Search results for: Salesforce-Communications-Cloud Practice Test 🍹 Salesforce-Communications-Cloud Reliable Exam Book ☂ New Salesforce-Communications-Cloud Test Forum 🚵 Search for ⮆ Salesforce-Communications-Cloud ⮄ and download it for free on ➽ www.pdfvce.com 🢪 website 🧭Original Salesforce-Communications-Cloud Questions

Cineaste review

“Film as Film” reviewed in Cineaste

The Winter 2015 issue of Cineaste (Vol. XLI, No. 1) contains a glowing review of Film as Film by Los Angeles based critic Jordan Cronk. The magazine, which contains a review of P. Adams Sitney’s The Cinema of Poetry in the same issue, is now available on newstands.

“Markopoulos was notably averse to critical deconstructions of his work, which likely accounts for such a thorough philosophical inventory on his own behalf. A book such as Film as Film is therefore the perfect complement to his legacy, consolidaying the artist’s own words into a singular aesthetic testament, free of analysis yet presented with striking clarity of purpose.”

Jordan Cronk, Cineaste, Winter 2015

About the Authors

Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema
Edited by Mark Webber
The Visible Press, September 2017

Thom Andersen has lived in Los Angeles for most of his life. His knowledge of and enthusiasm for the city has deeply informed his work, not least his widely praised study of its representation in movies, Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), which was voted one of the 50 Best Documentaries of All Time in a Sight & Sound critics’ poll. Andersen made his first short films and entered into the city’s film scene as a student of USC and UCLA in the 1960s. His hour-long documentary Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1974) was realised under an AFI scholarship and has lately been restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. His research into the victims of the Hollywood Blacklist, done in collaboration with film theorist Noël Burch, produced the video essay Red Hollywood (1996) and book Les Communistes de Hollywood: Autre chose que des martyrs (1994). Andersen’s recent films include Reconversão (2012) on the work of Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura, and The Thoughts That Once We Had (2015), a personal history of cinema loosely inspired by Gilles Deleuze. A published writer since 1966, Andersen has contributed to journals such as Film Comment, Artforum, Sight & Sound and Cinema Scope. He has taught at the California Institute of the Arts since 1987, and was previously on faculty at SUNY Buffalo and Ohio State University. Also distinguished for his skills as a film curator, he has acted as programmer for Los Angeles Filmforum and curated thematic retrospectives for the Viennale. Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema is the first collection of his essays.

Mark Webber is a film curator based in London, who has been responsible for major screening events or touring programmes hosted by institutions such as Tate Modern, LUX and ICA (London), Whitney Museum (New York), Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), Oberhausen Kurzfilmtage, IFFR Rotterdam and international festivals, museums and art centres. He was a programmer for the BFI London Film Festival from 2000-12, and is also the editor of Two Films by Owen Land, Film as Film: The Collected Writings of Gregory J. Markopoulos, Shoot Shoot Shoot: The First Decade of the London Film-Makers’ Co-operative 1966-76 and co-editor of Flare Out: Aesthetics 1966–2016. www.markwebber.org.uk

Thom Andersen at Skylight Books

Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema Los Angeles book launch at Skylight Books on 12 October 2017, at 7:30pm. Thom will be present to read from, sign, and discuss the new book with writer and poet Tosh Berman.

Slow Writing is a collection of articles by Thom Andersen that reflect on the avant-garde, Hollywood feature films, and contemporary cinema. His critiques of artists and filmmakers as diverse as Yasujirō Ozu, Nicholas Ray, Andy Warhol, and Christian Marclay locate their work within the broader spheres of popular culture, politics, history, architecture, and the urban landscape. The city of Los Angeles and its relationship to film is a recurrent theme. These writings, which span a period of five decades, demonstrate Andersen’s social consciousness, humour and his genuine appreciation of cinema in its many forms. Thom Andersen’s films include the celebrated documentary essays Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1975), Red Hollywood (1996), Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), and The Thoughts That Once We Had (2015). Of the thirty-four texts included in the book, six are hitherto unpublished; others have been revised or appear in different versions to those previously available.

