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Posts Tagged ‘bruce conner’

Space Program: MARS, or War Huh Yeah What Is It Good For Absolutely Nothing Say It Again, 5/1/2011

29 April, 2011 by

Crossroads by Bruce Conner (36:00, 16mm, 1976)

SPACE PROGRAM presents
MARS, or War Huh Yeah What Is It Good For Absolutely Nothing Say It Again

Sunday the 1st of May at 7:30pm
at Thalia Hall, 1807 S Allport, Chicago, IL (map)
$5 suggested donation
this space is unheated, so bring warm clothes, sleeping bags, blankets, etc
curated by Ben Russell

**this space is unheated, so bring warm clothes, sleeping bags, blankets, etc

“ Oh, rust-surfaced sphere, with your receding polar ice caps and optical illusion canals!  If not for your half-mass, your eccentric orbit, and your global dust storms, we would call you sister or cousin; but it was your fiery red-lit temperament and your thin atmosphere that led the Romans to name you after their God of War, and we at SPACE PROGRAM shall do the same.  We shall land our newest craft upon the peak of your Olympus Mons, and from that vantage point (highest in the solar system) we shall survey the entire galaxy stretched out before us.  Unlike the 2/3rds of failed Mars voyages that left before us, we shall traverse your Valles Marineris with the understanding that the power of Mars as the power of War is a power best used to secure the peace.  Our childhood wargames (Geissler/Sann), our damaged soldiers (Single Spark Film Collective), our flicker destruction (Sharits), our media paralysis (Smith), and our transcendent explosions (Conner) are herewith submitted as evidence.  With a question on our lips we shall raise our flag upon your soil, its single dollar/Euro sign fluttering in the solar wind: Oh, Mars – if it costs $309,000 per kilogram to land upon your basalt surface, what (pray tell) is the average cost of peace? ” — BR

FEATURING:
Fuck the War by Beate Geissler and Oliver Sann (4:00, video, 2007)
Winter Soldier by Single Spark Film Collective (20:00, 16mm, 1971)
T, O, U, C, H, I, N, G by Paul Sharits (12:00, 16mm, 1968)
Frozen War by John Smith (11:00, video, 2002)
Friendly Fire by Thorsten Fleisch (7:30, 16mm, 2003)
Crossroads by Bruce Conner (36:00, 16mm on video, 1976)
TRT 90:00

***
MARS PROGRAMME DETAILS
Fuck the War by Beate Geissler and Oliver Sann (4:00, video, 2007)
The film is, on the one hand, a con­tem­po­rary Lord of the Flies, which evokes the ongo­ing sense­less­ness of vio­lence and war, bring­ing the mes­sage home by allow­ing Ger­man (rather than Iraqi or Sierra Leonese) chil­dren to explore the giddy chaos of mil­i­tary power. At the same time, it speaks to the innate instincts and prim­i­tive impulses that remain only shal­lowly buried beneath our civ­i­lized surfaces.

Winter Soldier by Single Spark Film Collective (20:00, 16mm, 1971)
Vietnam vets give testimony at the Winter Soldier tribunals. Vet after vet talks about what he personally experienced in Vietnam, what he was made to do as a soldier in an imperialist army. Revealed by nightmarish firsthand account are the atrocities committed against the Vietnamese people.

T.O.U.C.H.I.N.G. by Paul Sharits (1969)

T, O, U, C, H, I, N, G by Paul Sharits (12:00, 16mm, 1968)
“Merges violence with purity.” – P. Adams Sitney

Frozen War by John Smith (11:00, video, 2002)
A disorientating experience while attempting to watch the TV news in an Irish hotel room triggers a spontaneous response to the bombing of Afghanistan.

Friendly Fire by Thorsten Fleisch (7:30, 16mm, 2003)
Friendly Fire (2003) literally burned what you could see, and it was the light of the fire, the projector’s beam, that played out in stunning violence onscreen. With so much attention dedicated to the preservation of film, FriendlyFire proposed a cathartic alternative: ruined figures of melted celluloid and crackling ash. in death film comes alive, more vital, reborn by the very forces that destroy it. (Genevieve Yue ‘Senses of Cinema’)

Crossroads by Bruce Conner (1976)

Crossroads by Bruce Conner (36:00, 16mm, 1976)
The 1945 atomic-bomb explosion at Bikini Atoll becomes a thing of terrible beauty and haunting visual poetry when shown in extreme slow motion, shown from 27 different angles, and accompanied by avant-garde Western classical music composed for electric organ by Terry Riley.
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Bruce Conner on NYC

26 April, 2011 by
When I was in New York, it was like a maze, a rat maze, going from one little box to another little box, and passing through passageways to get from one safe haven to another.

— Bruce Conner

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CHRIST CASTING OUT THE LEGION OF DEVILS by Bruce Conner

11 November, 2010 by
CHRIST CASTING OUT THE LEGION OF DEVILS, 1987, 2003 Tapestry 104.5 x 115 in. Edition of 6

CHRIST CASTING OUT THE LEGION OF DEVILS, 1987, 2003 Tapestry 104.5 x 115 in. Edition of 6

“Bruce Conner’s innovative work in media as diverse as assemblage, drawing, collage, photography, and film has led to his recognition as one of the most influential artists of his generation. Conner’s work is often characterized by unexpected juxtapositions, from which relationships emerge between far-ranging cultural and historical fragments.

His tapestries were woven from digitally manipulated translations of small-scale paper collages; most of the images used in the collages were taken from old illustrated books on the New Testament, the life of Christ, or the Bible. The figures have been re-imagined as players in allegorical scenes, addressing themes of mortality and the relationship between medicine and myth. There is a sense of self-examination and emotional inquest throughout; when Donald Farnsworth asked Conner if one of the figures was a self-portrait, Conner replied, “All of them are me.” -Nick Stone

CHRIST CASTING OUT THE LEGION OF DEVILS is derived from the 5 1/4 x 6 1/16 inch paper collage of the same name by Bruce Conner, dated September 21, 1987. The collage was scanned and digitally edited by Bruce Conner and Donald Farnsworth at Magnolia Editions in Oakland, CA. The weave file was created by Donald Farnsworth using techniques developed by Donald Farnsworth and John Nava. It was woven on a Jacquard loom in Belgium with cotton threads.”

Source: Magnolia Editions

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Tracery in the Sky by Bruce Conner and Emily Feather

11 November, 2010 by
TRACERY IN THE SKY, 2002/2003 Archival pigmented inkjet, graphite on Somerset 14.75 x 21.5 in. Edition of 10

TRACERY IN THE SKY, 2002/2003 Archival pigmented inkjet, graphite on Somerset 14.75 x 21.5 in. Edition of 10

Tracery in the Sky combines a 35 mm photograph taken by Bruce Conner in 1976 and an inkblot drawing created by Emily Feather in 2002 on Strathmore Bristol paper. Both were scanned and digitally edited by Bruce Conner, Emily Feather, and Donald Farnsworth at Magnolia Editions in Oakland, CA. The color printing was done on an HP DesignJet 5000ps printer using archival pigmented ink on Somerset Velvet Enhanced paper. The inkblot was translated into a vector outline which was drawn on top of the pigmented inkjet print with pencil using a Roland DPX-3500 flatbed plotter.

Source: Magnolia Editions

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Film Still and Song: America is Waiting (1982), a film by Bruce Conner; a song by David Byrne and Brian Eno

22 September, 2010 by

Bruce Conner, USA, 1982; 3.5m (16mm b&w/sound)

AMERICA IS WAITING
Bruce Conner, USA, 1982; 3.5m (16mm b&w/sound).
Music by David Byrne and Brian Eno.

“The lyrics of America is Waiting: ‘Well now, you can’t blame the people—blame the government! Take it in again! Again! Again! America is waiting for a message of some kind or another,’ cued Conner for a strongly structured and richly varied piece which examines ideas of loyalty, power, patriotism and paranoia.

“Like most of Bruce Conner’s films, repeated viewings yield deeper layers of successive structures. America is Waiting is strongly composed of interlocking visual connections, emblematic content and a resonating ambiguity of the human condition within the constructs with which we confound ourselves.”—Anthony Reveaux

America Is Waiting

“American is Waiting” by David Byrne and Brian Eno

07 Are You Running_

Here is another good song, “Are You Running?,” by Jerry Harrison, a song that is not related to Bruce Conner, but is related to David Byrne, inasmuch as Jerry Harrison is from the Talking Heads, and this is a song off his second solo LP, Casual Gods (1987). Way ’80s, way good. (Shout out to Will with this.)

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10 Film Strips: Ten Second Film (1965) by Bruce Conner

30 August, 2010 by

Ten Second Film, Bruce Conner, 1965, 10 sec, b&w, silent

Film Center of Lincoln Society :

“When Conner was commissioned to design the poster for the 1965 New York Film Festival he constructed TEN SECOND FILM, which he intended to act as its television commercial and to precede the film programs in the theater. It was a public ‘leader’ in that it was composed, like the poster, of a series of ten strips of film (each 24 frames long) of count-down leader, seen as fundamental heraldry of motion picture exhibition.” —Anthony Reveaux

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