[Frameworks] This week [November 26 - December 4, 2011] in avant garde cinema

Weekly Listing weeklylisting at hi-beam.net
Sat Nov 26 12:09:46 CST 2011


This week [November 26 - December 4, 2011] in avant garde cinema

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New Film/Video: non-feature:
"Confessors" by Michael Morris
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=newwork&readfile=484.ann

Job Available:
Assistant Professor (Filmmaking)
http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=jobs&readfile=10.ann


NEW CALLS FOR ENTRIES:
===================== 
Studio 27 at Big Muddy Film Festival (Carbondale, IL, USA; Deadline: January 16, 2012)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1379.ann
call for artists 2012 (Tondela, Portugal; Deadline: March 09, 2012)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1380.ann

DEADLINES APPROACHING:
====================== 
Go Short - International Film Festival Nijmegen (Nijmegen, the Netherlands; Deadline: November 30, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1319.ann
Strange Beauty Film Festival 2012 (Durham, North Carolina USA; Deadline: December 15, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1329.ann
$100 Film Festival (Calgary, AB CANADA; Deadline: December 01, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1339.ann
Experiments in Cinema v7.9 (Albuquerque, New Mexico USA; Deadline: December 01, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1343.ann
Faux Film Festival (Portland, Oregon; Deadline: December 31, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1348.ann
The Big Muddy Film Festival (Carbondale, IL; Deadline: December 09, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1352.ann
RiverRun International Film Festival (Winston-Salem, NC, USA; Deadline: December 16, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1353.ann
Black Maria Film + Video Festival (Jersey City, NJ, USA; Deadline: November 26, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1363.ann
Best Shorts Competition (La Jolla, Ca USA; Deadline: December 16, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1367.ann
Periwinkle Cinema @ ATA (San Francisco, CA, USA; Deadline: December 15, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1371.ann
Courtisane Festival (Ghent, Belgium; Deadline: December 31, 2011)
 http://www.hi-beam.net/cgi-bin/ann.pl?type=calls&readfile=1373.ann

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Also available online at Flicker: http://www.hi-beam.net

THIS WEEK'S PROGRAMS (SUMMARY):
==============================
 *  Essential Cinema: Grant, Jacobs & Fleischner Program [November 26, New York, New York]
 *  Essential Cinema: Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son [November 26, New York, New York]
 *  Essential Cinema: Genet/Frank & Leslie Program [November 26, New York, New York]
 *  Sex Trafficing [November 26, San Francisco, California]
 *  Essential Cinema: Melies Program 1 [November 27, New York, New York]
 *  Essential Cinema: Melies Program 2 [November 27, New York, New York]
 *  Essential Cinema: Melies Program 3 [November 27, New York, New York]
 *  Beat [November 29, Reading, Pennsylvania]
 *  Ann Arbor Film Festival Retrospective Screening Series #3 [November 30, Ann Arbor, Michigan]
 *  The Free Screen: Loop Collective  [November 30, Toronto, Ontario, Canada]
 *  Journal and Remarks- Films By David Gatten [December 1, Ann Arbor, Michigan]
 *  Journal and Remarks- Films By David Gatten [December 1, Ann Arbor, Michigan]
 *  "Working With Words" - A Lecture By David Gatten  [December 1, Ann Arbor, Michigan]
 *  4th Annual 1:1 Super 8 Cinema SoiréE [December 1, Fort Lauderdale, FL]
 *  Essential Cinema: Peter Kubelka Program [December 1, New York, New York]
 *  Essential Cinema: Une Simple Histoire [December 1, New York, New York]
 *  Luminous Earth: the Films of Robbie Land [December 1, Seattle, Washington]
 *  De Anza Experimental Film Exhibition [December 2, Cupertino, CA]
 *  Owen Land Program 1 [December 2, New York, New York]
 *  Owen Land Program 2 [December 2, New York, New York]
 *  Carolee Schneemann At Eli Ridgway Gallery [December 2, San Francisco, California]
 *  Frequency Spectrums: Works With Sound and Film [December 2, San Francisco, California]
 *  Mono No Aware V [December 3, Brooklyn, New York]
 *  Someplace I Don't Belong [December 3, Los Angeles, California]
 *  Insight Film Festival [December 3, Manchester, England]
 *  3rd Insight Film Festival 2011 [December 3, Manchester]
 *  Owen Land Program 1 [December 3, New York, New York]
 *  Owen Land Dialogues [December 3, New York, New York]
 *  Wallace Berman's Underground [December 3, Pasadena, CA]
 *  Incredibly Strange Music [December 3, San Francisco, California]
 *  Community visionaries: visual Communications and the Dawn of Asian
    Pacific American Cinema  [December 4, Los Angeles, California]
 *  Essential Cinema: Rapt [December 4, New York, New York]
 *  Robert Breer Program 1 [December 4, New York, New York]
 *  Robert Breer Program 2 [December 4, New York, New York]
 *  Robert Breer Program 3 [December 4, New York, New York]


Events are sorted by CITY within each DATE.

---------------------------
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2011
---------------------------

11/26
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
4:30 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: GRANT, JACOBS & FLEISCHNER PROGRAM
  Dwinell Grant COMPOSITION #2 CONTRATHEMIS 1941, 5 minutes, 16mm, color,
  silent. "An attempt to develop visual abstract themes and to
  counterpoint them in a planned, formal composition." –D.G. "Austere and
  chaste combinations, with subtle manipulation of structure, density and
  rhythm."–William Moritz STOP MOTION TESTS 1942, 3 minutes, 16mm, color,
  silent. A self-portrait. COLOR SEQUENCE 1943, 3 minutes, 16mm, color,
  silent. "Pure solid-color frames which fade, mutate and flicker. A
  research into color rhythms and perceptual phenomena." –William Moritz
  Ken Jacobs LITTLE STABS AT HAPPINESS 1959-63, 18 minutes, 16mm, color.
  Featuring Jack Smith. "Material was cut in as it came out of the camera,
  embarrassing moments intact. 100' rolls timed well with music on old
  78s. I was interested in immediacy, a sense of ease, and an art where
  suffering was acknowledged but not trivialized with dramatics. Whimsy
  was our achievement as well as breaking out of step." –K.J. Ken Jacobs &
  Bob Fleischner BLONDE COBRA 1959-63, 35 minutes, 16-to-35mm blow-up,
  b&w/color. Featuring Jack Smith. Preserved by Anthology, with the
  generous support of The Film Foundation, The National Film Preservation
  Foundation, Simon Lund and Cineric, Inc. "BLONDE COBRA is an erratic
  narrative – no, not really a narrative, it's only stretched out in time
  for convenience of delivery. It's a look in on an exploding life, on a
  man of imagination suffering pre-fashionable Lower East Side deprivation
  and consumed with American 1950s, 40s, 30s disgust. Silly, self-pitying,
  guilt-strictured and yet triumphing – on one level – over the situation
  with style… enticing us into an absurd moral posture the better to
  dismiss us with a regal 'screw off.'" –K.J. Total running time: ca. 70
  minutes.

11/26
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
6:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: TOM, TOM, THE PIPER'S SON
  by Ken Jacobs 1969, 115 minutes, 16mm An absolute masterpiece from one
  of the most inspiring innovators of modern cinema. "Original 1905 film
  shot and probably directed by G.W. 'Billy' Bitzer, rescued via a paper
  print filed for copyright purposes with the Library of Congress. It is
  most reverently examined here, absolutely loved, with a new movie,
  almost as a side effect, coming into being." –K.J.

11/26
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
8:30 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: GENET/FRANK & LESLIE PROGRAM
  Jean Genet UN CHANT D'AMOUR 1950, 26 minutes, 16mm, b&w, silent. Jean
  Genet's poetic expression of male eroticism pitted against the confines
  of prison cells and a homophobic state… a powerfully resonant work that
  explores individual freedom and the laws of desire. Robert Frank &
  Alfred Leslie PULL MY DAISY 1959, 28 minutes, 35mm, b&w. A largely
  spontaneous experiment, arranged in 1959 by Robert Frank along with
  Alfred Leslie. They enlisted the participation of Jack Kerouac, who
  offered in place of an original screenplay a stage play he'd never
  finished writing, "The Beat Generation." The plot is based on an
  incident in the life of Neal Cassady and his wife Carolyn. They're
  raising a family and trying to fit in with their suburban neighbors, and
  one night they invite a respectable neighborhood bishop over for dinner.
  But Neal's Beat friends crash the party, and that Marx Brothers-like
  scenario is the closest thing the film has to a storyline. Total running
  time: ca. 60 minutes.

11/26
San Francisco, California: Other Cinema
http://www.othercinema.com/
8:30, ATA, 992 Valencia Street

 SEX TRAFFICING
  MIMI CHAKAROVA'S THE PRICE OF SEX Introduced by photo-essayist Mark
  Brecke, UCB luminary Mimi Chakarova is here in person to present this
  unprecedented and compelling inquiry into a dark side of immigration.
  Feature-length, The Price of Sex sheds light on the underground criminal
  network trafficking Eastern European women, forced into prostitution
  abroad. Traveling from her home country through Greece, Turkey, to
  Dubai, Bulgarian-born photo-journalist Chakarova caps years of
  painstaking on-the-ground reporting—even posing as a prostitute to
  gather her material—filming undercover with extraordinary access. 

-------------------------
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2011
-------------------------

11/27
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
5:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: MELIES PROGRAM 1
  All films in this program are b&w and silent. THE CONJUROR /
  L'ILLUSIONISTE FIN DE SIÈCLE (1899, 1 minute, 35mm) TRIP TO THE MOON /
  VOYAGE DANS LA LUNE (1902, 12 minutes, 35mm) THE PALACE OF THE ARABIAN
  NIGHTS / LE PALAIS DES MILLE ET UNE NUITS (1905, 21 minutes, 35mm)
  DELIRIUM IN A STUDIO / ALI BARBOUYOU ALI BOUF À L'HUILE (1907, 5
  minutes, 35mm) MERRY FROLICS OF SATAN / LES QUATRES CENT FARCES DU
  DIABLE (1906, 18 minutes, 35mm) Magician, master of special effects,
  Méliès broke with the realistic (Lumière) mode of cinema and celebrated
  unlimited fantasy and artificiality (in its best sense). Total running
  time: ca. 60 minutes.

11/27
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
6:30 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: MELIES PROGRAM 2
  The films on this program are hand-tinted and silent. THE CASCADE OF
  FIRE / LA CASCADE DE FEU (1904, 3 minutes, 35mm) A DIABOLICAL TENANT /
  UN LOCATAIRE DIABOLIQUE (1909, 8 minutes, 35mm) THE HUNCHBACK FAIRY / LA
  FÉE CARABOSSE (1906, 13 minutes, 35mm) VOYAGE ACROSS THE IMPOSSIBLE / LE
  VOYAGE À TRAVERS L'IMPOSSIBLE (1904, 20 minutes, 35mm) Total running
  time: ca. 50 minutes.

11/27
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
8:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: MELIES PROGRAM 3
  All films in this program are b&w and silent. EXTRAORDINARY ILLUSIONS /
  ILLUSIONS FUNAMBULESQUES (1903, 3 minutes, 16mm) THE ENCHANTED WELL / LE
  PUITS FANTASTIQUE (1903, 3 minutes, 16mm) THE APPARITION / LE REVENANT
  (1903, 3 minutes, 16mm) TUNNEL UNDER THE CHANNEL / LE TUNNEL SOUS LA
  MANCHE (1907, 25 minutes, 16mm) SIGHTSEEING THROUGH WHISKY / PAUVRE JEAN
  OU LES MESAVENTURES D'UN BUVEUR (1909, 5 minutes, 16mm) THE DOCTOR'S
  SECRET / HYDROTHÉRAPIE FANTASTIQUE (1909, 11 minutes, 16mm) Total
  running time: ca. 55 minutes.

--------------------------
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2011
--------------------------

11/29
Reading, Pennsylvania: Berks Filmmakers, Inc
http://www.berksfilmmakers.org
7:30 pm, Albright College Center for the Arts

 BEAT
  a screening featuring works by and about that group of artists who
  shared a sensibility called Beat: Howl; (2010, 84 min) by ROB EPSTEIN &
  JEFFREY FRIEDMAN with James Franco as Allen Ginsberg ; also a selection
  of key Beat films: A Movie (1958,12 min.) by BRUCE CONNER; Pull My
  Daisy; (28 min.1959) by ROBERT FRANK & ALFRED LESLIE -with narration by
  Jack Kerouac; Towers Open Fire (16 min. 1963) by WILLIAM BURROUGHS &
  ANTHONY BALCH; The End (1953, 35 min) by CHRISTOPHER MACLAINE 

----------------------------
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2011
----------------------------

11/30
Ann Arbor, Michigan: Ann Arbor Film Festival
http://aafilmfest.org/
7:30 pm, Michigan Theater

 ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL RETROSPECTIVE SCREENING SERIES #3
  Curated by David Gatten. Filmmaker David Gatten (Boulder, CO) selects
  and introduces influential films from AAFF's exhibition history.
  Gatten's been attending AAFF for more than two decades as a filmmaker,
  visiting professor and 2007 festival juror. Program includes: Time Out
  for Sport by Paul Winkler (1996, 18 min); Filter Beds by Guy Sherwin
  (1998, 9 min); If You Stand With Your Back to the Slowing of the Speed
  of Light in Water by Julie Murray (1997, 17 min); Devotio Moderna by
  Michele Fleming (1993, 9 min); Landscape With the Fall of Icarus by
  Christopher Sullivan (1994, 24 min). All films presented on 16mm.

11/30
Toronto, Ontario, Canada: TIFF Bell Lightbox
tiff.net
7:00pm, 350 King Street West

 THE FREE SCREEN: LOOP COLLECTIVE 
  FREE EVENT! This retrospective spotlights some of the finest work
  produced by the Toronto-based avant-garde filmmaking collective.Founded
  at Ryerson University in 1996, the Loop Collective is a group of
  independent media artists dedicated to exploring the roots of
  experimental cinema by creating a dialogue with other art disciplines.
  Programming and producing works for presentation in both traditional and
  non-traditional spaces, Loop seeks to promote critical engagement with
  experimental film and video by cultivating relations among different
  artistic communities.Since Loop's inception, TIFF Cinematheque's The
  Free Screen (formerly The Independents) has played a significant role in
  shaping the aesthetic developments and preoccupations of its members.
  This programme, consisting of only a fraction of the works produced by
  the collective since the group's founding, features several works that
  are in direct dialogue with one another, as well as with the other films
  and filmmakers that Loop members encountered at The Free Screen and
  Loop's own events. —Izabella Pruska-Oldenhof 

--------------------------
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2011
--------------------------

12/1
Ann Arbor, Michigan: Studies and Observation Group
7:30 pm, 327 Braun Ct

 JOURNAL AND REMARKS- FILMS BY DAVID GATTEN
  An evening of films by David Gatten (Boulder,CO). Gatten will present a
  program of his films and a reading of poems by Wallace Stevens, Michael
  Drayton and Jorie Graham. Program includes the 16mm films HARDWOOD
  PROCESS (1996); SHRIMP BOAT LOG (2006/2010); JOURNAL AND REMARKS (2009);
  FILM FOR INVISIBLE INK, CASE NO.142: ABBREVIATION FOR DEAD WINTER
  [DIMINISHED BY 1,794] (2008); HOW TO CONDUCT A LOVE AFFAIR (2007); and
  SO SURE OF NOWHERE BUYING TIMES TO COME (2010). This program is Studies
  and Observation no. 4, which concludes the fall 2011 screening series
  organized by the Studies and Observation Group; co-presented by the Ann
  Arbor Film Festival. 

12/1
Ann Arbor, Michigan: Studies and Observation Group
7:30 pm, 327 Braun Ct

 JOURNAL AND REMARKS- FILMS BY DAVID GATTEN
  An evening of films by David Gatten (Boulder,CO). Gatten will present a
  program of his films and a reading of poems by Wallace Stevens, Michael
  Drayton and Jorie Graham. Program includes the 16mm films HARDWOOD
  PROCESS (1996); SHRIMP BOAT LOG (2006/2010); JOURNAL AND REMARKS (2009);
  FILM FOR INVISIBLE INK, CASE NO.142: ABBREVIATION FOR DEAD WINTER
  [DIMINISHED BY 1,794] (2008); HOW TO CONDUCT A LOVE AFFAIR (2007); and
  SO SURE OF NOWHERE BUYING TIMES TO COME (2010). This program is Studies
  and Observation no. 4, which concludes the fall 2011 screening series
  organized by the Studies and Observation Group; co-presented by the Ann
  Arbor Film Festival. 

