2022 in Minneapolis and Chicago. It uses images from three sources: black mattes held in front of the sky near my parents’ house which were filmed and edited in-camera to a metronome; my friends drinking wine and discussing The Bachelor in their Chicago apartment; and details of a Breughel painting filmed from a television.” -NC
Bye Bye Now
Louise Bourque, Canada, 2022, 9 minutes
Waving hello to the filming cameraperson, the subjects through this very gesture, are also providing a future viewer with the acknowledgment of a constant good-bye to a fleeting moment. Yet when the film is projected and the captured gesture is seen, it's as if the subjects are saying hello again from the past. This film is an homage to the artist's father, the man behind the camera in these personal family archives.
Tlaloc (Lines Drawn in Water)
Abinadi Meza, USA, 2022, 9 minutes
New York Premiere
Tlaloc (Lines Drawn in Water) is a handmade cameraless 16mm film of materiality and transformation; an enigmatic otherworld where hues of water evolve into prismatic blooms. Tlaloc is the deity of waters, rain, lightning, and growth in the Aztec pantheon. This film explores the membrane of film itself - a moving skin marked by fluid, punctured by light. The protean soundtrack was entirely composed with contact microphones to capture handmade surface markings and gestures. The motion picture was made with direct animation, scratching, hand-painting, and contact-printing techniques.
bliss.jpg
Elijah Stevens, USA, 2023, 10 minutes
New York Premiere
A travelog through the familiar and unfamiliar terrain of digital landscapes. Pairing 16mm footage of computer desktop backgrounds with soundscapes of sites of technological extraction - precious metal mining, smelting foundries, microprocessing plants, and data farms - Bliss.jpg excavates and examines the geological and geographical sites that produce our virtual worlds.
Anamnesis
Izabella Retkowska, Poland, 2023,1 minute
North American Premiere
The sequence of repetitive images creates a hypnotic atmosphere that calls into the flow of emotional introspection and internal questions about the human mind, identity and memory. This memory, is partial. We discover that a part of ourselves (like our memory) is outside of us.
Spark from a Falling Star
Ross Meckfessel, USA, 2023, 21 minutes
A forbidding soundtrack of horns and distorted noise sets the scene for Ross Meckfessel’s Spark from a Falling Star, where shots of grocery store parking lots and dimly lit suburban roads breed atmospheres of low-level menace. At the other extreme, smooth digital renderings promise a shiny, spectral
Declarative Mode
Paul Sharits, USA, 1967, 39 minutes
16mm
Dedicated to Gerald O'Grady. This work was made possible by a Bicentennial Grant by the N.E.A. and the N.Y. State Council on the Arts. "This film, rather than being 'structural,' is 'narrative like.' We feel as if we are on some sort of journey, where we never know/predict what is to 'happen' next. It is engaging, like a novel full of surprises. The 'narrative' feeling is like a soap opera, which just keeps twisting and turning, with no apparent resolution intended (but there _is_ a closure on the purely formal level), as opposed to say _Miami Vice_ wherein the dramatic line moves towards and achieves a weekly resolution. This work prefigures a long series of 30 min. chapters in a 'Light Novel,' PASSARE, which I am presently working on (which could finally reach 40 hours in total length before I die). Aside from a recurrent red, white and blue phrase, there is no repetition in the film (repetition conventionally provides structural order)." - P.S.
TS1/Harland Snodgrass Gallery
October 31 - November 12
Intervals
Simon Payne, United Kingdom, 2023, 10 minutes
North American Premiere
Stripes of primary and secondary colours in lateral motion and inverse diagonal motion, subsequently layered, divided and doubled. This has shown as a two-projector piece and it might well work for more than two. 'Intervals' can be thought of as a space between two things, a break in activity, a gap in time, the difference in pitch between two sounds, the difference between two colours etc.
Entelechy (or on the sense of duty)
Carlo Alleva & Anna Utopia Giordano, Italy, 2021, 5 minutes
North American Premiere
Entelechy (or on the sense of duty) is a spoken word song written and performed by artist, poet and performer Anna Utopia Giordano with music composed by multimedia indipendent artist Un Artista Minimalista. Entelechia is contained in Utopia's first album "Fogli d'ombra" released on March 19, 2021. The text, conceived by the author as a hybrid between poetry and script, contains suggestions from philosophy, literature and science, intertweaving current global issues with classical images of ancient Greece. The videoclip of Entelechy (or on the sense of duty) is inspired by the tradition of son et lumière night shows. The video concept was developed and conceived by Anna Utopia Giordano and Carlo Alleva, an Italian designer and director who has been entrusted with the direction of Entelechy. In particular, the theme of Entelechy (or on the sense of duty) concerns the value of life, how every living being is part of the same unique unbreakable network and the debate on migrants, a very important issue in Italy.
