THE FRAGILE EMULSION Curated by Jon Gartenberg at UnionDocs on Sunday, December 5th at 7:30

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UNIONDOCS • 322 UNION AVE •BROOKLYN, NY 11211 

Decasia

Decasia by Bill Morrison

The Fragile Emulsion curated by Jon Gartenberg

Sunday, December 5th at 7:30pm $9 suggested donation.

Jon Gartenberg in attendance for discussion.

One of the most vital and richly textured art forms threatened with extinction centers around the practice of avant-garde filmmaking, particularly in 16mm format. These filmmakers treat the celluloid film emulsion as a living organism: it is an organic substance, a shimmering silver onto which they directly imprint the delicacy of their emotions. They work in relative isolation, creating their films with the hand of an artist, rather than as products for consumption by a mass audience. The style of their films most frequently challenges the conventions of linear narrative. These filmmakers recognize not only the ephemeral nature of the celluloid film stock, but also the perilous state of human existence in the modern world. They begin with their direct experiences of everyday reality and often move toward a process of abstraction in their films. They filter found objects from the world around them, and through a wide array of filmmaking techniques, including use of outdated film stock, over- and underexposure, scratching directly on the film emulsion, re-photography, and optical printing – articulate distinct, individually defined processes of creation. They evoke spiritual visions of the world in which their own livelihood is inextricably linked to the vibrancy of the film emulsion – both literally and figuratively – as a matter of life and death. 

Purchase Tickets

Program Runtime 73 minutes.

DECASIA
by Bill Morrison                                                                     USA, 2002, 13 minutes (excerpt), digital projection

In Bill Morrison’s found footage opus, Decasia, decomposition reaches into the farthest corners of the natural and manmade world, penetrating continents, military and religious powers, the entire animal kingdom, architectural constructions as well as the celluloid film stock itself onto which all these delicate images are imprinted.

SANCTUSby Barbara Hammer                                                           USA, 1990, 18 minutes, 16mm

In Sanctus, Barbara Hammer addresses in compelling fashion the co-fragility of both human existence and the film emulsion, the artist’s raw material onto which she creates images. The filmmaker transforms historic scientific x-ray films into a lyrical journey, reworking this found footage material into a celebration of the body as temple.

HER FRAGRANT EMULSIONby Lewis Klahr                                USA, 1987, 11 minutes, 16mm      

In Her Fragrant Emulsion, images of 1960’s B-movie actress Mimsy Farmer float on the surface of the film emulsion, evoking erotic meditations on loves gained and lost. “The images I use are outmoded, and there’s a way that they’re dead. By working with them I’m kind of re-animating them, so I don’t really think of myself as an animator, as much as a re-animator that’s bringing these things back into some kind of life.” – Lewis Klahr

HALL OF MIRRORSby Warren Sonbert                                           USA, 1966, 8 minutes, 16mm

Throughout Hall of Mirrors Sonbert underscores the materiality of film and the self-referential aspect of the filmmaking enterprise. Sonbert incorporates black and white outtakes from a Hollywood movie with new scenes that he photographs in color; the filmmaker works the exposed leader of the film rolls in the fabric of his movie, and captures his own reflected image while shooting one of his protagonists (Warhol superstar Gerard Malanga) in artist Lucas Samaras’ Mirrored Room. Hall of Mirrors begins and ends with the protagonists’ movements enmeshed within multiple reflecting mirrors. The film’s imagery, combined with the rock and roll soundtrack, underscores the sense of visual entrapment of the characters in their respective environments, in a manner that conveys both youthful longing and human vulnerability.

WARRENby Jeff Scher                                                                       USA, 1995, 3 minutes, 16mm

Jeff Scher turns the table on his former teacher and mentor, Warren Sonbert (at a time when Sonbert was secretly afflicted with AIDS), creating an intimate dialogue between friends and colleagues, as well as a tense battle of directorial wills.

WHIPLASHby Warren Sonbert (restoration editor: Jeff Scher)                 USA, 1995/7, 20 minutes, 16mm

Whiplash is a compelling, multilayered portrayal of filmmaker Warren Sonbert’s struggle to maintain equilibrium in his physical self, his perceptual reality, and the world of friends and family around him, as his own mortality pressed upon his psyche. In it, Sonbert articulated the ideas and values by which he intended to be remembered. Most important among these is the theme of love between couples.

Jon Gartenberg is an archivist, distributor, and programmer. He began his career on the curatorial staff of The Museum of Modern Art, followed by jobs in the business sector both at Broadway Video and Golden Books. In 1998, he established Gartenberg Media Enterprises (www.gartenbergmedia.com), a company that is dedicated on the excavation, repurposing, and distribution of library assets in film, television, photographic, and print media.

In terms of experimental cinema, Gartenberg acquired avant-garde movies for the permanent collection of MOMA’s Film Department and restored the films of Andy Warhol. He also initiated a film preservation project with the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS, which culminated in the conservation of films by artists Warren Sonbert, David Wojnarowicz, Curt McDowell, and Jack Waters.

Currently, his company distributes avant-garde films on DVD and licenses them as well for documentary film productions. GME also advises and supports cutting edge filmmakers on the economics of experimental film production, distribution and exhibition. Gartenberg has programmed experimental films for the Tribeca Film Festival since 2003.                          

Presented with

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Millennium Film Workshop's Personal Cinema Series Presents Recent Video Works by Stephen Dwoskin - Other Dwoskin Titles On DVD From GME

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STARTING TIME - 8pm (except where indicated)

Admission- $8 / $6 members.

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NOVEMBER 27 (Sat.) STEPHEN DWOSKIN

Stephen Dwoskin, born in Brooklyn, New York, contracted Polio at the age of seven and was left disabled. After studying art with de Kooning and Albers, he attended NYU and the Parsons School of Design. He soon discovered experimental cinema and was influenced by the transgressive underground films of Jack Smith and Ron Rice. This led to the publishing of his book, FILM IS. He began making his own films and moved to Britain in 1964 where he has lived ever since. He was one of the founders of the London Film-makers Cooperative. His features, beginning in the 1970s, attracted much attention and critical acclaim, along with strong controversy.

THE SUN AND THE MOON, US PREMIERE (60min. 2007)

This video is some kind of enforced domestic cinema: an excessive video film in which the maker does not spare himself. Short of breath, in the absence of the spoken word. "The Sun and the Moon, a film fairy tale, is about two women's terrifying encounter with 'Otherness' in the form of a man, abject and monstrous, and for them to either to witness, accept or partake in his annihilation. All are caught in their own isolation and are fearful of the menace that has to be met. The film, as a personal interpretation of Beauty and the Beast, enciphers concerns, beliefs and desires in seductive images that are themselves a form of camouflage, making it possible to utter harsh truths." -S.D.

NIGHTSHOTS (1,2,3) (33min. 2006-2007)

Shot utilizing the "night vision" function of a digital video camera, these films deal with one person's perspective on sexuality, with the visual distortion and off-kilter color balance of the low-light camera adding to the film's unique point of view. Nightshots 1,2,3 was screened in competition at the 2007 Rotterdam International Film Festival. "The first three of a series of intriguing personal and erotic relationships, exploring in the intimacy of darkness, and transformed by the colour play of the night light." -S.D."Nightshots (1, 2, 3)" (2006-07)

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"Nightshots (1, 2, 3)" (2006-07)

STEPHEN DWOSKIN Available on DVD for INSTITUTIONAL SALES

14 films box 1:3

 14 FILMS BOX 1/3

  (1968-2003)           5-Disc Set

  Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

  Institutional Sale Price: $400.00 plus shipping & handling.

Dyn amo

DYN AMO

  (1972)

  Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

  Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

CHAPLIN AT KEYSTONE - A 4-Disc Collection of 34 Films Now Available on DVD for Institutional Sales

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CHAPLIN AT KEYSTONE

   (1914)   34 Films  /  4-Disc Set

   Format: DVD NTSC / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

   Institutional Sale Price: $400.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the these titles visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

New Index DVD Releases Presenting MARIA LASSNIG & VISIONary Now Available for Institutional Sales

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   MARIA LASSNIG - Animation Films

   (1970-1992)

   Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

   Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling.

Dvd034

   VISIONary - Contemporary Short Documentaries              and Experimental Films from Austria

   (2006-2008)           2-Disc Set

   Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

   Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

J’ACCUSE and SLOW SUMMER Featured in MoMA’s Eighth International Festival of Film Preservation

To Save and Project: The Eighth MoMAInternational Festival of Film Preservation                                                  

October 15–November 14, 2010

The Museum of Modern Art11 West 53 Street  New York, NY 10019                                                                                                                                   

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J’ACCUSE

1919. France. Directed by Abel Gance. With Romuald Joubé, Marise Dauvray, Séverin-Mars. Stunningly restored to its full 1919 length with its original color tinting by the EYE Film Institute Netherlands in collaboration with Lobster Films, and accompanied live on piano by Robert Israel, one of the world’s finest silent-film composers, J’Accuse is a milestone of silent cinema. It also endures as one of the most damning antiwar films ever made, said to have influenced Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs. Dalloway, and later championed by Susan Sontag and the film historian Kevin Brownlow. Made in the last, brutal year of the Great War, Gance’s technically groundbreaking film chronicles the decimation of a Provençal village as the sons of France go off to fight, either dying on the front or returning as shell-shocked, hollow men. Gance (La Roué, Napoleon) and his brilliant cameraman Léonce-Henry Burel filmed several sequences alongside the United States Army during the battle of Saint-Mihiel in September 1918. Gance would later recall the unforgettable “return of the dead” sequence that ends the film: "The conditions in which we filmed were profoundly moving….These men had come straight from the Front—from Verdun—and they were due back eight days later. They played the dead knowing that in all probability they'd be dead themselves before long. Within a few weeks of their return, eighty per cent had been killed." Silent. Approx. 161 min.

Friday, October 22, 2010, 7:00 p.m. , Theater 2, T2

Sunday, October 24, 2010, 1:15 p.m. , Theater 2, T2

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LANGSAMMER SOMMER (SLOW SUMMER)

1976. Austria. Directed by John Cook, in collaboration with Susanne Schett. Screenplay by Cook, Michael Pilz. With Cook, Pilz, Helmut Bozelmann, Eva Grimm. A successful Canadian-born fashion photographer who became “Viennese by choice,” Cook is often cited as one of the most important Austrian filmmakers of the past fifty years—a true auteur who created a deeply personal and vital vision of his adopted city. This screening of Slow Summer, with its sardonic and at times disturbing blurring of fantasy and autobiography, serves as a prelude to a retrospective that will begin this December at Anthology Film Archives of new prints restored by the Austrian Film Museum. Cook takes the uncanny Viennese landscape and his demimonde of artist friends and collaborators as the subject of this fascinating experimental film, which he shot on Super-8 color stock and then printed on black-and-white 35mm. “[Slow Summer] is a strange film,” the critic Olaf Möller observes, “a bit unsettling in its relentlessness, even if one doesn’t know the people in it. The characters bear the same names as the actors, and the line between truth and dare is so thin it’s often just not there; one can never be certain whether the self-loathing and disgust expressed by these people is real, or part of the fiction.” Preserved in 2006 by the Austrian Film Museum, Vienna, and the film’s producer, Michael Pilz. In German; English subtitles. 83 min.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010, 8:00 p.m. , Theater 1, T1

Friday, November 5, 2010, 4:30 p.m. , Theater 1, T1

J’ACCUSE Is Available on DVD for Institutional Sales here.

SLOW SUMMER Is Available on DVD for Institutional Sales here.

All Six GEORGES MÉLIÈS Discs Including ENCORE Now Available on DVD for Institutional Sales

 All 6 Discs

 GEORGESMÉLIÈSFIRST WIZARD OF CINEMA

(1896-1913)

173 Films on 5 Discs

 and

Melies_Encore_500

 GEORGES MÉLIÈS - ENCORE

(1896-1911)

26 New Discoveries

 Format: DVD NTSC / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

 Institutional Sale Price: $400.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the these titles visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

Dulac's THE SEASHELL AND THE CLERGYMAN Awarded "Best Critical Research On A DVD" in Bologna

This year's 

Il Cinema Ritrovato DVD Awards included THE SEASHELL AND THE CLERGYMAN, 

cited for

the "Best Critical Research On A DVD", in a new award category this year.  

Congratulations to the disc's 

publishers, Light Cone and Paris Expérimental.  

GME is very proud to include the title in our catalog of 

select publications, 

exclusively available for North American institutional sales.

For more details on this year's Cinema Ritrovato DVD Award winners, 

Jonathan Rosenbaum, one of this year's judges, has blogged here:

www.jonathanrosenbaum.com

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  THE SEASHELL AND THE CLERGYMAN 

  (1927)  Germaine Dulac.

  Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

 Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

CHICAGO - The Original 1927 Silent Classic Restored - NEW to DVD - Institutional Sales Exclusively from GME

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  CHICAGO

   A Cecil B. DeMille Production

   (1927)  Frank Urson.    2-Disc Set

   Format: DVD NTSC / Region 0, No Regional Code.

   Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

Silent Classics by Dziga VERTOV and René CLAIR - NEW to DVD - Institutional Sales Exclusively from GME

A SIXTH PART OF THE WORLD/THE ELEVENTH HOUR

A SIXTH PART OF THE WORLD / THE ELEVENTH HOUR

(1926 / 1928)  Dziga Vertov.2-Disc Set

 Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

 Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

THE ITALIAN STRAW HAT

THE ITALIAN STRAW HAT  

(1926)  René Clair.

 Format: DVD NTSC / Region 0, No Regional Code.

 Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling. 

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

Dulac's THE SEASHELL AND THE CLERGYMAN Available Now on DVD for Institutional Sale

 THE SEASHELL AND THE CLERGYMAN  

(1927)  Germaine Dulac.

 Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

 Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654