Florian Schneider on Mon, 9 Nov 2009 06:40:47 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> huillet and straub |
Dear nettime! Please allow me to invite you to join (locally or remotely) a new project we are currently preparing for the next few weeks. OF A PEOPLE WHO ARE MISSING will open next Thursday, November 12 as a Ciné-club and exhibition on films by Daniele Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub. http://ofapeoplewhoaremissing.net The project approaches the work of Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub from a perspective of contemporary image production. Although until very recent almost exclusively tied to the analog mode of production the way the two filmmakers have worked could be considered as "open source" in the true sense of the word. Rather than owning the images they have produced, their images try to own up to their sources or predecessors, and therefore they value their collaborators and potential audiences in the highest possible way. It seems like Straub-Huillets entire work and attitude could not be more contradictory to the digital mode of production. Instead, we understand the background as an extreme pole of analog filmmaking which -- besides the technical questions and challenges -- provokes a permanent rethinking of the potentialities and limitations of the digital itself. As the filmmakers constantly questioned the possible transformation from one medium to the other, such as literature, painting, music towards film, as a process of re-reading, re-inventing or readjusting of meaning. The "Straubs", as Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub are often called, are among the most outstanding, and yet widely unknown contemporary filmmakers in the history of cinema. Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet worked together for over 40 years until Danièle Huillet's death in October 2006. Since the early 1960s their radical approach towards filmmaking allowed them to create more than 30 very diverse films; they treated and transformed literature by Kafka, Pavese and Hölderlin, as well as the paintings of Cézanne, cantatas by Bach and operas by Schönberg. If there is such a thing as a "Pédagogie straubienne" (as Serge Daney once hinted), the project follows the question: what can be learned from their films today? Is it possible to translate their precision which seems so deeply connected to and conditioned by the means of analog film production, into what is usually conceived as the age of digital image production, and if so, under what terms? Huillet and Straub categorically refused to offer any kind of interpretation that might ease or facilitate access to the artwork or so-called original. Instead, their focus on the act of speaking, always in very specific circumstances, opens up a multitude of possible interpretations; this marks precisely the peculiarity of their films. Through the speech-act the moving images change one of their most essential properties and they become no-one's property. No-one's property is the opposite of what pretends to belong to everybody -- no matter whether it is communicated, participated in or otherwise shared. In this sense one can also understand the remarks that Gilles Deleuze repeatedly put forth in his books on cinema: the films of the "Straubs" are made for a people who are missing. "A people" needs to be invoked rather than represented or addressed. "The people no longer exist, or not yet...". The phrase "a people who are missing" is taken from the only public lecture Paul Klee held in 1924 in the Kunstverein Jena: "Uns traegt kein Volk." Instead of embellishing the splendid isolation of the artist, such a people who are missing need to be understood literally and Jean-Marie Straub once suggested dedicating his movie "The chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach" to the Vietcong. OF A PEOPLE WHO ARE MISSING will open in Extra City from November 12 to December 20 as a platform for both the viewing and making of films. The exhibition space will be structured around five studios which will act as showrooms as well as independent production spaces. Each studio is to be used in a different configuration of archive material, film excerpts, actual footage and the critical discourse around it. Every Thursday to Saturday, one studio will host invited guests and contributors for a series of screenings, lectures and debates. Among the contributors are: Chantal Akerman, Pietro Bianchi, Manon de Boer, Robert Bramkamp, Vanessa Brito, Giulio Bursi, Rinaldo Censi, Anna Fiacciarini, Jack Henrie Fisher, Peter Friedl, Kim de Groot, Romano Guelfi, Armin Linke, Laura Malacart, Martha Rosler, Sally Shafto, Ines Schaber, Eyal Sivan, Benoît Turquety, Barbara Ulrich, Klaus Volkmer, Susanne Weirich. OF A PEOPLE WHO ARE MISSING On films by Daniele Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub Ciné-club and exhibition 12 November - 20 December 2009 Extra City - Kunsthal Antwerpen Curated by: Annett Busch and Florian Schneider Detailed program at: http://ofapeoplewhoaremissing.net http://extracity.org Of A People Who Are Missing is a collaboration of Extra City – Kunsthal Antwerpen and Jan van Eyck Academie, Maastricht. With the support of Multitude e.V., Academy of Fine Arts Hamburg and Time Festival, Ghent. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org