Dancing Through – AXW Film Festival June 17, 2015 – TRT: 64:00
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- SHE VANISHES; Sara Bonaventura
(ITALY; 7.26; digi)Read more...
The video is my anti-manifesto. A mise en scene of an impossibility, a virtual presence. An “impossible body” is enacting a fantasy of loss and distance: of desire, that cannot be satisfied but also a desire for an unsatisfied desire.
The spoken quotation is from Luce Irigaray’s classic essay Speculum, of the Other Woman; in french it works well (rien à voir équivaut à n’avoir rien) but it’s hard to translate it in english, due to the ambivalent meaning, ie: having nothing to see equals having nothing, possessing nothing.
It was one of those cutting edge sentence reflecting on the gaze (here in Europe), over the female body and against the Lacanian phallocentrism, considering female sexual attribute as a substitute for the penis; they were just playing with words but saying – if there’s nothing, that nothing cannot be a substitute.
I was writing my thesis on gender studies and visual culture when I filmed that video. My thesis title was: ID: Interior Density (on visual theories and practices where the body was protagonist, as form and content, identity and difference). Although it seems probably weird or taken for granted nowadays and Irigaray was later criticized. But I still think it’s strong, to ironically deconstruct dichotomies… maybe even more now that naked bodies are everywhere! That’s why I put that e (just as a capital letter, for end but also for eternity, in fact it has been sprayed on a bubble in a children playground here in Venice. To me, that bubble was a vanitas vanitatae reminding us the eternal cycle, but also that we can put an end to something.
- LIGHT DIVIDES THE SQUARE; Kimberly Burleigh
(USA; 4:48; digi)Read more...
Computer animation features “rippling caustics,” or refracted light patterns, cast by a virtual fluid body. I formed the virtual fluid body in the computer and then created a rippling surface by periodically perturbing it with invisible shape-shifting objects. I cast a virtual light on the fluid and as the rays of light passed through the surface they refracted and created the “rippling caustics” on another surface placed beneath the fluid surface. (The light patterns on the bottom of a swimming pool are an example of rippling caustics.) The repercussive wave formations as they collided with each other and the edges of the square pool created new patterns. To enhance the aesthetic experience, I added sampled sounds of ringing tones of a finger gliding the edges of crystal glasses, rain, and ice and water tinkling in a glass bowl.
- DORIAN; Rebecca Arndt;
(USA; 20.00; digi)Read more...
Choreography: Eva Perrotta & Sophie Bortolussi in collaboration with Asli Bulbul; Performers: Asli Bulbul & Eva Perrotta; Music: Sam Crawford & Arthur Solari; Director of photography: Rebecca Arndt; Production: Nu Dance Theater & WAC Inc; Set Designer: Katie Fleming
In the middle of the night, Dorian wakes up on her couch, plagued with memories from which she thought she had severed ties long ago. Soon these memories take the shape of a ghostly figure, who might be a past version of herself. Dorian loses control of her manifested “other” and must engage in a claustrophobic battle for control. This cerebral, internal argument transcends time and language through the use of movement and a rich soundscape. With an intimate eye and exhilarating choreography, Dorian C. illustrates the frustrating struggle between the boundaries of how we are defined and our manufactured identity.
- ANATOMY OF A POEM; Rebecca Ruige Xu; Sound/Music: Pablo Palacio
(USA; 3.31; digi)Read more...
Computer programming generated animation. Utilizing sound synthesizing and computer graphics programming, this work depicts a famous poem “Drinking Alone by Moonlight” from the ancient East using a Western analytical approach. The poem was written by Li Bai, arguably the most accomplished poet from China’s Tang Dynasty. Instead of literally interpreting the meaning of this poem, we chose to portray it by translating the rhyme and tonal prosody of the poem into sound/music and graphics simultaneously.
- COMBTHROUGH; Tabita Rezaire
(MOZAMBIQUE; 3.10; digi)Read more...
A self-portrait exploring the artist’s relationship with her hair and its social and cultural meaning. While the video shows her struggling to take her braids off, the sound superimposes various personal accounts of young women complaining on YouTube about their ‘nappy’ hair or giving a socio-historical explication of “afro hair” disguise.
- THREADBARE; Kristin Reeves
(USA; 5.14; 16MM to digi)Read more...
A fever-dream processes childhood memories of medical exploitation. The clinical gaze holds tight to the profitable conjuring made possible by vulnerable bodies.
- TO MY LOVE; Leslie Wilson
(USA; 3.10)Read more...
Pen and ink drawings, animation, and special effects are blended with vintage footage and old-fashioned valentines. Vintage footage includes “Innocent Party”1959 from A/VGeeks; “Century 21 Calling”, 1964 “Prom: It’s a Pleasure!”, 1961 and the amazing Rosita Royce in “Dance of the Doves from the Prelinger Archives The sound score includes a mix of digitally altered samples from Rogers and Hart’s “My Funny Valentine” sung by Chet Baker, 1964, “Kiss Me Honey” by Ada Jones and Bill Murray, 1913, “Love Boat” by Earl Burnett and the Biltmore Hotel Orchestra, 1929 and “My Funny Valentine” sung by Ruth Gaylor with the Hal Mcintyre Orchestra, 1945 – all found at archive.org.
- MALDITA VOUGUE (BAD VOUGUE); Júlia Portella & Melina Schleder
(BRAZIL; 11.10; digi)Read more...
Photography director: Tiago Lage, PozziLabs, Tiago Tambelli, Fernando Augusto, Pedro Maffei, Peterson Lomovtov; Editi: Alexandre Barreto; Art Direction: Júlia Portella e Melina Schleder; Costume Design: Júlia Portella e Melina Schleder; Original Soundtrack: Júlio Manaf; Sound Designer: Júlio Manaf
A movie about the desire to fit in and the way this desire can consume you.
- GYRE-ATION; (2012); Beth Portnoy
(USA; 6.48; Digi)Read more...
Gyre-ation is a visual exploration of resistance to and acceptance of the forces outside of ourselves.
“Gyre” is a circular or spiral form found in nature: rotating ocean currents; wind curl; concentric circles formed by leaves or flower petals. Gyre-ation is a visual exploration of resistance to and acceptance of the forces outside of ourselves. A woman whirls through a vortex of tension between natural and psychological patterns.
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