videodance (38)



RELEASE OF THE BOOK

”TERPSICHORE IN ZEROES AND ONES.

ESSAYS ON VIDEODANCE”

THURSDAY 27th MAY, 7PM

at CCEBA (Cultural Centre of Spain in Buenos Aires),

Paraná 1159

"Terpsichore in zeroes and ones. Essays on Videodance" is the first collection of articles published in Spanish about this particular art form, questioning its own and complex grammar.

The book will be presented to the public on Thursday 27th May at 7PM at the Cultural Centre of Spain in Buenos Aires (CCEBA), Paraná 1159. Jointly co-edited by Guadalquivir Publishing House, the CCEBA and the International Festival VideoDanzaBA, and compiled by Susana Temperley and Silvina Szperling, this publication is the result of the first two editions of the International Symposium on Videodance (2007/2009), also featuring some other essays, yet unpublished in Argentina.

The presentation will be complemented with the interactive performance

S P E A K 3. 0, by Alejandra Ceriani, Fabián Kesler and Fabricio Costa Alisedo.

Authors: Prologues by Silvina Szperling and Rodrigo Alonso.

Authors of the essays (in order of appearance): Oscar Traversa (Arg); Ivani Santana (Br); Alejandra Vignolo (Arg); Claudia Sánchez (Arg); Alejandra Ceriani (Arg); Laura Papa (Arg); Paulo Caldas (Br); Simon Fildes (UK); Alexandre Veras Costa (Br); Erica Koleff (Arg); Gabriela Tropia Gomes (Br- UK); Douglas Rosenberg (USA) Susana Temperley (Arg); Ladys González (Arg); Ellen Bromberg (USA); Sandra Mathern-Smith (USA); Graciela Taquini (Arg).

more info at www.VideoDanzaBA.com.ar

available online at http://www.libreriaguadalquivir.com/libros/10/Terpscore-en-ceros-y-unos-Ensayos-de-videodanza/

About “Terpsichore in zeroes and ones. Essays on Videodance”

The richness of this publication is founded in its diversity of views, including those from scholars specialized in disciplines close to Videodance who have made important contributions from the fields of Semiotics, Philosophy and Art Criticism, as well as the practice of video, cinema, digital art and dance. And even reflections upon the use of the Internet, the Interactive Systems in relation to Education, AIDS and social movements. Thinkers and artists from Argentina, Brazil, the USA and the UK converge in this book. These essays will begin to cover an increasing need and curiosity from researchers, students and artists, supplying information and reflections in Spanish which dialogue among them, in the way of a rich and bright mesh.

Terpsichore, our Muse of the Dance, keeps on getting transformed in the 21st Century. She dances in the cyberspace as well as in the street, on the videotape and at the museum, in the theatre and on the screen, in the paper as well as in life.

Other news of the International Festival VideoDanzaBA

| Call for entries 2010. Videodances and Documentaries on Dance

DEADLINE: JUNE, 15th 2010

Pieces must be registered online at www.VideoDanzaBA.com.ar

They must be sent by regular mail up to June 15th, 2010 (postmarked date valid) to:

FESTIVAL INTERNACIONAL VIDEODANZABA

CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION CINEMATOGRAFICA

Benjamín Matienzo 2571 (C1426 DAU) - Buenos Aires – Argentina


Additional press material

WHO ARE WE?

Since 1995, VideoDanzaBA, founded as Festival Internacional de Video-danza de Buenos Aires, is a platform for divulging, learning, discussing, and developing networks about the artistic work around the axis body-technology in the broadest sense.

With a strong accent on the exchange with the Latin American countries, that lead to the establishment of MERCOSUR Videodance Circuit (CVM) and the Latin American Videodance Forum (FLV), VideoDanzaBA has also developed residency plans with foreign organizations such as South East Dance (RU), among others, to increase the research opportunities and the artistic exchange, in a frame that encourages diversity.

In 2008, at its tenth edition, the festival widened its range to a broader arch of artistic forms linked to videodance: installations and performances that involve new technologies and interfaces in real time.

In 2009, thanks to the support of Iberescena, the festival presented again multimedia live performances, with companies from Spain, Chile and Argentina. Also, the Second International Symposium on Videodance (SIV) “Thinking Videodance II” was held with scholars from Brazil, Argentina and USA, among other countries.