12/1
Ann Arbor, Michigan: Ann Arbor Film Festival
http://aafilmfest.org/
6pm, Ann Arbor District Library

 "WORKING WITH WORDS" - A LECTURE BY DAVID GATTEN 
  Filmmaker David Gatten will discuss his use of historical documents,
  "out- dated" instructional texts, and rare books as both inspiration and
  image in his filmmaking practice. Over the last fifteen years Gatten's
  work has explored the intersection of the printed word and the moving
  image, while investigating the shifting vocabularies of experience and
  representation within intimate spaces and historical documents. Through
  traditional research methods (reading old books) and non-traditional
  film processes (boiling old books), the films trace the contours of both
  private lives and public histories, combining elements of philosophy,
  biography and poetry with experiments in cinematic forms and narrative
  structures. David Gatten (b.1971, Ann Arbor) lives in the Rocky
  Mountains near Boulder, CO and is currently Visiting Professor and
  Distinguished Filmmaker in Residence in the Program in the Arts of the
  Moving Image at Duke University. 

12/1
Fort Lauderdale, FL: 1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=225485190848394
7:30 p.m., 810 NE 4th Avenue

 4TH ANNUAL 1:1 SUPER 8 CINEMA SOIRéE
  The 4th Annual 1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée | December 1, 2011 Screening @
  IWAN The Bubble 810 NE 4th Ave, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304 Doors @ 6:30
  pm | Screening @ 7:30 pm | $5 @ Door Wrap Party @ Poor House 110 SW 3rd
  Ave, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312 11 p.m. - 4 a.m. | Music | Cheap Drinks |
  No Cover Established in 2006, the 1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée is an annual
  South Florida event celebrating the use of super 8 film. Local
  filmmakers and artists gleefully take part in this distinct event,
  loading their cameras with 3m20s of film, nervously creating their
  masterpieces. The 1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée is distinct in that none of
  the films are viewed by the filmmakers before the screening.
  Participants are not allowed to preview or edit their films. No matter
  what imperfections, happy accidents, or planned technical attributes
  occur, what's shot in-camera is what's shown. There is no opportunity to
  make changes. Each participant gets one chance, one reel, and one take,
  premiering the films at a one night collective screening. Sound is done
  separately, most often designed, edited, and mixed after filming. It's
  then played back live at the screening as a type of dual sync system.
  Other sound options for participants include projecting the film silent
  or adding live audio, which in-turn, adds a performative element. Many
  of these characteristics lead to some exciting and refreshing films.
  It's also a rare opportunity for a public viewing and a chance to see
  super 8 projected in it's original format. Contact Info: Shane Eason,
  1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée Director 1to1super8filmfestival at gmail.com |
  954.762.5246 The 4th Annual 1:1 Super 8 Cinema Soirée acknowledges
  support from: IWAN The Bubble, Poor House, Black Iron Films, One Take
  Super 8 Event, FAU SCMS, Kodak & PAC Lab Inc.

12/1
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
7:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: PETER KUBELKA PROGRAM
  MOSAIK IM VERTRAUEN / MOSAIC IN CONFIDENCE (1955, 16 minutes, 35mm,
  b&w/color) ADEBAR (1957, 1 minute, 35mm, b&w) SCHWECHATER (1958, 1
  minute, 35mm, color) ARNULF RAINER (1960, 7 minutes, 35mm, b&w) UNSERE
  AFRIKAREISE / OUR TRIP TO AFRICA (1966, 12 minutes, 16mm, color) PAUSE
  (1977, 12 minutes, 16mm, color) "Peter Kubelka is the perfectionist of
  the film medium; and, as I honor that quality above all others at this
  time finding such a lack of it now elsewhere, I would simply like to
  say: Peter Kubelka is the world's greatest filmmaker – which is to say,
  simply: see his films!...by all means/above all else...etcetera." –Stan
  Brakhage Total running time: ca. 55 minutes.

12/1
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
8:30 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: UNE SIMPLE HISTOIRE
  by Marcel Hanoun In French with no subtitles; English synopsis
  available, 1958, 68 minutes, 16mm "Based on a true incident, the film
  chronicles the wanderings of a woman and child looking for work and
  lodging in Paris. This is the only plot, and Hanoun has little interest
  in embellishing it with background and motivation: he never even makes
  it clear, for example, whether the woman is the child's mother, guardian
  or companion. UNE SIMPLE HISTOIRE is, more than a narrative, a formal
  stylistic exercise so rigorously disciplined and understated that it
  makes the visual asceticism of Robert Bresson seem almost Fellini-esque
  by comparison." –TIME

12/1
Seattle, Washington: Northwest Film Forum
http://www.nwfilmforum.org
7pm, 1515 12th ave

 LUMINOUS EARTH: THE FILMS OF ROBBIE LAND
  Robbie Land's 16mm films provide a personal vision of the southeast
  United States, re-imagining our familiar surroundings, both natural and
  man-made. His unusual methods include pasting plant life and other items
  directly on to the filmstrip to painstakingly create vibrant, colorful
  and haunting imagery. Program includes: Precipice—An unconventional
  dance film that achieves a pointillist study of motion; Old Florida Salt
  Marsh—Combining video footage cut, glued and taped directly to the
  celluloid; Micanopy Winter Wonderland—Featuring an antique jukebox
  converted into a diorama; Betty Creek—A portrait of the plant life
  located in the Appalachian Mountains; Bioluminescence—Uses direct
  application, time-exposure and micro-cinematography to magnify the
  beauty of nighttime phenomenon.
  http://www.nwfilmforum.org/live/page/calendar/1959

------------------------
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2011
------------------------

12/2
Cupertino, CA: De Anza College
7:30 pm, 21250 Stevens Creek Blvd.

