Search results for: NIST-COBIT-2019 Certification Book Torrent 👗 NIST-COBIT-2019 Latest Test Answers 😊 Test NIST-COBIT-2019 Voucher đŸ€ź Easily obtain free download of { NIST-COBIT-2019 } by searching on ✔ www.pdfvce.com ✔ đŸșNIST-COBIT-2019 Reliable Test Notes

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

Film as Film: Theory and Practice in the Work of Gregory J. Markopoulos
Opening Session

Introduction by Maja Naef and Markus Klammer
Jonas Mekas, Gregory J. Markopoulos Shoots Backgrounds for Galaxie (excerpt of Walden), c.1966, c.2 min
Mark Webber presents the book “Film as Film. The Collected Writings of Gregory
J. Markopoulos” (The Visible Press, 2014)

The Greek-American filmmaker Gregory J. Markopoulos (1928–1992) was one of the key figures in the development of postwar avant-garde film, and a co-founder of the New American Cinema Group. In his exquisitely stylized and dreamlike early films, and in the stunning works of the sixties and seventies, Markopoulos formulated a maverick aesthetic characterized by incomparable formal rigor, fascinating beauty, and the penetrating representation of interior worlds that emerge from the entwinement of image and sound into an ecstatic filmic language. He was able to infuse his films with poetic density and force using minimal filmic and financial means. Although the archive of his films, texts, research materials, correspondence and library has been located in Switzerland since his death, Markopoulos’ films have yet to be officially shown here, nor have they been the subject of extended scholarly discussion. On the occasion of the publication of his collected writings in September 2014, texts which underpin Markopoulos’ oeuvre with far-reaching theoretical reflections, this event presents three film programs and a colloquium that will discuss the many different aspects of his work.

A collaboration between Stadtkino Basel, eikones NCCR Iconic Criticism, and the Department of Media Studies at the University of Basel.

Written by Comments Off on Film as Film: Theory and Practice in the Work of Gregory J. Markopoulos

Luke Fowler on Film as Film

Luke Fowler on Film as Film

Luke Fowler reflects on Markopoulos’ films and writings ahead of the event at Tate Modern, London, next Friday.

“Gregory Markopoulos has been in my thoughts since his masterpiece Bliss inspired me to pick up a Bolex camera several years ago. This book collects many of Markopoulos’ strident and inspirational writings providing a wealth of experiences and provocations for future filmmakers and scholars everywhere. This publication, as well as the monumental Temenos screenings in Greece, will help to establish Markopoulos as one of the single most important filmmakers of the American avant-garde.”
—– Luke Fowler

Psyche, Bliss and Gammelion will be projected at the event on 31 October 2014. The films will be interspersed with readings from Film as Film: The Collected Writings of Gregory J. Markopoulos, which will be available for purchase throughout the event.

Vienna Retrospective

Vienna Retrospective, 19-24 November 2014

The upcoming retrospective at the Vienna Filmmuseum, within the context of Vienna Art Week, will include almost all of the available films by Markopoulos. Outside of Temenos, the Österreichisches Filmmuseum has the largest collection of Markopoulos films, including some unique prints, as a result of the close relationship between the filmmaker and the Filmmuseum’s founders Peter Kubelka and Peter Konlechner. The following introductory text is taken from the Filmmuseum website.

Gregory J. Markopoulos was twenty (and still a student at the University of Southern California) when he completed his first masterpiece, the one-hour Du sang, de la voluptĂ© et de la mort (1947-48). Influenced by surrealism and literary modernism, and along with Mara Deren and Kenneth Anger, he was one of the founders of the New American Cinema, the most significant movement in independent cinema after 1945. At the same time, that film marks the beginning of an individual course, as Markopoulos became one of the greatest formal inventors and innovators in the history of film: “A work formed in serious, radical creativity, employing what the Greeks called thrasos – fire, self-confidence, enthusiasm.” (Harry Tomicek)

Born in Toledo, Ohio in 1928, and raised with the Greek language and traditions (he didn’t speak English until he was seven years old), Markopoulos would follow his artistic goals with unprecedented rigor until his death in November 1992. Against any pigeonholing by generic terms such as “narrative”, ”underground”, “avant-garde” or ”art” film, he always vehemently upheld one motto: Film as Film.

Markopoulos was no stranger to cinematic storytelling – he attended lectures by Josef von Sternberg, observed Hitchcock and Lang at work and had contact with Cocteau and Godard during the fifties. But his own practice taught him that the deepest experiences available in cinema were to be found elsewhere: “Who can dare to imagine what a single frame might contain?” More and more, he realized the shape of his films directly during the filming process: composition, sequencing, montage, dissolves, multiple exposures – all of these processes (which the film industry usually delegates to an entire team), he accomplished himself, during the moments of filming.