This year 2010 –our 15th birthday- we continue with the same line. The publishing of a book, two residencies, a project development LAB, workshops for professionals and for members of the community, scholarships and internships -from our Education Department-, will add up to our usual screenings (open call, work-in-progress, retrospectives and special screenings).

The audience access, the artistic communication and the development of the regional production are our major priorities.

The festival VideoDanzaBA 10 has support from:

INCAA (National Film Institute)

INT (National Theatre Institute)

CCEBA (Cultural Centre of Spain in Buenos Aires)

British Council

CIC (Research Centre on Film)

ABOUT Silvina Szperling – Director of the Festival VideoDanzaBA

  • Choreographer, video artist and curator, dance journalist.
  • Director of the International Video-dance Festival of Buenos Aires.
  • Coordinator of Mercosur Videodance Circuit and Latin American Videodance Forum.
  • Curator and artistic co-director of Buenos Aires Contemporary Dance Festival in 2008.

Graduated from the First School of Body Expression, directed by Patricia Stokoe (1979) and from the Dance School of Margarita Bali (1986), Silvina Szperling has been a choreographer for both conventional and non-conventional stages since 1985. In 1993 she started to make video-dance, documentaries on dance and collaborations in multimedia pieces as a video artist. Her formation in video-dance includes the First Video-dance Workshop for choreographers by Jorge Coscia (1883), the six-week video-dance school by Douglas Rosenberg as a grant holder at the American Dance Festival (1994), in addition to Director of Photography (1995, SICA, by Rodolfo Denevi), Documentary Video (1994, Ricardo Rojas Cultural Centre, by Andrés Di Tella), and master classes by Thierry De Mey at the Experimental Centre of Teatro Colón (2006).

Her work in Video-dance initiated this art form in Argentina. Her pieces Temblor, Bilingual duetto, sistersister, SZiS and Chámame have been screened at many festivals in her country and abroad. Temblor won the Best Editing Prize from the National Secretariat of Culture, and has been included at the New York Public Library’s Dance Collection at Lincoln Center, as well as at the Argentine National Museum of Fine Arts’ Video Collection. Her documentaries Danza argentina en los 60 and Escrito en el aire have been produced through grants from the National Fund for the Arts. Between January and March, 2000 she produced and directed the weekly TV program Videodanza, nationally broadcast by Channel 7 Argentina. In July, 2002 she made a residency as a guest artist at the Video-dance Summer Workshop at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her video-dance SZiS was awarded a grant from Dance Film Association NYC and was premiered as part of the competitive screening at the III International Jewish Film Festival of Buenos Aires (Hoyts General Cinema, November, 2005). It was screened at Tandil Film Festival, Oberá en Cortos (Misiones, Argentina, 2006) and IDN Festival - Imatge, Dansa i Nous Mitjans (Barcelona, 2007). Chámame was premiered at Alliance Française in Buenos Aires, and has been screened at moves09 (Machester, UK), FRAME (Porto, Portugal), agite y sirva (Puebla, Mexico), UFBA (Salvador de Bahía, Brazil) and Dance Camera West (Los Angeles, USA).

She is the founder and director of the International Video-dance Festival of Buenos Aires, which has developed eleven editions between 1995 and 2009. The Festival has been supported by public institutions such as the National Fund for the Arts, the National Secretariat of Culture, the City’s Secretariat of Culture and the University of Buenos Aires, the National Theatre Institute (INT), the National Film Institute (INCAA), as well as private institutions such as Fundación Antorchas, the Research Centre on Film (CIC) and Channel á, among others. Its International supports have included the embassies of France, Canada, USA, Holland and Brazil at Buenos Aires, the Cultural Centre of Spain in Buenos Aires (CCEBA), the Goethe Institute, the Cunningham Dance Foundation, the American Dance Festival, the Cinémathèque de la danse of Paris and the Filmmuseum Netherlands. The Festival is partner of MERCOSUR VIDEODANCE CIRCUIT, within the frame of which in 2005 a double DVD was edited containing pieces by 20 artists from the region. It has been distributed both regionally and worldwide (Dance Camera West/Los Angeles, VideoDance/Atenas, Dança em Foco/Río de Janeiro, Dança em foco/Berlin, Danscamdanse/Belgium, FIVU/Montevideo, Andanzas/La Paz, El Cruce/Rosario, among other Festivals). In 2007 a second compilation was edited in DVD -CVM2- which is distributed through the website www.VideoDanzaBA.com.ar

In 2006 Silvina coordinated the Exchange of Artistic Residencies Argentina-UK,

Festival carried out with the South East Dance agency from England, patronized by the Arts Council of England and the British Council. The first phase of the exchange, held in Brighton and London, included the Postgraduate Course in Videodance at The Place. The closing phase took place in Buenos Aires with the Laboratory in Videodance, in which Argentine and English artists took part, within the frame of the Festival. In 2007 she coordinated the Exchange of Artistic Residencies of the Mercosur Videodance Circuit, with artists from Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay in the cities of Río de Janeiro, Montevideo and Buenos Aires. Szperling has also curated and produced the video-dance section at Festival Buenos Aires Danza Contemporánea (2000 and 2002).

She was commissioned by UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) to write an article about Argentine and Latin American video-dance (Taking tools into my own hands) included at the book Envisioning dance on film and video (Routledge, New York - London, 2002).

Szperling was invited as a panelist and curator to idat99 (International dance and technology conference) at Tempe, Arizona, to the Dance for the Camera Symposium at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (USA, 2000), to Mostra de video-dansa in Barcelona (1999) and to the Festivals Dance screen 2002 (Monaco) and 2005 (Brighton, England), among others. She has given Video-dance Workshops at Ricardo Rojas Cultural Centre/University of Buenos Aires, at the Research Centre on Film/CIC (Buenos Aires) and in numerous cities in Argentina (Córdoba, Rosario, Mendoza, San Martín de los Andes, Corrientes, Santa Fe, Paraná, Jujuy, Oberá), as well as in Dança em Foco (Río de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, Brazil), FIVU (Montevideo, Uruguay), Andanzas (La Paz, Bolivia), UArcis (Santiago, Chile) and at the International Film and Television School (San Antonio de los Baños, Cuba).

Szperling has been a free-lance dance writer for the newspaper La Opinión in Los Angeles and for Dance Magazine, USA, and she has collaborated with Argentine press media such as Página/12, Balletin dance and Funámbulos. She was a part of the Journalists’ Comitee of the Nijinsky Awards at Monaco Dance Forum (Dec, 2002-04).

She has worked at Buenos Aires Festival de Cine Independiente-BAFICI as an Assistant to the Artistic Director (1999-2000). She has also worked as a Coordinator of Workshops, tributes and special events at Festival Internacional de Cine de Mar del Plata (2000, 2001, 2006, 2007) and Festival de Cine para Niños y Jóvenes (Nov, 2001).

Silvina has been the Technical and Video Director at SZ Danza Company. She has collaborated in the creation of the multimedia pieces Las hijas de Rosita (1995), La InComodidad de los Cuerpos, Paseo inclinado (1996), Croquet en el living (1997) and Inflamable (2000).

Read more…
View our new uploaded video of Featured Choreographer, Larry Keigwin, who shares his Success Story Promoting Dance with Video. Share your comments with us! Stay tuned for more success stories from the panelists from this Information Session at the 2010 APAP conference in NYC. http://youtube.com/user/FilmingDance4web.
Read more…
Call for Submissions of Student Dance Films, postmark deadline, July 15, 2009. More info: http://www.dance.utah.edu/index.php/program/detail/C37/ The University of Utah Department of Modern Dance and the Division of Film Studies are pleased to announce a call for submissions of original student dance works made specifically for the medium of video or film. An evening of student works will be presented on Thursday, September 10, 2009, in conjunction with the International Dance for the Camera Festival. Students of the University of Utah’s Department of Modern Dance and Division of Film Studies will present an evening of student works chosen from submissions from around the world. Selected by a jury of professionals and educators in the field, the adjudication process provides valuable feedback to submitting students. The adjudicated evening provides young filmmakers and choreographers a venue for their work, and provides audiences a glimpse of the work of future dance filmmakers from around the world. Being accepted are: - Choreography for the Camera - original work made specifically for the video/film medium or staged work remade for the camera (performance documentation will not be adjudicated) - Documentary - productions which include interviews or other educational elements in addition to choreography - Experimental/Digital Technologies - work that extends the boundaries of the medium and exists only in the realm of video, film or new technologies Students submitting works must be or have been enrolled in a full-time university undergraduate or graduate degree program, or a dance film workshop when the work was made. The postmark deadline for national and international submissions is 5:00 pm, Wednesday, July 15, 2009. There is no submission fee. Only Region 1 or All Region DVD formats will be accepted. Please send all entries and inquires to: Dance for Camera Festival Department of Modern Dance The University of Utah 330 South 1500 East, Rm. 106 Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0280 Phone: 801-581-7327 Fax: 801-581-5442 For more information please contact: Student Co-Director Shannon Vance: allthe5dance@yahoo.com Student Co-Director Erin Empey: erin_eb@hotmail.com
Read more…