Thom Andersen has lived in Los Angeles for most of his life. His knowledge of and enthusiasm for the city has deeply informed his work, not least his widely praised study of its representation in movies, Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), which was voted one of the 50 Best Documentaries of All Time in a Sight & Sound critics’ poll. Andersen made his first short films and entered into the city’s film scene as a student of USC and UCLA in the 1960s. His hour-long documentary Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1974) was realised under an AFI scholarship and has lately been restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. His research into the victims of the Hollywood Blacklist, done in collaboration with film theorist Noël Burch, produced the video essay Red Hollywood (1996) and book Les Communistes de Hollywood: Autre chose que des martyrs (1994). Andersen’s recent films include Reconversão (2012) on the work of Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura, and The Thoughts That Once We Had (2015), a personal history of cinema loosely inspired by Gilles Deleuze. A published writer since 1966, Andersen has contributed to journals such as Film Comment, Artforum, Sight and Sound and Cinema Scope. He has taught at the California Institute of the Arts since 1987, and was previously on faculty at SUNY Buffalo and Ohio State University. Also a respected film curator, he has acted as programmer for Los Angeles Filmforum and curated thematic retrospectives for the Viennale. Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema is the first collection of his essays. 

Tosh Berman is a writer and poet. His two books are Sparks-Tastic (Rare Bird) and a book of poems, The Plum in Mr. Blum’s Pudding (Penny-Ante Editions). He is also the publisher and editor of his press, TamTam Books, which published the works of Boris Vian, Serge Gainsbourg, Guy Debord, Jacques Mesrine, Ron Mael & Russell Mael (Sparks) Gilles Verlant, and Lun*na Menoh. 

With thanks to David Gonzalez and Skylight Books.

Early Clues to the New Direction

Early Clues to the New Direction

Andrew Meyer, An Early Clue to the New Direction, 1966, 28 min
Andrew Meyer, The Match Girl, 1966, 25 min
Warren Sonbert, Hall of Mirrors, 1966, 7 min
David Brooks, Winter, 1964-66, 16 min
Robert Cowan, Rockflow, 1968, 9 min
Introduced by Thom Andersen

Ein Programm zur Pop-Avantgarde, mit der sich Andersen am Anfang seiner Karriere als Autor und Filmemacher vor allem befasste. Über den (zu Unrecht vergessenen) Andrew Meyer schrieb er 1966 einen seiner ersten großen Texte, fasziniert vom “subtilen filmischen Realismus” in An Early Clue to the New Direction und der widersprüchlichen Erzählung von Hans Christian Andersens Märchen in der Warhol-Factory (mit Andy als Erzähler, seinem Marilyn-Porträt als Großmutter und den Stones als Rhythmusgebern). Warren Sonberts Hall of Mirrors kontrastiert Hollywood-Outtakes einer Spiegelkabinettszene von 1948 mit Spiegel-Posen der Warhol-Stars René Richard und Gerard Malanga (die Verzweiflung der Kleinfamiliengründer und der Narzissmus ihrer Kinder). Dazu: zwei musikfilmische Raritäten von David Brooks und Robert Cowan.

Christoph Huber

Written by Comments Off on Early Clues to the New Direction

Seconds in Eternity + Luke Fowler

Film as Film: Theory and Practice in the Work of Gregory J. Markopoulos
Seconds in Eternity

Gregory J. Markopoulos, Sorrows, 1969, 6 min
Gregory J. Markopoulos, Gammelion, 1968, 54 min
Artist’s Talk: Luke Fowler: Markopoulos Measures

Following screenings of Sorrows and Gammelion, Luke Fowler (Glasgow) will give an artist’s talk titled “Markopoulos Measures: a personal take on Markopoulos in light of our current digital/film economy”.

SORROWS
Gregory J. Markopoulos, USA, 1969, 16mm, colour, sound, 6 min
The Swiss chateau built for Wagner by King Ludwig II is documented in Sorrows, an in-camera film composed through intricate layers of superimposition.

GAMMELION
Gregory J. Markopoulos, USA, 1968, 16mm, colour, sound, 54 min
Markopoulos’ elegant film of the castle of Roccasinibalda in Rieti, Italy, (then owned by patron, publisher and activist Caresse Crosby) employs an intricate system of fades to extend six minutes of footage to an hour of viewing time. This inventive new film form, in which brief images appear amongst measures of black and clear frames, was a crucial step towards Markopoulos’ final work Eniaios (1947-91). Though seemingly an abstract architectural study, Gammelion is based on Julien Gracq’s surrealist novel Chateau d’Argol, and incorporates elements found at the site to represent the characters and events of the book’s narrative.

Written by Comments Off on Seconds in Eternity + Luke Fowler