Ritual for Synthetic Media
Jason & Debora Bernagozzi, USA, 2023, 19 minutes
New York Premiere
Live Video Processing by Debora Bernagozzi Custom Software (SC Frame Buffer), Google Earth Hacking, Sound by Jason Bernagozzi "Ritual for Synthetic Media" is a single channel video recorded from a live video and sound performance by Debora and Jason Bernagozzi. Notes toward a statement Jason: The reason that the footage is interesting is because it is attempting to map our world and in exposing the inadequacies of it being able to map our world, it becomes a commentary about the ephemeral nature of things that seem monumental and permanent. Maybe even, like, the idea of the constructed, not as an end, but almost as a continuous growing and shifting thing. Google Earth is attempting to map our world, but in a way, it kind of exposes the fragility of what it is our world is made of. The sound elements are all granular synthesis and stretched moments of clicking hard drive failure sounds. Those are then being warped into soundscapes and musical movements. The live process is live granular synthesis from pre-recorded sounds of hard drives trying to boot up, clicking, and failing. The granules of those frequencies were then stretched, amplified, pitched shifted, panned, and remixed live using custom software built in Max/MSP by Jason. Debora: Worlds fall apart. Things fall apart. People fall apart. No matter how solid structures appear, there is a tenuous web of entropic processes at the core of everything. When I live process video, I’m not working from a rehearsed performance or simply performing a set of effects, I am feeling that video on a deep, physical level, and - combined with a solid relationship with my tools enabling nuanced expression - take both myself and the viewer into the video, experiencing it, embodying it, and emerging. Through the processing, I am further exposing the ephemeral qualities of signal and matter, while recombining the imagery to create new worlds, new energies. In these performances, Jason’s sound affects my experience of the video, and my visual responses to that affect his sound choices. We are traveling in the space of the media together.
me with and without my brain
Nilson Carroll, USA, 2020, 8 minutes
North American Premiere
me with and without my brother is a short experimental video exploring isolation and separation between brothers using original, real-time Super Mario 64 and Super Mario Bros. 3 audiovisual corruptions. Luigi repeatedly tackles Mario, jumping off his head, the eternal wisdom “boys will be boys” ringing in both their ears. Perhaps it is this toxic-masculine competition that drives the brothers apart, or perhaps they just grow into different, unrelated people. With time to contemplate, Mario’s vision blurs, his home becomes shattered glass, his air unbreathable. He no longer has ground to stand on, the limp UI in each corner his only sense of stability. His mental and physical states no longer align. It becomes a queer or defiant question to ask “what does Mario do if he has no princess to save,” no binary call to action. He looks to his brother for answers, but there is no one there. I miss my brother, and I miss my family. Divided by an anxiety to not be vulnerable, each of us remains distant. This work is dedicated to my older brother, who introduced me to video games almost three decades ago.
RED HOUSE
Barry Doupe, Canada, 2022, 3 minutes
RED HOUSE is an animation that playfully explores metamorphosis in relation to the stability and structure of housing. Created using the AMIGA computer console and Deluxe Paint IV software, hand drawn sequences delight in the constant reconfiguration of images, characters and forms.
The Becoming
Melissa Faivre, France, 2020, 5 minutes
New York Premiere
The Becoming is a dynamic, fast-paced collage of animated photographs of ink paintings as well as video material of extinct and living species of fish, reptiles and birds. The juxtaposition and superposition of fragments of different life forms, together with cold or blooming nature expresses the idea of regeneration. This somehow hallucinatory collage evolves into a succession of increasingly vibrant patterns reminiscent of biological cells and ends with an explosion of shapes and colors. Quite an intense trip.
DATAVISION
Joris Guibert, France, 2023, 5 minutes
North American Premiere
- How does an animist see the world? - What do we see when we look at a screen? - What does video code look like? - Do digital data spread throughout reality? - Do images form an encoding of the gaze? - What is the conversion of reality into data? Digital camera compression clones and reconstructs all or part of each image. In a video, we actually see very few images : we watch algorithms. This film is made from real-world material captured in digital video (without any virtual effects or synthesized creations), through a hijacking of data.
Help Desk
Edwin Rostron, United Kingdom, 2023, 3 minutes
A mysterious transmission revealing playful geometric possibilities. Help Desk is a hypnotic hand drawn animation, providing a meditative and contemplative space, oscillating between flatness and depth, control and instability. The film was made using an improvisational process of ‘straight ahead’ animation, and was primarily an attempt to regain some much needed focus after the fragmented years of the pandemic.