call for entries - video dance 2009

The call for entries is now open for the 2009 VideoDansa projects competition. This competition, organised by NU2's with the collaboration of TELEVISIÓN OF CATALUNYA and the Generalitat de Catalunya's Department of Culture and Media, is only open to artists working in Catalunya. This year, three projects will be selected and be granted between 6.000 and 12.000 euros each towards production.Terms and conditions (in Catalan) at their Website or directly the PDFDeadline for submitting projects: May 30th.+ info: info@nu2s.org
Read more…

Linda Sabo (back of her head), Vicky Bloor, and Steph Wright at the Screendance conference.photo: American Dance Festival 2008/Sara D. DavisI'm finally home after several weeks on the road, crossing the country and then heading south for the second Screendance: State of the Art conference at the American Dance Festival. The topic for this year's conference was CURATING THE PRACTICE/CURATING AS PRACTICE. There were about 20 registered participants, coming from all over the US and Europe, and we were a good mix of artist/makers, teacher/scholars, and curators. While some of the old topics came up (like what is the definition of screendance?) the presence of the over-arching theme of curating helped guide many of the discussions into new territory, and keep us on topic.Douglas Rosenberg, a filmmaker, scholar, and organizer of the conference started off the proceedings with a lecture about the history of curating as it arose out of the visual arts field and how this practice has gradually slipped by the wayside with the rise of the festival model in screendance. He spoke about the original premise of curating in the art world as a means of creating meaning by grouping different works of art together. This combination of art works creates a meta-narrative between the pieces and can serve to support a thesis about the art put forth by the curator. In this way curating can help shape new ideas in art.I appreciated learning about how curating differs from "programming", which is generally how dance film festivals work. For a long time I've felt dissatisfied by the programs at festivals, particularly the shorts programs, because they can be such a grab bag of films that seem to have nothing to do with each other. Usually these programs are billed as the "best" new dance films of the year, with the dubious value judgment of "best" being the only unifying theme. With no other underlying meaning to connect the films together, I as a viewer often find myself feeling disappointed when the films fall short of my expectations of what "the best" dance film should be. I leave most screenings feeling like the vast majority of screendance is boring and uninspired, when in reality, I just didn't have enough context to view them under.Helping to illustrate this difference between curating and programming, there were several curated screenings during the conference as well as screenings that were part of the "Dancing for the Camera" festival. One of these curated programs was put together by Claudia Kappenberg, an artist and scholar from the University of Brighton and was entitled "Paradoxical Bodies." In her program notes Kappenberg described "Paradoxical Bodies" as seeking "to address the peculiar premise of real bodies on screen, in itself a paradoxical proposition, which mixes and purposefully confounds mental states and actual physical existence." With this introduction we watched seven experimental films that were often oblique and seemed to float in the timeless space of ritual. The program included ELEMENT (1973) by Amy Greenfield, HWRGAN (BY THE LATE HOUR) (2006) by Simon Whitehead, K (1989) by Jayne Parker, THE NIGHTINGALE (2003) by Grace Ndiritu, SAND LITTLE SAND (2006) by Becky Edmunds, IT IS ACHING LIKE BIRDS by Lucy Baldwin, and SPRUE (2004) by The 5 Andrews. Most of these films have never been shown in dance film festivals before, either because they are not generally considered "dance", or they are not the typical show pieces that would past muster with a festival's judging panel. Despite their challenging and experimental nature, I was captivated by this program. After Kappenberg's introductory statements I was prepared to grapple with the paradoxes, ambivalence, and alternative notions of the body put forth in these films, and I was freed from having to compare them to my usual standards of what's "good" and "bad". Instead, I appreciated them for what they each said to me within the framework of the program's topic.In contrast to Kappenberg's curated program, Sini Haapalinna, a freelance artist from Finland, presented a program of shorts from her first curation for the Finnish dance film festival "Beyond the Lens" which sought to show a snapshot of "the state of the art" of Finnish screendance. This was a good example of the usual festival model of programming, which culls work from an open call for entries, and then seeks to show the best ones of the group. While it was probably meaningful for Finnish audiences to see what work is being made in their own country, for an international group of screendance experts gathered in North Carolina, the program seemed jumbled and out of context. The works were all over the map in terms of style, production value, content, and intention. The result was a muddy program that had some nice isolated moments, but was somehow lesser than the sum of its parts. While Haapalinna probably didn't get the reaction she was hoping for from the conference attendants, it was actually really useful and informative for us to see this kind of program in light of the curation model Rosenberg had just presented. Finally we were able to critically respond to the festival model of programming, and articulate about why it isn't as effective as it could be at promoting and advancing screendance to the public.In my next couple of posts, I'll talk about my presentation on "artist-driven" curating, and summarize some of the other discussions that went on at the conference including a theory for mapping screendance by Kappenberg, how a curator's role is always political by Gita Wigro, and a modified Venn diagram for curators of screendance proposed by Martha Curtis.To be continued!
Read more…