 DE ANZA EXPERIMENTAL FILM EXHIBITION
  The De Anza College Experimental Film Exhibition is a showcase of
  experimental cinema created by San Francisco Bay Area filmmakers, as
  well as, filmmakers from around the world. This exhibition will present
  a filmmaking genre that is rarely screened in the South Bay and offers
  the community a wonderful opportunity to see and learn more about this
  ground-breaking genre of film and video art. Experimental films and
  video are more akin to other fine art forms, such as poetry and
  painting. The genre is often concerned with the most fundamental aspects
  of cinema, such as its formal structure, capacity for meaning, and
  singular elements such as color and light. As a practice, cinematic
  experiments can be traced to the very beginnings of film as an art form;
  experimental cinema continues to attract an international following in
  the worlds of fine art, academia and cinema itself. The event is free to
  the public, and is happening at De Anza College, 21250 Stevens Creek
  Blvd., Cupertino, CA, on Dec. 2 at 7:30 pm, in the Advanced Technology
  wing, lecture hall AT120. Please bring $2 for parking in Lot A. For more
  information, email infiltration834 at gmail.com.

12/2
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
6:45 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 OWEN LAND PROGRAM 1
  This screening is part of: ROBERT BREER AND OWEN LAND Film Notes "His
  remarkable faculty is as maker of images.... [T]he images he photographs
  are among the most radical, super-real and haunting images the cinema
  has ever given us." –P. Adams Sitney, VISIONARY FILM "Film is a complex
  medium, combining elements of many other media. The ideal film artist
  would be a great poet, great painter, great playwright, great composer,
  great inventor – and maybe even a great business man or woman (most
  probably a woman – all the artists of the future may be women, men
  having long given up that profession to become soldiers or mystics).
  Such a composite genius has yet to appear." –George Landow, IMAGE FORUM
  EARLY FILMS BY GEORGE LANDOW (ca. 1961-62, ca. 15 minutes, 8mm-to-16mm
  blow-up. Preserved with support from Cineric, Inc.) These films are not
  part of the Essential Cinema. According to Jonas Mekas, Landow used to
  show these films along with FLEMING FALOON at early screenings before he
  pulled them from his repertoire. They seem to be studies for FLEMING
  FALOON, more raw, less concise, messy split-screens, and footage
  re-filmed off the screen. Talking heads (including Mike Wallace and film
  historian Richard Kraft) blur, stretch, fade; what Jonas says is a
  festering arm wound that Landow had at the time is shot at various
  blurry exposures. FLEMING FALOON (1963, 6 minutes, 16mm) FILM IN WHICH
  THERE APPEAR SPROCKET HOLES, EDGE LETTERING, DIRT PARTICLES, ETC.
  (1965-66, 5 minutes, 16mm, silent) DIPLOTERATOLOGY: BARDO FOLLIES (1967,
  7 minutes, 16mm, b&w, silent) THE FILM THAT RISES TO THE SURFACE OF
  CLARIFIED BUTTER (1968, 9 minutes, 16mm, b&w) INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY
  (1969, 5 minutes, 16mm) REMEDIAL READING COMPREHENSION (1970, 5 minutes,
  16mm) WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? (1972, 13 minutes, 16mm) THANK YOU
  JESUS FOR THE ETERNAL PRESENT (1973, 6 minutes, 16mm) Total running
  time: ca. 80 minutes.

12/2
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
9:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 OWEN LAND PROGRAM 2
  A FILM OF THEIR 1973 SPRING TOUR COMMISSIONED BY CHRISTIAN WORLD
  LIBERATION FRONT OF BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA (1974, 11.5 minutes, 16mm) NO
  SIR, ORISON! (1975, 3 minutes, 16mm) WIDE ANGLE SAXON (1975, 22 minutes,
  16mm) NEW IMPROVED INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY: IN THE ENVIRONMENT OF LIQUIDS
  AND NASALS A PARASITIC VOWEL SOMETIMES DEVELOPS (1976, 10 minutes, 16mm)
  ON THE MARRIAGE BROKER JOKE AS CITED BY SIGMUND FREUD IN WIT AND ITS
  RELATION OF THE UNCONSCIOUS, OR CAN THE AVANT-GARDE ARTIST BE WHOLED?
  (1979, 17.5 minutes, 16mm) NOLI ME TANGERE (1984, 6 minutes, video) THE
  BOX THEORY (1984, 15.5 minutes, video) Total running time: ca. 95
  minutes.

12/2
San Francisco, California: Eli Ridgway Gallery
http://www.eliridgway.com
8:00 pm, 172 Minna Street