Discriminator Loss
David Witzling, USA, 2023, 9 minutes
World Premiere
A data science allegory: the technological spectacle of nudes descending staircases, and a visual poem on modelling non-equilibrium thermodynamics in reverse. Electronic provisions for Socialist victuals accompany secular church bells from a new Homeland, whereupon we encounter a visual divide between the domestic and foreign defiance of Gravity. Tones in the static. A symbol of the Muse is then destroyed, while serenaded by the lullaby of an amphibious UFO colony.
When I Said Express…
Ajunie Virk, USA, 2023, 3 minutes
New York Premiere
My sister told me the way there would have a great view of the city. But I accidentally went to the wrong platform and instead spent the whole ride traveling through a tunnel. There, I was forced to listen to a cover band sing a tragically off-key rendition of Empire State Of Mind in a pitch-black subway car for 15 minutes. I am now in Bay Ridge and was stranded at a McDonald's (one of those boring, new ones that lack a play place and seems more suited to house a plastic surgeon’s office than a few deep fryers). Even though he was redeeming his free birthday fries, the man that ordered before me was holding a bunch of coins in his hands. He seemed really happy that it was his special day. He was smiling so wide I could see all of the plaque buildup on his teeth. When I went up to order, they claimed to have “broken” their ice cream machine. I used the McFlurry money to buy this journal and a pack of Lisa Frank stickers. I’m still deciding, but I think I’ll just walk the rest of the way there.
Immersive Gallery
November 3-5, 2023
Compre(hen)ssion of Artifacts
Damian Anache, Argentina, 2023, 6 minutes
North American Premiere
Recursive pixelization and self-referencing of data within a collage. This video repeats fragmented, distorted, and faded elements over and over again, while drifting towards abstract degradations and looped simulations, circling back on itself endlessly until exhaustion, insisting on saying what it already said in the first instance (much like this very sentence). Words, sounds, and textures merge and disintegrate into noise without an apparent pattern but very present nonetheless. The subject stretches, compresses, and expands, once again showing that the possibilities of technological replication can generate subpar prints, leaving a bad impression both on paper and in our minds.
dark forest // invincible summer
Jenn Grossman, USA, 2023, 10 minutes
World Installation Premiere
"Dark Forest//Invincible Summer is a video/sound collage and projected installation that deconstructs and reassembles sensory memory through media artifacts. It explores synesthesia and embodiment in the act of looking and listening. “Our cognitive awareness – conscious as well as unconscious – consists of multiple strands of signification, woven of shifting fragments of imagery, sensation and malleable memory. Works of sensory media are capable of echoing or reflecting or embodying these kinds of multiple simultaneous strands of signification." (Ernst Karel)
Same Old Santa
Justin Rhody, Abigail Smith, & Ben Kujawski, USA, 2023, 14 minutes
World Premiere
A collaborative piece for hand painted 16mm film, found footage, and live improvised sound by Justin Rhody, Abigail Smith, and Ben Kujawski. The soundtrack was recorded live at Shapeshifters Cinema in Oakland California, and the title of the piece was decided by Craig Baldwin before a live audience at Other Cinema the night before. Audio featured on K/S/R's ultra-full-length album "Desert Crawl", released by the PHYSICAL media imprint.
Thalassophobia
Kit Young, USA, 2022, 16 minutes
Thalassophobia: the persistent and intense fear of deep bodies of water such as the sea, oceans, pools, or lakes. Crossroads Film Festival 2022 San Francisco Cinematheque Gray Area, San Francisco TanukiSpiderCat- electric cello, pedals, modular audio synthesis, field recordings. Kit Young- video synthesis, video feedback, cinema verite samples. Thalassophobia is a live performance in which the artists interact across mediums to create a work of interdisciplinary improvisation.
grain cloud atmosphere
Martin Moolhuijsen, USA, 2023, 7 minutes
New York Premiere
Many grains make a cloud. many clouds form an atmosphere. 120 meters of handpainted 35mm film were digitized as single pictures and fed into a self developed editing software that shuffles the individual images according to certain parameters such as painterly technique and color. The film is the result of one hour of improvisation with that software. Grain cloud atmosphere explores the perception of time through the eye and through the ear.
Plasforms
Valentin Sismann, France, 2023, 5 minutes
World Installation Premiere
With an average of 0.602 packages a day, I pack, repack and unpack a cyclical pile of plastics. Made by Valentin Sismann, Plasforms is an exhibition/explosion of these garbages in their motion: a cycle of openings/closures gradually transforming them into concrete and filmic material.