Starting in PerformaticaApril 13th-24th, 2009agite y sirva calls for entries of videodance/dance for the camera/screendance pieces for its first edition in Mexico.Deadline: January 31st, 2009.We share the idea that videodance is born out of the exploration of movement on screen. We invite choreographies created for the camera, remakes for film/video of previous choreographies or performances, and animations based on movement composition.We invite short, mid and full length videodance pies produced since 2005. There isno limit to the number of pieces entered per organization or individual.For complete info please visit www.agiteysirva.com
Read more…

Kinetic Cinema is Back! Monday Sept 8th

I'm very pleased to announce the start of a new season of Kinetic Cinema, with the first screening happening at 8pm on Monday Sept 8th at Chez Bushwick. As you might of heard, our original presenting partner, Collective:Unconscious unexpected lost their space in Tribeca this July when their basement was flooded and they were forced out by their landlord. It is a sad and all too familiar story of endangered affordable art spaces in Manhattan. Luckily Chez Bushwick has stepped in and saved the day for this program, and their director, Jonah Bokaer has curated a fabulous selection of films drawing from Chez Bushwick's constituency of dancers and choreographers.

"Momentum" by Samuel Topiary"PRIME MOVER: Dance on Camera From Chez Bushwick" is a program of works created to represent the diversity of artists working in movement-based media. Filmmakers and choreographers featured on the program will be Charles Atlas, DD Dorvillier, Jillian Peña, Dean Moss, Samuael Topiary, and Ann Liv Young.Pentacle Movement Media presents:Kinetic Cinemain collaboration with Chez BushwickMonday September 8th, 8:00pm (and the first Monday of every month)$5 Admission (buy tix at the door)Chez Bushwick304 Boerum St., Buzzer #11Brooklyn, NY 11206.Phone: 718.418.4405URL: http://chezbushwick.net/Trains: L to Morgan AveAdmission: $5