 CAROLEE SCHNEEMANN AT ELI RIDGWAY GALLERY
  Eli Ridgway Gallery, in collaboration with the Stanford University Dept.
  of Art & Art History, is pleased to host a special evening with Carolee
  Schneemann. This is a rare west coast appearance by the
  internationally-renowned artist. Schneemann will introduce a program of
  her films and videos, including an extended excerpt from her rarely-seen
  epic Kitch's Last Meal (1973-76). Program total running time is 70 min,
  with reception to follow. Free Admission; suggested 5$ donation. |||
  Schneemann appears at Eli Ridgway Gallery in celebration of the recently
  published Millennium Film Journal #54: "Focus on Carolee Schneemann,"
  edited by Kenneth White (Ph.D. candidate, Stanford Art & Art History).
  Copies of the journal will be available at the gallery for sale (8$).
  ||| About Carolee Schneemann: Schneemann works at the juncture of
  sexuality and politics. She focuses upon taboos and the suppressed in
  cultures, and strives to position the body of the artist in dynamic
  relationship with the social body. Her work in film, video, photography,
  paint, and performance has been exhibited at the Los Angeles Museum of
  Contemporary Art; Whitney Museum of American Art; Museum of Modern Art,
  New York; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and the New Museum of
  Contemporary Art; among many other institutions. Her writing is
  published widely, including Correspondence Course: An Epistolary History
  of Carolee Schneemann and Her Circle (ed. Kristine Stiles, Duke
  University Press, 2010) and Imaging Her Erotics: Essays, Interviews,
  Projects (MIT Press, 2002). ||| About Millennium Film Journal: Founded
  in New York in 1978, the Millennium Film Journal intends to fulfill the
  need for more substantial discourse on independent, avant-garde cinema.
  Issue #54 debuts a new design, but continues the journal's tradition of
  publishing diverse writing forms, including artist pages,
  collage-essays, interviews, and articles.

12/2
San Francisco, California: Artists Television Access
http://www.atasite.org/
8pm, 992 Valencia Street $6-10

 FREQUENCY SPECTRUMS: WORKS WITH SOUND AND FILM
  An evening of sound, Super 8 and 16mm film performances. JOHN DAVIS AND
  PAUL CLIPSON / TASHI WADA AND MADISON BROOKSHIRE / BEN BRACKEN AND JOHN
  DAVIS / Passage: a new work in sound and light for two 16mm projectors
  by Madison Brookshire and Tashi Wada. Benjamin Bracken & John Davis
  present transient vibrations revealed through sound and film. Paul
  Clipson screens new films shot in Berlin, Zagreb, Lisbon and Geneva to
  soundscapes by sound artist John Davis. 

--------------------------
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2011
--------------------------

12/3
Brooklyn, New York: MONO NO AWARE 
http://www.mononoawarefilm.com
6 PM - 11 PM, 92 Wythe Avenue at the corner of North 11th street & Wythe 

 MONO NO AWARE V
  MONO NO AWARE is an international exhibition of contemporary artists and
  filmmakers whose work incorporates Super 8mm, 16mm, 35mm or altered
  light projections as part of a live performance or installation. No
  digital projections are presented; film and projected light only. We
  believe there is magic in seeing a film print projected, a presence a
  poet has when reading their own work, a feeling that resonates in your
  chest when seeing music performed live. For these reasons we encourage
  live projections with live additional audio, visual and performative
  elements. Participating artists include: Lindsay Mcintyre, Edward Merton
  Casey, Monica Baptista, Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe aka Lichens, Joey
  Huertas aka Jane Public, Patricia Ordonez, Morgan Nance, Luke Munn, Eric
  Ostrowski, Jodie Mack, Jasa Baka, Julia Thomas, Tyr Jami, Alex Mallis,
  Hunter Simpson, Theodore Rex King, Jordan Stone, Alex Cunningham and
  Amanda Long. It will be a wonderful evening filled with live musical
  performances, dance, poetry, installation, multiple-projections and
  audience participation! That means YOU! There is NO FEE TO ATTEND, so
  invite your friends ! Various snacks / drinks / treats will be available
  from our sponsors: Adobe software will raffle a new version of CS5.5 and
  Flash !!! ADOBE, KODAK, DIJIFI, PAC-LAB, RAW REVOLUTION, IZZE, ROUTE 11
  CHIPS, REEDS GINGER BREW, DAVID LYNCH'S ORGANIC COFFEE, EMERGEN-C,
  LARABAR This event is sponsored, in part, by the Greater New York Arts
  Development Fund of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs,
  administered by the Brooklyn Arts Council, Inc (BAC) and by the
  participants of MNA filmmaking workshops. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mono No Aware is a sponsored
  project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization.
  Contributions for the purposes of Mono No Aware must be made payable to
  Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
  The full program is listed on our website in the GALLERY includes bios
  and synopsis for each presentation. 

12/3
Los Angeles, California: Echo Park Film Center
http://www.echoparkfilmcenter.org/
8pm, 1200 N. Alvarado Street

 SOMEPLACE I DON'T BELONG
  A not-to-be-missed night of Italian Futurist ponderings, poignant
  portraits, animated evocations, intimate glimpses of shrimp, and much
  more. This collection of film and video includes work by Scott Stark,
  Janie Geiser, Matt Wolf, Allison Schulnik, Ben Coonley, Ely Kim, Keith
  Wilson, and John Davis, plus a few surprises. Highlights include Scott
  Stark's award-winning 16mm film "Speechless" (a mesmerizing and
  provocative meditation featuring animated 3D photographs taken from a
  set of ViewMaster 3D reels that accompanied a medical textbook entitled
  "The Clitoris"), Janie Geiser's haunting 16mm film "The Fourth Watch"
  (which was named by Film Comment as one of the top 10 experimental films
  of 2000-2010), Matt Wolf's cell phone-only mini-opus "Boca"
  (commissioned by Filmmaker Magazine with music by Owen Pallett/Final
  Fantasy), and Allison Schulnik's breathtaking stop-motion animation
  "Mound." Program compiled by John Palmer. Admission helps support Echo
  Park Film Center and the featured artists. Stick around after the
  screening for libations, treats, and lively discussions. $5 at the door
  - seating is limited. SHOW SITE: http://someplaceidontbelong.tumblr.com/
  FACEBOOK EVENT PAGE: https://www.facebook.com/events/188411011243935/ 

