Wednesday, September 29, 2010

BAM/PFA Gallery Exhibition / Book

Radical Light: Alternative Film and Video in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945–2000

(HALFLIFERS ARTIST PAGE)
Book Launch: October 15, 2010
BAM/PFA Film and Video Series: September 2010 through March 2011, co-sponsored by San Francisco Cinematheque
BAM/PFA Gallery Exhibition: October 6, 2010 through April 3, 2011
Film Series and Book Tour: January 2011 through December 2012

The San Francisco Bay Area has been home to a thriving and prominent film and videomaking community since at least the 1940s. Of this larger community, a substantial subset of artists, innovators, and experimentalists has pursued alternative forms of visual expression that have influenced other artists far beyond our foggy enclave. The rich history of this alternative practice is explored in the new book Radical Light, published jointly by UC Press and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Through our research efforts to synthesize the artistic output of this diverse group of film and video artists, BAM/PFA has amassed a collection of rare “ephemeral” materials that often represent the remaining traces of what were vital manifestations of the Bay Area media community, its artists, as well as its pedagogical institutions and exhibition venues. These overlooked, often visually striking, archival materials come in the form of posters for bygone cinema screenings, newsletters from extant and now-defunct media organizations, production stills from seminal films that capture the time of their making, historical correspondence by renowned artists, and many other artifacts that encapsulate a half-century’s media culture. Of additional interest, nearly a dozen artist-made collages and drawings commissioned for Radical Light will be displayed in their original form. A special sidebar focuses on the microcinema movement that emerged full-force in the early 1990s and which is attributed to the prophetic inspiration of several Bay Area curators who showed films in intimate settings beginning in the late 1970s. Organized as a loose timeline along the walls of the Theater Gallery, hundreds of discrete paper relics evoke the graphical playfulness and diverse means that sustained a still-flourishing community of alternative media artists.

Steve Seid and Kathy Geritz
Film and Video Curators

Radical Light is curated by Kathy Geritz, Steve Seid, and Steve Anker, Dean of the School of Film/Video at CalArts; the microcinema sidebar is curated by Steve Polta, Artistic Director, San Francisco Cinematheque.

ETC: Experimental Television Center 1969-2009-DVD

The DVD set is distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix (NYC)

The Experimental Television Center is pleased to announce the upcoming release of ETC: Experimental Television Center 1969-2009, a five DVD set presenting the electronic media work of over one hundred artists who have worked in the Center’s Residency Program during the last 40 years. The collection offers a look at the evolution of the unique artist-designed sound and image tools that are the hallmark of the Center’s studio and provides a view into the constantly changing artistic processes and practices that have shaped the work over the years. The set is being distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix.

Video art began to develop in the US in the late 1960s, with the introduction of new portable video tools. While many artists used the technology to document and have voice in social and political issues, others collaborated with technologists to design unique instruments which allowed the creation of imagery never before seen. ETC remains dedicated to the development of video and digital instruments in the service of creative visual and sonic investigation by artists from around the world.

This set contains works by the first generation of video and film artists – including Barbara Hammer, Gary Hill, Jud Yalkut and Aldo Tambellini - as well as contemporary works by Marisa Olson, Kristin Lucas, Lynne Sachs and Mark Street. The complete list of artists is below. A 132 page catalog is also included. The works have been widely exhibited internationally and received awards from festivals around the world.

For about 40 years the Center has offered programs in support of the media arts, offering an international residency Program, grants to individuals and media organizations, and sponsorship assistance for independent media and film artists. The Video History Web is an online resource for scholars concerning the formative development of media art and community television.

An essential component of the project, the digitizing of early video works recorded on obsolete formats, was performed through the Standby Program by Bill Seery. We also wish to recognize Maria Venuto and Kelly Spivey for their contributions. The newly digitized ETC works are archived at Cornell University Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media, to be made available to the public for research purposes.

This project has received support from the Digitization Project Grants Program at the New York State Council on the Arts, mediaThe foundation, and the Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science and Technology. The project manager was Aaron Miller. The art designer for the project was Diane Bertolo.

ETC: The Experimental Television Center 1969-2009 is distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix. Please contact EAI for more information. [www.eai.org or 212.337.0680]

5 DVD set, with 132 page catalog. Total running time: 19 hours.

Mara Alper • Amoeba Technology • Kristen Anchor • Benton Bainbridge • Irit Batsry • Bebe Beard • Alan Berliner • Kjell Bjorgeengen • David Blair • Peer Bode • Philip R Bonner • Jean-Pierre Boyer • Lawrence Brose • Nancy Buchanan • Barbara Buckner • Torsten Zenas Burns • Michael L. V. Butler • Abigail Child • Laurie Beth Clark • Cohen Charles • Connie Coleman • Dearraindrop • Andrew Deutsch • Kenneth Dominick • Monica Duncan • Nicholas Economos • David Fodel • Joshua Fried • Larry Gartel • Raymond Ghirardo • Jonnathan Giles • Shalom Gorewitz • Carol Goss • Alexander Hahn • Barbara Hammer • Julie Harrison • Sachiko Hayashi • Janene Higgins • Gary Hill • Tali Hinkis • Sara Hornbacher • Takahiko Iimura • Kelly Jacobson • Deborah Johnson • Brian Kane • Peggy Kay • Zohar Kfir • John Knecht • Andrew Koontz • Richard Kostelanetz • Annie Langan • Kyle Lapidus • Paula Levine • Henry Linhart • Jeanne Liotta • Jason Livingston • LoVid • Kristin Lucas • Darrin Martin • Mimi Martin • Christina McPhee • Rohesia Hamilton Metcalfe • Aaron Miller • Bianca Bob Miller • Terry Mohre • Brian Moran • Ikue Mori • NNeng • Marisa Olson • Carol Parkinson • John Phillips • Michael Phillips • Alan Powell • Nicholas Ray • Megan Roberts • Ron Rocco • Peter Rose • Eric Ross • Mary Ross • Dave Ryan • Lynne Sachs • Eric Schefter • Michael Schell • Matthew Schlanger • Jessie Shefrin • Alan Sondheim • Caspar Stracke • Mark Street • Chad Strohmayer • Aldo Tambellini • Carolyn Tennant • Matthew Underwood • Liselot van der Heijden • Siebren Versteeg • Ben Vida • Nancy Walker • Reynold Weidenaar • Ann-Sargent Wooster • Walter Wright • Jud Yalkut • Neil Zusman

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

VIDEO_DUMBO 2010

VIDEO_DUMBO FESTIVAL / BROOKLYN , NY
FAUNAUTICA 9/24 - 8PM
Beauty Plus Pity | Emily Vey Duke + Cooper Battersby | 2010|14:26
The Roar | Shaun Slifer | 2009 | 1:15
Koreanautica | Torsten Zenas Burns | 2010 | 17:00

Untitled - Hypno Project | Douglas Fishbone | 2009 | 12:55

How To Draw Sad Animals | Pere Ginard & Laura Gines | 2009 | 4:34

Versions | Oliver Laric | 2010 | 8:48

Real Snow White | Pilvi Takala | 2009 | 9:14