In addition, we also wish to recognize and support Jillian Peña, a choreographer and filmmaker on this program who was hit by a car three weeks ago and sustained very serious injuries and hospitalization. The driver was unlicensed, and Jillian, like many artists in our community does not have health insurance. Her dear friend and colleague, Miguel Gutierrez has set up a paypal account to receive financial donations to alleviate the financial hardship that Jillian and her family are experiencing at this time. In addition, there will be opportunities to make donations for her at the screening. Please consider making a donation on her behalf. ANY amount, any number of times that you can give it, will be invaluable for her and for her family.To donate online, go to paypal.com and sign up for an account (takes literally about 2-3 minutes) and then go to the "Send Money" tab and make the donation to:donations4jillian@gmail.comKinetic Cinema explores the intersection of dance and the moving image both on screen and stage. Each month curator Anna Brady Nuse invites a special guest from the dance community to share the films and videos that have inspired or moved them. These could be films that feature dance, are kinetic-based, or have been influential on their work in some way. The guest curators come from a range of backgrounds as performers, choreographers, critics, and filmmakers. Past programs have included fresh new shorts from the Dance On Camera Festival, a survey of the history of mediatized movement curated by Brian McCormick, dance films from the popular to the avant-garde curated by Malinda Allen, feminist video art curated by Jonah Bokaer, explorations in experimentalism with Levi Gonzalez, and a tour of inspiringly bad dance films curated by Kriota Willberg. Next month on October 6th, dance writer and critic Elizabeth Zimmer will curate.This screening of Kinetic Cinema also marks the first event of Movement Media, a new project I am directing at Pentacle that provides screenings, consulting services, and online interactive programs for dancers about dance and media. More information will be available soon online at pentacle.org. In addition to producing Kinetic Cinema, my blog, Movement Media will soon become the home of Move the Frame. Stay tuned for more announcements!
Read more…
Click here to take a survey on Move the Frame!Dear friends and colleagues,I'm conducting a little survey to collect information about your perceptions of Move the Frame blog and videodance in general to help me to improve the blog and make it more useful to you and the videodance community. Also, I'm writing a case study on Move the Frame for my Media Management class on branding at The New School, so it's a good time to take stock and get some feedback on what I've been doing.This survey is really short. It should only take a few minutes to complete, and your feedback will be sooo sooo helpful to me. I've loved all the comments I've gotten on this blog, and I hope that everyone, including readers who are normally too shy to post, will participate in this survey to make your voice heard. Don't worry if you don't know what videodance is, or have only glanced at Move the Frame blog once or twice. All information is useful information.Many many thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts, and feel free to forward to others.Yours in moves and frames,AnnaSurvey url:http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=39RhCVF51UHiES6tSyhbzA_3d_3dClick here to take the survey
Read more…

Find more videos like this on cinedans
Alain Platel interview for Cinedans 2007 Film shown: les ballets de ci de là This documentary is shot to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the company Les Ballets C. de la B. Alain Platel is filming his dancers and goes back to their roots. This results in moving images when one thinks of family reunions in Burkina Faso and Vietnam. Platel is known for his unconventional approach and makes the audience a privileged witness of a new work in progress. Winner Dance screen Award 2007(endowed with 15,000.- EUR) www.lesballetscdela.be
Read more…

What's the Worst Dance Film Ever?

At the next Kinetic Cinema on June 2nd, choreographer Kriota Willberg will be presenting a hilarious program of the worst dance films in history. To help her compile her list, she is seeking input from the community. Please comment here with your top picks of the worst dance films, and come out to Kinetic Cinema to see what makes the cut!From Kriota:1. WHAT, IN YOUR OPINION, IS THE WORST DANCE FILM OF ALL TIME, EVER? It can be a full film or just an excerpt, and any style or type of dance at all, but it has to be on film.2. WHY?Please submit your answers in the comments section below by Friday May 16th.The reason I'm asking is that I'm putting together an evening of "Bad" dance film clips. As many of you know, I've been studying bad and mediocre dance for a number of years. As I put the program together, I am organizing examples of different categories of Bad (offensive, inept, confusing, etc.) from the early 1900's to the present. As an acknowledgment to the highly personal perception of bad dance, I'd love to get your input. Below is the description and particulars of the night.Thanks for your time!Best,Kriota WillbergOn June 2, Kinetic Cinema will feature dance films selected by choreographer Kriota Willberg. The theme of the evening is The Worst of the Best, a tour of inspiringly bad dance films from the early 1900's to the present. Truly awful dance is powerful art. We react strongly to it as an audience, we relate our horrible experiences to our friends and warn them away from it, we laugh, we seethe, we remember it far longer than "good" dance, and possibly longer than "great" dance. Join us for film and discussion as we chase that ethereal muse, Badness, through the work of generations of dance film artists.KINETIC CINEMAMonday June 2, 7:30pm (and the first Monday of every month)$5 Admission (buy tix at the door)@ Collective:Unconscious279 Church Street (just south of White Street)New York, NY 10013Trains: 1 to Franklin; A, C, E to Canalhttp://weird.org/films.htm212.254.5277Kinetic Cinema at Collective:Unconscious explores the intersection of dance and the moving image both on screen and stage. Each month curator Anna Brady Nuse invites a special guest from the dance community to share the films and videos that have inspired or moved them. These could be films that feature dance, are kinetic-based, or have been influential on their work in some way. The guest curators come from a range of backgrounds as performers, choreographers, critics, and filmmakers.
Read more…
There is a lot of great dance film stuff going on this week!Screening:First, you won't want to miss Kinetic Cinema tonight (5/5) curated by downtown dance fav Levi Gonzalez. Levi has brought out a bunch of friends to share cutting edge dance videos and talk about experimentalism in dance and film. Come see new videodances by Melanie Maar, Sarah White, Theo Angell, Yasuko Yokoshi, Hedia Maron, ChameckiLerner, and much more!Be one of the first 10 to arrive and get a free Corona for Cinco de Mayo!Kinetic CinemaMonday May 5th, 7:30pm (and the first Monday of every month)$5 Admission (buy tix at the door)@ Collective:Unconscious279 Church Street (just south of White Street)New York, NY 10013Trains: 1 to Franklin; A, C, E to Canalhttp://weird.org/films.htm212.254.5277Salon:Tomorrow night is Dance Film Lab at DTW, moderated by the wonderful Zach Morris of Third Rail Projects. This salon brings dance filmmakers together to present raw footage, drafts, works-in-progress and newly finished films to their peers for constructive feedback, to share information, and address technical, practical and artistic challenges. The lab is free and open to the public, though reservations are necessary.Meeting Details:Dance Film LabTuesday, May 6, 8-10pmat Dance Theater Workshop (DTW)219 West 19th Street(between 7th and 8th Aves)Phone: (212) 691-6500Blogathon:Last but not least, yesterday marked the beginning of the week-long Dance Movie Blogathon! Marilyn Ferdinand over at Ferdy on Films has organized this fabulous web event in which dozens of dance and film bloggers (including yours truly) will be blogging about dance on the silver screen. Check out her blog during the week for links to all the latest posts.
Read more…
On Monday April 7th, Chez Bushwick founder and dance/media phenom Jonah Bokaer will guest curate a program for Kinetic Cinema, my monthly screening series at Collective:Unconscious.For his program, Jonah will show pivotal works of movement-based video art by Nam June Paik. The theme of the evening will be the thread between between video art and post-modern dance focusing on Paik's significant contributions to both art forms. As a dance artist whose work addresses the human body in relation to contemporary technologies, Jonah will be able to offer rare insights into Paik's multi-disciplinary work that overlapped with dance, visual art, media, and technology.