12/3
Manchester, England: Insight Film Festival
http://www.insightfestival.co.uk
11am- 11pm, Zion Arts Centre, Manchester

 INSIGHT FILM FESTIVAL
  The Insight Festival brings together films and audiences from around the
  world for a weekend spectacular of screenings, discussion and debate.
  Filmmakers of all faiths and none present work from around the world,
  exploring and challenging aspects of religion and belief. TICKETS
  Weekend Pass - £9.00/£6.00 (Concessions) Day Pass - £5.00/£3.50
  (Concessions) Festival Lecture - £3.00/£1.50 (Concessions)
  www.insightfestival.co.uk/tickets Festival highlights… The Insight
  Festival Lecture The first Insight Festival Lecture will be given by
  critically acclaimed author and screenwriter, Frank Cottrell Boyce
  (Millions, 24 hour Party People). Frank has worked with everyone from
  Michael Winterbottom to Danny Boyle, and will be discussing his approach
  to his work in the lecture titled 'Special Effect: The joy and pain of
  having a counter cultural set of beliefs'. Film Programme The 3rd
  Insight Festival 2011 received a record number of submissions, and with
  entries open internationally for the first time, this year's screenings
  are more exciting than ever. Insight announce animation, documentary and
  drama from across the globe. Full listings at
  www.insightfestival.co.uk/films Workshops BBC writersroom will host a
  free session about screenwriting with a chance to meet BBC writer and
  producer Henry Swindell. Join them for a workshop which focuses on
  championing writers from across the north of England. This event is
  FREE.

12/3
Manchester: Insight Film Festival
http://www.insightfestival.co,uk
11am, Zion Arts Centre, Manchester

 3RD INSIGHT FILM FESTIVAL 2011
  3rd Insight Film Festival 2011 Saturday 3 & Sunday 4 December Zion Arts
  Centre Manchester www.insightfestival.co.uk 0161 232 6084 The Insight
  Festival brings together films and audiences from around the world for a
  weekend spectacular of screenings, discussion and debate. Filmmakers of
  all faiths and none present work from around the world, exploring and
  challenging aspects of religion and belief. TICKETS Weekend Pass -
  £9.00/£6.00 (Concessions) Day Pass - £5.00/£3.50 (Concessions) Festival
  Lecture - £3.00/£1.50 (Concessions) www.insightfestival.co.uk/tickets
  Festival highlights… The Insight Festival Lecture The first Insight
  Festival Lecture will be given by critically acclaimed author and
  screenwriter, Frank Cottrell Boyce (Millions, 24 hour Party People).
  Frank has worked with everyone from Michael Winterbottom to Danny Boyle,
  and will be discussing his approach to his work in the lecture titled
  'Special Effect: The joy and pain of having a counter cultural set of
  beliefs'. Film Programme The 3rd Insight Festival 2011 received a record
  number of submissions, and with entries open internationally for the
  first time, this year's screenings are more exciting than ever. Insight
  announce animation, documentary and drama from across the globe. Full
  listings at www.insightfestival.co.uk/films Workshops BBC writersroom
  will host a free session about screenwriting with a chance to meet BBC
  writer and producer Henry Swindell. Join them for a workshop which
  focuses on championing writers from across the north of England. This
  event is FREE. 

12/3
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
3:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 OWEN LAND PROGRAM 1
  See notes for Dec. 2 , 6:45. 

12/3
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
5:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 OWEN LAND DIALOGUES
  DIALOGUES, OR A WAIST IS A TERRIBLE THING TO MIND 2007-09, 120 minutes,
  video. Land's final film – the first he had produced in more than 20
  years – consists of an episodic series of short films informed by his
  study of folklore, myth, history, and the theology of all major
  religions, including Gnosticism and cabala. With a healthy dose of irony
  and a proudly irreverent attitude toward all kinds of orthodoxies, Land
  readily applies the structure of the Platonic dialogue to explore themes
  of reincarnation, art criticism, and Tantra. "On one level, DIALOGUES is
  a parody of SCORPIO RISING, using era-specific hit records to locate
  scenes in time and mood; on another level, it's an interpretation of
  Plato's dialogue 'Phaedo', in which Socrates proves the doctrine of
  re-incarnation; on still another level, it is a polemic for the Tantric
  belief in the sacredness of male-female polarity. With music by Meredith
  Monk, Laurie Anderson, Joan Baez, Patti Smith, The Byrds, Phil Collins,
  Alice Cooper, Genesis, The Human League, et al. Rated R: Restricted to
  audiences with a knowledge of Art History." –O.L.

12/3
Pasadena, CA: Filmforum
http://www.lafilmforum.org/
8:00pm, the Armory Center for the Arts, 145 North Raymond Ave

 WALLACE BERMAN’S UNDERGROUND
  In the mid-1960's, Wallace Berman inspired and communed with a
  close-knit circle of actors and artists, who screened their underground
  films domestically among a group of Topanga Canyon bohemians. These
  films were influenced by Berman's spiritualist and radically amateur
  concepts of art, that nevertheless thrived in the intersection among
  art, Hollywood, and the institutions of the semi-commercial underground.
  Films to be screened include: Aleph by Wallace Berman (1956-66),
  Breakaway by Bruce Conner (1966), First Film by Russ Tamblyn (c. 1966),
  Rio Reel by Russ Tamblyn (c. 1968), A Dance Film Inspired by the Music
  of Jim Morrison by Toni Basil (1968), and Selections from Topanga Rose
  by George Herms (1960s). In person: Toni Basil, Tosh Berman, George
  Herms, Russ Tamblyn (schedules permitting)

12/3
San Francisco, California: Other Cinema
http://www.othercinema.com/
8:30, ATA, 992 Valencia Street

 INCREDIBLY STRANGE MUSIC
  DALE HOYT'S BRAILLE + WHAT THE FUTURE SOUNDED LIKE + Dale introduces
  this deadpan video about his father's career at Muzak, revealing some of
  the machinations behind what became known as "elevator music." Preceded
  by a clip from The Joy of Easy Listening, from none other than the BBC.
  ALSO British in origin is Matthew Bate's What the Future Sounded Like, a
  look at the early analog synthesizer scene in '60s England, with clips
  of Hawkwind and Roxy Music-era Brian Eno!! Keith Sanborn's Russian
  research has unearthed a rare Esfir Shub clip of the revolutionary
  Theremin, followed by John Roy's work-in-progress on the avant-garde
  hobo Harry Partch, Bitter Music. In 16mm, surreal post-war Soundies
  initiate a mini-review of the music-on-film genres: the campiest
  Scopitones, as well as The World's Worst Music Videos! Free beer AND
  free vinyl!! 

------------------------
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2011
------------------------

12/4
Los Angeles, California: Filmforum
http://www.lafilmforum.org/
2:00pm, the Downtown Independent, 251 S. Main Street

 COMMUNITY VISIONARIES: VISUAL COMMUNICATIONS AND THE DAWN OF ASIAN
 PACIFIC AMERICAN CINEMA 
  This program highlights the documentary-focused early years of Visual
  Communications (VC), an organization created by a group of visionary
  Asian American filmmakers, educators, and activists from UCLA's
  EthnoCommunications program. In person: Alan Kondo, Duana Kubo, Robert
  Nakamura, Eddie Wong! Films to be screened include Manzanar by Robert
  Nakamura (1971), Wong Sinsaang directed by Eddie Wong (1971), City City
  by Duane Kubo & Donna Deitch (1974), I Told You So by Alan Kondo (1974),
  and Cruisin' J-Town by Duane Kubo (1975).

12/4
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
3:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ESSENTIAL CINEMA: RAPT
  by Dimitri Kirsanoff In French with no subtitles, English synopsis
  available, 1934, 84 minutes, 35mm "RAPT is, paradoxically, both a film
  which looks back anachronistically toward the silent era and a work
  which belongs to the vanguard of sound cinema. Part of that paradox can
  be resolved by an understanding of the film's complex utilization of
  music. RAPT employs very little dialogue, and in this respect it is
  reminiscent of the part-talkie genre…. It is linked to such abstract and
  hybrid avant-garde works as VAMPYR and L'?GE D'OR. The radical nature of
  RAPT, however, resides in its vision of a cinematic musical score. In
  making the film, Kirsanoff worked closely with the composers Honegger
  and Hoerce." –Lucy Fisher

12/4
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
5:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ROBERT BREER PROGRAM 1
  With the exception of BREATHING, all of the films in this program were
  preserved by Anthology with generous support from the Andy Warhol
  Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.
  Unless otherwise noted, all films in this program are 16mm blown-up to
  35mm. FORM PHASES I (1952, 2 minutes, 16mm) FORM PHASES II (1953, 2
  minutes, 16mm) UN MIRACLE (1954, 30 seconds) Made with Pontus Hulten.
  RECREATION (1956, 1.5 minutes) A MAN AND HIS DOG OUT FOR AIR (1957, 2
  minutes) JAMESTOWN BALOOS (1957, 6 minutes) LE MOUVEMENT (1957, 14
  minutes) EYEWASH (1959, 3 minutes) EYEWASH (ALTERNATIVE VERSION) (1959,
  3 minutes) BLAZES (1961, 3 minutes) PAT'S BIRTHDAY (1962, 13 minutes,
  16mm) BREATHING (1963, 5 minutes, 16mm) 66 (1966, 5.5 minutes) 69 (1969,
  4.5 minutes) Total running time: ca. 70 minutes.

12/4
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
7:00 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ROBERT BREER PROGRAM 2
  With the exception of GULLS AND BUOYS, all of the films in this program
  were preserved by Anthology with generous support from the Andy Warhol
  Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.
  Unless otherwise noted, all films in this program are 16mm blown-up to
  35mm. 70 (1970, 5 minutes) 77 (1970, 6.5 minutes) FIST FIGHT (1964, 9
  minutes) GULLS AND BUOYS (1972, 8 minutes, 16mm) FUJI (1974, 9 minutes)
  SWISS ARMY KNIFE WITH RAT AND PIGEON (1981, 6.5 minutes) BANG (1986, 10
  minutes) Total running time: ca. 60 minutes.

12/4
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
8:45 pm, 32 2nd Avenue

 ROBERT BREER PROGRAM 3
  HOMAGE TO JEAN TINGUELY'S HOMAGE TO NEW YORK (1960, 9.5 minutes, 16mm,
  b&w) INNER AND OUTER SPACE (1960, 4 minutes, 16mm) HORSE OVER TEA KETTLE
  (1962, 8 minutes, 16mm) PBL NO. 2 (1968, 1 minute, 16mm) RUBBER CEMENT
  (1975, 10 minutes, 16mm) LMNO (1978, 9.5 minutes, 16mm) T. Z. (1979, 8.5
  minutes, 16mm) TRIAL BALLOONS (1982, 5.5 minutes, 16mm) A FROG ON THE
  SWING (1988, 5 minutes, 16mm) SPARKILL AVE! (1993, 5 minutes, 16mm) TIME
  FLIES (1997, 13.5 minutes, 16mm) ATOZ (2000, 5 minutes, 16mm) WHAT GOES
  UP (2000, 4 minutes, 16mm) Total running time: ca. 95 minutes.
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