Tagged: gareth williams
landmark seizures // workshop #3 // saturday 18th may // report
Yesterday was the third Saturday Workshop of Landmark Seizures 2 (Aid &Abet).
With little need for exterior direction the colour of the day was settled as orange.
Herman Hase led conversions with Amy Feneck and DGGNGNTHRTH on community and use before the ghost of Joseph Beuys was summoned. Beuys’ recommendation for pre-death artists was to have sex with as many people as possible in order that they would have a significant mourning party at the time of their passing and have the best chance at fame. A number of thesis on this topic are currently being proposed at universities across the country.
The audio from this discussion is available at Archive.org here
Video to follow.
Weathering the storm of technology complaints which we have come to see as the reassuring undertone of this entire project, Bad Timing got the Raspberry Pi to hold a stable operating system.
The Film Room Retains an Element of Mystery.
The Soup of the Day was chilli carrot and tomato.
One in every two bottles of “DGGNGNTHRTH N(e)TTL(e) B(e)(e)R” opens with the full force of the coming revolution.
Beatriz completed her installation (an animation is now on its way).
Thank you to everyone involved for making the lunchtime conversation the marathon that it was, and to Amy for proposing the question:
“How do we reclaim artists “usefulness” (from market?) making it a sustainable option for a way of life?”
The audio from this discussion is available on archive.org here.
friday (self directed) film room
16th May 2013 -‐ Underneath
Main feature 5pm Haxan -‐ Witchcraft through the ages -‐ Directed by Benjamin Christensen
(1922)
Dance for a chicken: the Cajun Mardi Gras -‐ Directed by Pat Mire (1993)
http://www.folkstreams.net/pub/FilmPage.php?title=168
People who take up Serpents -‐ Directed by Gretchen Robinson, Stan Woodward (1974)
http://www.folkstreams.net/pub/FilmPage.php?title=269
Tales of the Supernatural -‐ Directed by Sharon R Sherman (1970)
http://www.folkstreams.net/pub/FilmPage.php?title=106
Werner Herzog eats his shoe -‐ Directed by Les Blank (1980)
Le Sculpteur Express -‐ Directed by Segundo de Chomón (1970)
http://archive.org/details/LeSculpteurExpress
Mark Landis father philanthropy -‐ Directed by Terri Timely (?) http://vimeo.com/56921333#
Minatur Wunderland -‐ Director unknown (2012)
landmark seizures // workshop #2 // saturday 11th may // report
Yesterday saw the second Saturday workshop of Landmark Seizures. Phase 2 of Nicole Bachmann's audio work began, and phase three was recorded live for those that saw it by Gareth Williams at around about 1pm. Various DGGNGNTHRTH activities continued. Drawings appeared. Also sculptures. Spinach and Stilton was uneaten due to lack of time or dietary restrictions. Bad Timing saved the day as Sitting Room University built their Raspberry Pi media hub. 3pm discussion was foreshadowed by torrential rain as the group discussed the SRU-posed topic "Should art create rational objective knowledge?" the full recording is available at archive.org here
Thursday Film Room
Thursday Film Room
Curated by Becky and Gareth this is a quasi-curated semi-self-service moving image space.
Dialogue and action is built into the programme which is manually played from various media or on-line sites by one of the curators on Thursdays and by the viewer themselves or anyone else who happens to be in the space on Fridays and Saturdays. The programme and delivery is therefore subject to change with both dialogue and deviation being a natural process. The line-up on Friday might be significantly different from that of Thursday, or it might be exactly the same.
Becky and Gareth say this…
“For Landmark Seizures we have collated a three day film screening. Every Thursday the film room will have a “Feature” presentation, played at 5pm, accompanied by a selection of related films throughout the day. “The Enigma of Kasper Hauser”, “Haxan”, and “Sleep Furiously” are incredible, engaging, communicative works of art. As examples of a director using a film to “tell us something” they are first-class.
“Haxan” by Benjamin Christensen is probably one of the craziest films you will ever see. Shot in 1922 it is one of the first horror films. In its essence Haxan is a documentary about Swedish witchcraft and the subjugation of women by the church. Stop-motion, demonic animal costumes, lusty nuns and pervert priests all combine under Christensens` incredible cinematography to make a documentary unlike any other you will ever see. Christensen uses the craft of film making to fantastically transform the truth into a work of art. Literally one of the best films in the world.
“Sleep Furiously” by Gideon Koppel follows a year in the life of Trefeurig, a small farming community in Ceredigion. The film is an incredibly touching observation of village life. Possibly one of the least obtrusive, and yet intimate documentaries ever made.”
PROGRAMME (ALL FREE, SUBJECT TO CHANGE, WHETHER BY WHIM OR DISAGREEMENT)
9th May 2013 – Lifetimes
Andre Rubliev – Directed by Andre Tarkovsky
Possum Trot – The life and work of Calvin Black – Directed by Allie Light,
Irving Saraf Sometimes I Run: Stanley Maupin,
Sidewalk Flusher – Directed by Blaine Dunlap
The London Perambulator Directed by John Rogers
Hannah Arendt “Zur Person” (full interview)