Showing posts with label Slought Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slought Foundation. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Chris Marker commemorative symposium


There's an embarrassment of riches this week, as Penn, Temple, and Slought are organizing a commemorative symposium on Chris Marker's work, with visiting filmmakers to include Agnes Varda. Here's a rundown of events:

Wed. March 13

6pm
Agnès Varda, in conversation with Molly Nesbit
University of Pennsylvania, Meyerson Hall


Thurs. March 14
7PM
Screening: Beaches of Agnes (Varda 2008)

Varda in person
International House

Friday, March 15
5:30PM
opening panel and reception for Chris Marker event
Slought Foundation

Saturday, March 16
10AM-6PM
Chris Marker event
Slought Foundation

Saturday, March 16
7PM
Screening: early Chris Marker collaborations
International House

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Hito Steyerl on Adorno

Adorno's Grey and other refusals 
Hito Steyerl 
in conversation with Nora M. Alter

Tuesday, October 09, 2012
6:30-8:00pm
Slought Foundation
Free, reservation not required

Slought Foundation is pleased to announce a public conversation with filmmaker and writer Hito Steyerl, in dialogue with film scholar Nora Alter, on Tuesday, October 9, 2012 from 6:30-8:00pm. The conversation will be preceded by a special screening of Hito Steyerl's Adorno's Grey (approx. 14 min). The program is presented in conjunction with Temple University's Department of Film and Media Arts (FMA).

"In her works, Hito reflects upon the role of traveling images, those images, that crowd the realms of suburbs and the lowlands of the web. Images that change their meaning, outlook, framing, caption and often also their protagonists by traveling through time and space. She put some interesting questions like: Which role do digital modes of communication play in creating new political and aesthetical articulations? How do they accelerate, slow down or modify conflict, civil war and the writing of history? How are media – video or audio tapes, jpegs or posters – implicated in violence? How does the struggle over copyright and reproduction- over making things seen and heard - factor into these considerations? And is a withdrawal from representation perhaps a new form of strike or refusal?" (Rabih Mroue).

About the screening of Adorno's Grey
Legend has it that Theodor W. Adorno had the auditorium where he taught at the Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt painted grey to aid concentration. In Adorno’s Grey, a team of conservators burrows into the wall of this auditorium hoping to reveal the layer of grey paint beneath it. A voiceover recounts an incident in 1969 when, after three female students approached and bore their breasts to him during a lecture, Adorno collected his papers and ran away in a panic. This would be his last lecture.

Hito Steyerl is a filmmaker and writer based in Berlin. She teaches artistic media practice at the University of Arts Berlin. Her latest works include: The Kiss 2012, Adorno's Grey 2012, The Body of the Image 2012 (performance), Abstract 2012, Guards 2012 as well as the lectures Probable Title: Zero Probability (2012) with Rabih Mroué and I dreamed a dream (2012). Nora M. Alter is Chair and Professor of Film and Media arts, Temple University, and the author of Chris Marker.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Raymond Bellour and Christa Blümlinger

This Thursday, September 29, 2011, from 6:30-8:00 pm, at the Slought Foundation:

"Film as object of study and as archive"
Raymond Bellour, Christa Blümlinger

Raymond Bellour will speak for 30 minutes on "Forty years of stopping moving images, "followed by Blümlinger on "Archival Gestures," with a moderated conversation to follow.

This program has been organized by Nora Alter, Professor of Film and Media Arts at Temple University, with generous support of the Department of Film and Media Arts at Temple University; the Program in Film Studies at Bryn Mawr College; French Studies in the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania; and the Society of Friends of the Slought Foundation.

Fuller biographies and descriptions available at the Slought website.