The result is a cinema of true poetry, containing trance-like narratives such as Swain (1950) and Twice a Man (1963), as well as iridescent portraits of people (Galaxie) and spaces or structures (Ming Green, Gammelion, Sorrows), all made and released in the late 1960s when Markopoulos separated himself from the New York underground scene. His oeuvre of that period is characterized by an almost eerie sense of color and rhythm, and by ecstatic “chords” and clusters made of the shortest visual elements. At the same time, he searched for a utopian unity – a non-alienated relationship between life, filmmaking and film viewing.

Starting in 1967 and together with his partner, Robert Beavers (now the keeper of his estate), Gregory Markopoulos led a nomadic life marked by poverty, traveling between Italy, Belgium, Greece and Switzerland. He continued filming ceaselessly, but released no work after 1971. Instead he concentrated fully on that approximately 80-hour work which would sum up his artistic existence: Eniaios (“unity”, “uniqueness”), created for a special performance in nature, at the “Temenos” near the village of Lyssaraia in Greece.

22 years after Gregory Markopoulos’ death, the opportunities to see his films are still rare; the restoration and preservation of Eniaios is in progress, but far from complete. The Austrian Film Museum, with whom the artist had a long (and complicated) relationship, has collected his works for almost 50 years – and is proud to offer its international audience this retrospective of 26 works, the most comprehensive examination of Markopoulos’ cinema to date.

The retrospective takes place in conjunction with the Vienna Art Week and was organized with the help of Robert Beavers who will attend all screenings. At the opening, curator Mark Webber will present his new book, “Film as Film: The Collected Writings of Gregory J. Markopoulos.” On November 21, Beavers will present four restored reels from ”Eniaios IV” and will speak about the ongoing Temenos project.

Visit the calendar for details of each screening, or view the programme on the Filmmuseum website.

Film Comment Review

Film Comment has published the first review of Flare Out: Aesthetics 1966–2016 in its July/August 2016 issue. Jordan Cronk’s enthusiastic response to the book concludes that Gidal’s prose is “as dense, complex, and harmonically composed as any the field has produced.”

Referencing the first publication from The Visible Press, the review draws parallels with Gregory Markopoulos, whose dictum “Film as Film” was also, coincidentally, used by Gidal in his own writing.

Gidal responds:-

thanks for the lovely review by jordan cronk, just a note about fim as film, which does not reference the work or writings of gregory markopoulos … when writing my piece “film as film” (not reprinted in my flare out: aesthetics 1966-2016)  around 1972 for the artists film issue of Art and Artists, i had thought the phrase was of my invention, due to ignorance of the many others who used that phrase from the 1920s onwards … in any case, gregory m. once phoned me in london in the late 1970s in a fury about the use of the term for an exhibition at the hayward gallery and also at the Kölnischer Kunstverein, organized by Wilhelm and Birgit Hein and others, in any case i said gregory before you blame only them i have to tell you i wrote a piece called that in the early 70s not aware of your use of the term and he said oh that’s ok peter, but this exhibition is an outrage etc etc … so somehow i was exempted. but this note just to say it doesnt reference anything but my own ideas (which of course don’t exist in a vacuum). and to thank film comment for the kind review. the visible press will no doubt echo beckett’s “7 copies sold, 3 at trade discount”.

Gidal’s text “Film as Film”, which originally appeared in the December 1972 issue of Art and Artists, will be reprinted in “Shoot Shoot Shoot: The First Decade of the London Film-Makers’ Co-operative 1966-76”, due to be published by LUX in October 2016.

Soft Floor, Hard Film: 50 Years of the London Film-Makers’ Co-op

Frieze Video, ICA Artists’ Film Club and LUX present

Soft Floor, Hard Film: 50 Years of the London Film-Makers’ Co-op

The London Film-Makers’ Co-operative (LFMC) started life at Better Books, a counter-culture bookshop on Charing Cross Road, where a group led by poet Bob Cobbing and filmmakers Stephen Dwoskin and Jeff Keen met to screen films. Initially inspired by the activities of the New American Cinema Group in New York, the London Co-op grew into a pioneering organisation that incorporated a film workshop, cinema space and distribution office. 

The LFMC played a crucial role in establishing moving image as an art form in the UK and internationally. Malcolm Le Grice, Peter Gidal, Annabel Nicolson and Lis Rhodes were among its active members in the 1960s and ’70s, and later associates included John Akomfrah, Derek Jarman and Isaac Julien. Through the work of LUX, which continues to manage its distribution collection, the radical, inventive and varied output of the LFMC continues to influence artists and filmmakers today.

On the 50th anniversary–to the day–of the LFMC’s formation, Frieze Video presents Soft Floor, Hard Film, a short video about the organisation produced in collaboration with artist and writer Matthew Noel-Tod, who will chair a discussion with former LFMC members on its early ideals and ongoing legacy.

The event also marks the launch of a new book, published by LUX and edited by Mark Webber. Shoot Shoot Shoot: The First Decade of the London Film-Makers’ Co-operative 1966–76 brings together texts, interviews, images and archival documents, and includes newly commissioned essays by Mark Webber, Kathryn Siegel & Federico Windhausen.

Written by Comments Off on Soft Floor, Hard Film: 50 Years of the London Film-Makers’ Co-op