Experimental Cinema - Festival ImpaktThe veteran dutch film festival Impakt that will reach this year its 20th edition will be held October 14 - 18 at several locations in the city centre of Utrecht. Under the title of 'Accelerated living' the festival programme, curated by Maria Palacios Cruz and Stoffel Debuysere will focus on 'changing notions of time and speed today'. The festival will feature various expositions themed on the different conceptions of time and its social and natural repercusions, with works by Julieta Aranda, Jonas Dahlberg, Vadim Fishkin, Glenn Kaino, Marcellvs L., Guy Sherwin, Thomson & Craighead and Guido van der Werve. The screenings take place the weeken of October 16-18 at the Filmtheater ’t Hoogt with works by Bruce Conner, Dryden Goodwin, Philip Hoffman, Gerard Holthuis, Malcolm Le Grice, Kurt Kren, Jeanne Liotta, Gordon Matta-Clark, Marie Menken, Dietmar Offenhuber, Yo Ota, Michel Pavlou, Ilppo Pohjola, Emily Richardson, Scott Stark, Leslie Thornton, Chris Welsby, Fred Worden, Ivan Zulueta and many others.
EXPO “All will be now. Dreams are too fast. You are the first. We are the last. The passing of time is something we feel intimately familiar with, and yet it continuously slips away from us. Centuries ago, St. Augustine already pointed out that tension: “What is Time? If nobody asks me, I know: but if I were desirous to explain it to one that should ask me, plainly I know not.” The invention of clock time provided a partial solution: time was rationalised, adjusted to the rhythms of growing industrialisation. This transformation – symbolically completed with the introduction of standard time and the division of the world into time zones – resonated deeply in our social and cultural lives. The experience-based understanding of time was replaced by a rigid, linear and numerical logic which has gradually become embedded in our subconscious. The arrival of ICT and globalisation has pierced this unilateral and troublesome relationship. Ironically enough, the dawning of the computer age –the main source of today’s acceleration – has allowed for new perspectives on the role and potential of time. This exhibition takes that openness as a starting point and presents a series of works which each in their own way strive for a particular time awareness. Different dimensions of time, both social and natural, objective and subjective, are unfolded, deformed and combined, in search for new forms of perception and imagination of time. With works by Julieta Aranda, Jonas Dahlberg, Vadim Fishkin, Glenn Kaino, Marcellvs L., Guy Sherwin, Thomson & Craighead, Guido van der Werve.
SCREENINGS “Take some time, take some more, time is passing, the time of
your life, the earth rotates, seasons come and go, the machine sorts
zeros from ones, as another thousand tiny bursts of phosphorescent
light dance to the rhythm of the wind and the tide.” It seems as if time is increasingly out of joint. We no longer experience time as a succession or an acceleration of events, but rather as something adrift in a fragmented world of information stimuli, out of the realm of chronology and linearity. What is the impact of this evolution on our perception patterns? How do the different internal, natural, social and technological rhythms relate to each other and influence our daily sensory perception? What is the role and potential of cinema, together with music, the art form most particularly devoted to the shaping force of time? These and other questions will be explored through a series of contemporary and historic film and video works addressing the relation between space, movement, technology and (our experience of) time. With works by Bruce Conner, Dryden Goodwin, Philip Hoffman, Gerard Holthuis, Malcolm Le Grice, Kurt Kren, Jeanne Liotta, Gordon Matta-Clark, Marie Menken, Dietmar Offenhuber, Yo Ota, Michel Pavlou, Ilppo Pohjola, Emily Richardson, Scott Stark, Leslie Thornton, Chris Welsby, Fred Worden, Ivan Zulueta and many others.
EVENTS OPENING NIGHT “We will sing of the multicolored, polyphonic tides of
revolution in the modern capitals; we will sing of the vibrant nightly
fervor of arsenals and shipyards blazing with the violent electric
moons; greedy railway stations that devour smoke-plumed serpents;
factories hung on clouds by the crooked lines of their smoke.” Thomas Köner : The Futurist Manifest The work of media artist Thomas Köner cannot be easily categorised. For years he was active as a sound engineer, before his project Porter Ricks caused a stir in the European techno landscape of the 1990s. In filmmaker Jürgen Reble he found the perfect collaborator to pursue his interest in the symbiosis of visual and auditory experiences. All these different influences come together in Köner’s recent work, in which his fascination for tone colour has expanded to the moving image, resulting in a series of acclaimed performances and installations. Prompted by the festival theme of “Accelerated Living” and the hundredth anniversary of the Futurist Manifesto, he has composed a mini opera for Impakt, which will be performed with a prepared piano, a digital ”noise orchestra” and a female singer. The sonic sediments of one hundred years of industrialisation and acceleration will be condensed in a multidimensional audiovisual space, where image and sound interact as if “time and space died yesterday”. An Impakt production
15.10.2009 DOPES TO INFINITY Guy Sherwin Dirk de Bruyn + Joel Stern Core of the Coalman Bruce McClure
16.10.2009 SPEED TRIBES “It is not just a matter of music but of how to live: it is by
speed and slowness that one slips in among things, that one connects
with something else. One never commences; one never has a tabula rasa;
one slips in, enters in the middle; one takes up or lays down rhythms.” Mount Kimbie + James Blake Cooly G The Bug + Flowdan
17.10.2009 ECSTATIC MUTATIONS “Below the level of sounds and rhythms, music acts upon a
primitive terrain, which is the physiological time of the listener. (…)
Because of the internal organization of the musical work, the act of
listening to it immobilizes passing time; it catches and enfolds it as
one catches and enfolds a cloth flapping in the wind.” Thomas Brinkmann Arnold Dreyblatt Ensemble Oren Ambarchi + Robbie Avenaim
SPECIAL EVENTS “Time is the substance of which I am made. Time is a river which
sweeps me along, but I am the river; it is a tiger which mangles me,
but I am the tiger; it is a fire which consumes me, but I am the fire.” 18.10.2009 Charles Curtis, Carol Robinson & Bruno Martinez The work of French composer Eliane Radigue is first and foremost an exploration of the phenomenological reality of sound : the combination of matter, vibration and resonance which ultimately determines our experience of sound. She began to experiment with electronic feedback in the 1950s, before discovering her medium of choice, the analogue ARP synthesizer. Since 2004 she has composed exclusively for acoustic instruments. ‘Naldjorlak I’, in which the hidden, complex sonority of the cello is fathomed, was developed as a collaboration with renowned cellist Charles Curtis. For the following parts, she required the participation of basset-horn players Carole Robinson and Bruno Martinez. The result is a versatile and volatile sound world, which continuously balances on the verge of perception. 16 – 17.10.2009 Leif Inge : 9 Beet Stretch There are few musical works that speak to the imagination as does Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. But although almost everyone in the Western world can easily hum its melody, this classic composition has not yet given away all its secrets. That’s what Norwegian artist Leif Inge does by digitally stretching out the piece to a length of 24 hours, unveiling its unknown and unheard dimensions. A marathon performance which is sure to provide a peculiar perception of time. In the words of a participant : “I thought I was a fly trapped in honey.”
CONFERENCE “In the sun that is young once only 15.10.2009 Contemporary science and technology have made possible a temporality which though still based upon clock time, has exploded into countless different time fractions and speeds beyond human comprehension. Today we seem to live in several time zones at the same time, propelled by a variety of internal and external time mechanisms and innumerable rhythms which continuously vibrate, resonate, connect, oscillate and disconnect. How to grasp the temporal complexity that surrounds and occupies us ? What sort of ecologies of time and speed have we developed under the influence of new technologies and what is their impact on our body and senses ? This conference brings together a number of international thinkers who offer new perspectives on our contemporary experience of time and speed. A day-long programme including contributions by Mike Crang, Dirk de Bruyn, Charlie Gere, Sybille Lammes, Adrian Mackenzie, Stamatia Portanova, John Tomlinson, and others. In cooperation with Utrecht University, Department New Media & Digital Culture |
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