Andreas Broeckmann on Sat, 10 Oct 1998 12:37:52 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Digital Cuts in Cologne 28-31 October |
<nettime-announcer> Von: nils@khm.de (Nils Roeller) Datum: 08.10.98, 14:46:57 Betreff: Digital cuts in Cologne 28-31 October Digitale '98 Digital Cuts Computers were not initially invented to produce images but rather to control other machines. Undoubtably, today these control and command machines are changing the field of film editing. The breaking up and rebuilding of visual and sound sequences which characterizes the classical film editing gives way to a compositional working method thus following linear and hierarchical working methods similar to word processing. Editing and mixing are joined together in a single apparatus. While crossing through the shared digital code, complex layers of music, language, text, pictures and movement are formed. Filigreed weave structures which are no longer bound to real work spaces are the outcome. Beginnings of homebased artwork surface, showing once again that film production can take place outside of professional film making centres. The Present and the Absent shows in four examples how Israelic artists in a contemporary way handle memories in film and how they combine history with the present. The day has been curated by Irit Batsry. Her film "The Roman Wars" will be screened as the opening of the day, followed by David Perlov who will talk about his works and will show excerpts of his film "DIARY" shot on 16mm, a diary filmed from 1973-1983. The seventeen years old Yonatan Vinitsky has produced during the last two years a very personal home video about identity and the history of violence. "I LIVE YOU" will be screened for the first time during the Digitale '98. Tirtza Even presents her beginnings dealing with hi(story) in hyptertext. Adam Berg shows a new version of his work "Inter-View II: Unfolded Dialogue" which has been reworked especially for the Digitale '98. Separating and Stringing Together shows positionings of montages in opposition to each other. Roberto Perpignani will report about his works as an editor of Orson Welles' films, about his collaboration with Bernardo Bertolucci and the Brothers Taviani. Maurice Lemaître is a pioneer of Lettrist cinema. Lettrism as the most radical art movement in the 50's had the determination to revolutionise cinema with techniques such as cover painting and scratches. In how far editing as a principle in film making can be avoided will be discussed in Heinz Emigholz' talk and presentation. In the "Chequerboard" of the fourth "Roth-Wiener-Teppich", written text and one-dimensional pictures are interwoven, but also usually disregarded pieces about live and "garbage". Ingrid Wiener will report on this collaboration with different artists - a collaboration which has been kept alive through her individual loom. Lynn Hershman, who also deals with industry based weaving art, theorises about the relationship between computer based work, social production of identities and memories. She uses Ada Lovelace as a working example. Thomas Brinkmann and the RECHENZENTRUM atomise visual images and sounds during their performances, thereby destroying contrasts. M. Meisen-Jelas will simultaneously translate the performance into sign language. PIC'N'MIX Peter Whitehead loves to see himself as a magician, falconer, god and eccentric film and rockstar of the 60's movement. Chris Petit, Iain Sinclair and Dave McKean use reports and self-representations of this character and through techniques of collage and montage created a documentary - "The Falconer". Fiction and reality merge together in this Avid-controlled assemblage about this living beat generation legend. The first ever German screening will take place in the afternoon and is later discussed by Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair. Remixing has already established itself in the music industry: Amos Zamorski and Andrew Chitty are renowned for their sound and film remixes for British television and will respond to Petit's recently procuded "radio on" remix. Keith Griffiths and John Wyver curate this day and show the connections between comics, cut-ups and strange cuts. In the evening, musician Bruce Gilbert will first transmit acoustic SOLI and will prepare us for a screening of "RADIO ON", a long lasting visual journey. Homework In larger pre-industrial communities spinning and weaving were a collaborated production process of goods and tales. Production took place in front of the homely hearth. Today, most hearths have been exchanged for television screens. Work takes place outside the home and the telling of tales is left to others. There are some film makers who have taken this as a starting point and have interfered in this run of things. Andrej Ujica and Heinz Emigholz will show us their work copied out of private recordings and the television and will talk about their associations towards this work: the revolution in Romanian television and the tears of a Brazilian football star are just two examples of their electronic plundering. Thomas Balkenhol will talk about his collaborated work with children in Turkey and Canada. His aim was to use Dziga Vertov's Kino-Eye in the production of contemporary technical pictures. Yvonne Angkawidjaja and Filip Krejelk are organisers of the Fan Film Festival in Deggendorf and will look at films and fans and their positive response to the film and television industry. F.M. Einheit/GRY and band will be performing in the basement of the Koelner Filmhaus on the last evening of the festival. The sounds and voices recorded at this event will simultaneously be screened on various internet channels. The relationship between an on-line concert and text will be tested. The Filmhaus Cinema will be screening David Perlov's "DIARY III-VI". An "Instant Archeology" project recorded on an ES 7 will be filmed and edited during the Digitale '98. Parts of this work will be screened as a finishing film during the final evening. www: Timothée Ingen-Housz ES 7: Michael Mikina, Chris Chroma, Anja Theismann Inserts: Loki - a project of Anselm Weidmann and Peter C. Simon Nils Roeller Academy of Media Arts Peter-Welter-Platz 2 50676 Cologne 0049 - 221 - 20189- 226 Fax : 17