NUDEDESCENDANCE by Jonah BokaerKinetic CinemaMonday April 7th, 7:30pm (and the first Monday of every month)$5 Admission (buy tix at the door)@ Collective:Unconscious279 Church Street (just south of White Street)New York, NY 10013Trains: 1 to Franklin; A, C, E to Canalhttp://weird.org/films.htm212.254.5277MORE INFO: www.movetheframe.comKinetic Cinema explores the intersection of dance and the moving image both on screen and stage. Each month curator Anna Brady Nuse invites a special guest from the dance community to share the films and videos that have inspired or moved them. These could be films that feature dance, are kinetic-based, or have been influential on their work in some way. The guest curators come from a range of backgrounds as performers, choreographers, critics, and filmmakers. Upcoming guests include Jonah Bokaer (April 7th), Levi Gonzalez (May 5th), and Kriota Willberg (June 2nd).Jonah Bokaer's work has been presented widely throughout venues in the United States and abroad, including Cornell University, Dance Theatre Workshop, Danspace Project, Dixon Place, La Mama ETC, P.S. 122, Symphony Space, The Laban Centre (London), the ISB (Bangkok), Naxos Bobine, Studio Théatre de Vitry, and La Générale (Paris), Les Subsistances (Lyon), La Compagnie (Marseille), and OT301 (Amsterdam). Bokaer was a member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company from 2000 to 2007. In 2002, he formed Chez Bushwick with a group of artists and choreographers, to create an adventurous arts organization that has significantly impacted a new generation of dance artists, choreographers, and performers in the United States, and beyond.For more info on Kinetic Cinema and reviews of past programs, check out my videodance blog, Move the Frame
Read more…
Download flyer As you would have heard at CAPTURE's distribution event last Monday at the ICA - Artists' Film: Facing the Digital Future; artists film and video can be seen both as as a distributable work and as an art object. Last Monday's event dealt mostly with dance and the moving image and artists' film as a distributable work. On Wednesday at the CAPTURE/Picture THis/Watershed event - Performance on Screen - at The Watershed, Bristol there will be among other things an opportunity to hear about artists film work in performance relation to collections. There will also be one-on-one opportunities to talk about your work and your practice with Writer/Curator Tracey Warr and myself. From CAPTURE via email
Read more…

Blog Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives