Archive - Visual Arts Events
Repertoire on Selected Films and Screen Savers is at Project Arts Centre from 27 to 30 October 2010

REPERTOIRE ON SELECTED FILMS AND SCREEN SAVERS

7.00PM
27 - 30 OCT 2010
Visual Arts
Cube

By Nina Beier, Feidlim Cannon and Aurélien Froment

Tickets: Free



REPERTOIRE ON SELECTED FILMS & SCREEN SAVERS

To coincide with Exhibitions, our current exhibition in the gallery, Nina Beier has collaborated with Aurélien Froment to produce Repertoire on Selected Films and Screen Savers, a four-day film and performance programme in the Cube. Froment has selected a series of films whose structures generate a dialogue with the ideas surrounding Exhibitions, and specifically Nina Beier’s previous performance Repertoire, previously exhibted at Art Statements, Basel, 2010.

The details of the programme will begin to unfold when actor Feidlim Cannon, of Brokentalkers, performs a voiceover which consists solely of memorised lines from previous performances throughout his history as an actor. His unscripted performance will organically evolve in response to the flittering, projected characters and images of the films of Jean Comandon, Jean Painlevé, Andy Warhol and Hollis Frampton. Seated somewhere amongst you, his voiceover bridges the gap between screen and audience, where the process of identification or projection, revealed during the cinematic experience, mutates and transforms to be as much directed towards the screen as with your neighbour.

Film screenings and performances will change nightly to both explore and illuminate an intense exchange of gazes between projected figures and the Cube’s audience (Screen Test #2); a dialogue generated by the play between screened and improvised forms of language and image (Zorn’s Lemma) and finally close with The Best of Screen Savers, Ever – a performance best left unexplained but definitely not missed!

WEDNESDAY 27 OCTOBER, 7PM
Jean Comandon, La Croissance des vegetaux (The Growth of Plants), 1929
One of the first to use the techniques of cinematography to study biological phenomena, Comandon accelerated his films, originally shot frame by frame, to depict a detailed view of nature only visible through the mechanical eye of the camera. From the late 1920s, these studies chronicle a time when film provided not only a source of entertainment, but also acted as an animated microscope.

Jean Painlevé, La Pieuvre (The Octopus), 1927
Wading around in water up to your ankles or navel, day and night, in all kinds of weather, even in areas where one is sure to find nothing, digging about everywhere for algae or octopus, getting hypnotised by a sinister pond where everything seems to promise marvels although nothing lives there. (Jean Painlevé, ‘Feat in the Water,’ 1935)
Avant-garde filmmaker, Jean Painlevé, captured scenes of underwater creatures through his custom made, waterproof camera box fitted with a glass plate which allowed the camera lens to reach into its murky surroundings. Similar to Comandon, his films replaced the rigid nature of scientific filmmaking, during the 1920s, to poetically display the idiosyncratic nature of these beings.

THURSDAY 28 OCTOBER, 7PM
Andy Warhol, Screen Test #2, 1965
Andy Warhol’s Screen Tests consist of a series of silent film portraits depicting a range of the artist’s friends, guests and celebrities. Filmed in Warhol’s famous Factory studio in New York, his subjects are examined in a strong key light through a stationary 16mm Bolex film camera, on silent mode. The 16mm Screen Test #2 has been loaned from MoMA for this once off event and is one of Warhol’s most entertaining early films - depicting Mario Montez, the first transvestite filmed by the artist.

FRIDAY 29 OCTOBER, 7PM
Hollis Frampton, Zorn’s Lemma, 1970
Zorn’s Lemma, the most widely known of Hollis Frampton’s films, takes on a particularly self-referential exploration of the material of film itself. The film opens with a rapid sequence depicting letters, which expands to words that start with the letters, to a montage of visual film shots, to the eventual disintegration of the word into moving images. Zorn’s Lemma is also a 16mm film on loan from MoMA’s film archive.

SATURDAY 30 OCTOBER, 7PM
The Best of Screen Savers, Ever
Originally designed as a prevention tool for phosphor burn-in, the screensaver has developed from the blank screen to an entertaining array of moving patterns and images. This eccletic array of screensavers includes your retro favourites - Afterdark’s Flying Toasters and original computer fireworks, nightowls, flamingos to the present spectacle of graphic linear curves and depictions of the outer cosmos. The Best of Screen Savers, Ever is a new work developed by Aurélien Froment for this special context.

With many thanks to Nina, Feidlim, Aurélien, Les Documents cinématographiques, Paris, and MoMA Circulating Film & Video Library, New York, for supporting this film and perforamance programme.

This is a free, ticketed event but seats are limited so be sure to book your place with Box Office on + 353 1 8819 613 or at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .