Sunday, April 1, 2018
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Saturday, February 3, 2018
The Name Has to Go: Super Bowl 26
This was 1992. I was a student at the University of Minnesota and worked a night job that allowed me to sleep. So I had some extra times during the day. I filmed as much as I could that year, I filmed more than I could edit.
I lived in the Phillips Neighborhood of Minneapolis. I lived near Little Earth of United Tribes, which was the center of the American Indian community in the city. When the Super Bowl was coming to town, and one of the teams playing was the Washington, D.C. team, the American Indian Movement organized a conference and a protest to ask Washington to change the mascot of their football team, a racist derogative term.
I don't really remember filming this video, and am not sure why I never edited it (until now). At the time I usually liked to film interviews, and for this I just filmed the speeches and the march. I began filming at East Phillips Park, where Clyde Bellecourt, Paul Wellstone, and others spoke. I then followed the march to the Metrodome, where we circled the stadium and then listened to speeches from Vernon Bellecourt and others.
The Super Bowl is once again taking place in Minneapolis this weekend, and it is truly amazing to compare the level of security between the event in 1992 and 2018. In 1992, AIM has set up a teepee on the plaza right in front of the stadium entrance. We marched just a few feet from the open doors of the Metrodome. There were a few police officers around, but their presence was pretty minimal.
This year, a wall of chain link fence on concrete blocks surrounds the new U.S. Bank Stadium for a block. Downtown is peppered with National Guard humvees. It seems like there are hundreds of private security guards in downtown at any time. The comparison is simply unfathomable.
As I was finally editing this video, twenty-six years after I shot it, I had to do some searches to find the spellings of some of the names. It was sobering to see all the people in this video who have since passed on, from Vernon Bellecourt and Paul Wellstone to Brian Roberts, at the time a law student, Dixie Latu Riley, Matthew Little, and E. Randal T. Osburn. Look for a shot of Congressman Keith Ellison standing near me in the crowd around 4:45.
After I did this edited I found a few more minutes of Super Bowl video on another tape. That video had some issues, but I will try to edit a little out of that one too.
Thursday, February 1, 2018
Monday, January 8, 2018
CAVE 2 Day 2
The second day of the second annual CAVE (Festival of
Cinematic Audio and Video Experimentation) included lots of moments when the
theater of the Bryant Lake Bowl was just full of people talking to each other.
Festival director Kevin Obsatz explained that he programmed shorter blocks of films to open up those opportunities for discussion.
Saturday afternoon's screening of Arab-American experimental
film was co-presented by the Minnesota Museum of American Art and MIZNA, which
puts on the Arab Film Festival. Co-curators Michelle Baroody and Andrea Shaker
explained that they selected work for the screening that went beyond the
stereotypes and dominant narratives.
The program began with Shaker's On Silence, which included a live performance element. Shaker stood
on stage to the right of the screen to read a poetic narration while looking out
a video window onto an endless expanse of water, sometimes the view blurred by waving
bare branches and curtains, sometimes the view was so clear you could see that
there was no distant horizon. She spoke about the luxury of stillness, the
luxury of forgetting, and created a meditation both personal and universal on
displacement that connected herself and us to the stories of refugees of Syria.
Shaker's use of news footage, both frozen still and rendered
without sound, was echoed in other films in the program, many of which appropriated
media images and sounds to pin and enlighten them. Ariana Hamidi's The Covenant Adam intercut home movie-like images of young people with TV images of a cartoon incredible Hulk to show
how superhero images condition young people to problem-solve with violence.
Usama Alshaibi's The Muslim Meme
countered rabid anti-Muslim AM hate radio audio quotes with quiet subtitles
that detail that pain that comes from being the human-being target of such vicious
propaganda.
Following an afternoon break, CAVE resumed with two evening
screenings featuring visiting artists. First up was Christopher Harris of
Florida, who was also on hand to conduct an in-camera editing workshop as part of the festival. His films featured lush 16mm images
pristinely transferred to video. His 16mm frames were bursting with edge
fogging, the sun flying through the edges of his films to re-assert itself,
particularly in a dual screen rendering of a roadside passion play where the
sun coming through the film edges was like a divine presence trying to strangle
the Hollywood phoniness of evangelical Christian crucifixion re-enactors.
The sun itself, and the transience of our whole universe, was at the heart of
his film Sunshine State (Extended
Forecast) which paired primary color images of beach ball planets floating in a
swimming pool and suns drawn of sidewalk chalk with an audio track of scientific
predictions of the sputtering out of our sun, and the end of the potential for
life on earth.
The reflection or absorption of light on faces was
referenced in Reckless Eyeballing,
which set up a conversation between the lynch-victim Gus from D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation with Pam Grier,
star of Blacksploitation films in the 70's. Both The Birth of a Nation and Grier could have flashed on the screen of
The Criterion Theater in St. Louis, whose deterioration Harris documents in
detail in still/here, an excerpt of
which closed the screening. The long-closed building's brick walls were burst
open to let in the sun to the Criterion's dusty tumbled seats, both suggesting the
liveliness and community that once happened here with the devastation and
emptiness that is its dereliction.
The final screening featured work of Jesse McLean of
Milwaukee, who introduced her films by saying that she is a collagist, both in
that she appropriates images and sounds, but also in that she collages ideas.
Her films look at how media gets to the middle of our brain, from the mediated
spaces of big box stores and surface parking lots, which may be our actual
homes, to the sparkling international postcards we get in our email boxes via
spam.
Her film See A Dog,
Hear A Dog, was all about intelligence, and its YouTube images of a dog
playing the piano and singing, and its dog facial expressions acted out by
humans, really pointed out that it isn't really intelligence and emotion that
distinguish humans from other animals, it might just be that our difference is
that we have the media, and that doesn't really make us better.
Although we humans had media, we also had each other at
CAVE. And after the very human Q and A with Jesse McLean ended, the unmediated
humans in the Bryant Lake Bowl Theater formed a collective voice to sing Happy
Birthday to Kevin Obsatz as a chocolate cake topped with slightly skewed
burning candles was carried to him. But we also could also have been singing
a happy birthday for CAVE, which lives and will live another year. Obsatz
announced that there will be a CAVE 3 in 2019.
Saturday, January 6, 2018
CAVE 2 Day 1
CAVE (the Festival of Cinematic Audio Visual
Experimentation) is now officially annual, and once again taking us to a place
of light and sound on some of the coldest winter days. You enter CAVE 2 at the
Bryant Lake Bowl past all the crashing of bowling balls on pins around the
corner of the kitchen and that strange box office inserted in a cubby that
could have once held a phone booth and grab the luscious printed program in
black and blue with a brown paper insert of Andy Sturdevant words about other
equally cold nights when people gathered to watch movies together in town and
found warmth and inspiration, wonder and community.
The 7 pm Friday show featured local work, mostly videos that
featured images and sounds of nature, of water and waves and physically
improbable human shadows in Julie Kouneski's Shapeshifter,
of the interplay of water and rock with fingers and insects as landscape in
Jonathan Kaiser's Canyons, with water
and ice holding and releasing in Jason Cole's Same Bare Place and Kate Casanova's Slow Black Glow. Trevor Adams' Rumors
of Train Barn broke the nature line with his images of night and
people-rich places filled with ghosts etched and painted over and behind the
lights and shadows of somewhere somewhat familiar but also maybe not. There
were also a couple short videos by me.
For the 9 pm slot, both the cinema and the audience
expanded, with people sitting on the walls and standing by the door and John
Marks starting things out with his great wall of 16mm projectors to show Spirit Leveling, a four movement sonata
for trees, water, water lilies, sun and sound. The sound was created on the
spot with his analogue synthesizer, which he operated while turning projectors
on and off. At one point the side by side sun was two eyes reflected in water
looking back at us. The piece ended with one joyous sun reflection circling and
sketching delirious commas on gently lapping water.
HIJACK (Kirsten Van Loon and Arwen Wilder) performed Volleyball, Basketball, Hanky, a dance that
doubled down on Janis Ian's "At Seventeen," channeling teenage
awkwardness into movement of body with repeated shadows on the screen and a dance-partner
TV set with a clip of the volleyball/basketball they didn't get called to play.
Kleenix turned into the pom poms of beauty queens but also reminded me of the
snow and cold outside, and the cold inside that sometimes comes from seeing
yourself through the eyes of others rather than just thinking about how great
you really are.
The last piece, Kinski
Wanted Herzog to Direct but He Turned It Down by Guillaume Vallee and Hazy
Montague Mystique of Montreal, combined a film clip of Klaus Kinski that was
transferred to videotape, distressed, and then transferred back to film and
expanded and repeated with live video feedback to give us a multiplying brightly
hued approximation of Kinski's grinning theatrical madness, or impatience and recalcitrance
in general. Film scratches and dust conspired with the teeth of TV static to
take us further and further down into a place of extreme color and lunar brain
echoes. Mystique's synthesized sounds reprocessed voices and other kinds of
unidentifiable blips and beeps and hums that kept on rising and up falling to
match the feedback of the images. It was both cave painting primal and futuristic techno, eye opening
and closed-eye rattling.
And then it was time to get out of there quickly to catch
our bus. There are still two more days of CAVE! CAVE is presented by Cellular
Cinema, which is a monthly series of screenings at the Bryant Lake Bowl.
Monday, January 1, 2018
A Drawing A Day December 2017
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