Robert Shaller

A screening and talk at Plymouth University, Robert Shaller had brought 16mm prints and some of his homemade 16mm cameras. Shaller was Stan Brakhage’s projectionist in Boulder, Colorado, USA. He visited to talk about his projects that explore the representation of landscape, projecting examples of his work from 16mm film. Marcy Saude kindly brought her projector as ours all have ‘issues’ and the university has none that are working.

Robert Shaller building an optical device.

The films were great and his low-tech cameras – one made from empty Kodak 16mm film boxes – caught the imagination of the audience. His devotion to the materiality of film was inspirational.

The event info:
Robert Schaller the renowned American film-maker and founder of the Handmade Film Institute in Colorado, USA, will be here on Tuesday and Wednesday to talk about his projects that explore the representation of landscape, and will be using a 16mm film projector to screen examples of his work.

Wednesday 9 May 4.30pm > 6.00pm
Room 102 Scott Building, University of Plymouth

About the artist:
For more than twenty years, Robert Schaller has been making films that are fundamentally concerned with two essential aspects of film-making: the materiality of the film medium itself, and the creation of ‘visual music’ through applying the formal structures of music to film-making.

His approach is based on the fact that film, consisting merely of a transparent strip of plastic that can be held in the hand and seen with an unaided eye, is accessible to the artist in a direct and tactile way. He has been a pioneer in re-envisioning the industrial model of celluloid film-making into an embodied human-scale practice for the individual artist who seeks greater control of the means of artistic production.

His is an anti-consumer world of film-making in which the work of creating and re-conceiving the materials, tools, and methods of the medium on a personal non-industrial scale is as essential to the art as are the images light casts on a screen after passing through it.

http://www.robertschaller.org
http://www.handmadefilm.org

Derek Jarman: Brutal Beauty

Brutal_Beauty

It’s ten years since we made a special trip to London to see the Serpentine exhibition which was curated by artist filmmaker Isaac Julien. There were several spaces in use: Blue was running in one room, Jarman’s paintings along some walls, some photos of Dungeness and a room with multiple projections of Super 8 loops. We sat on bean bags and saw some familiar work like the mirror plays from the Thameside flat, others were new to me. I had seen some of the material in the compilation work Glitterbug which was broadcast as an episode of Arena on BBC2 one evening. A gallery attendant stopped us filming the installation after a few minutes. It was lovely to see the work with Jarman’s sonorous voice filtering through from Blue.

The looped Super 8 in the gallery was a particular experience, perhaps not wholly satisfying. The screens were at different heights and sizes and for me the overall experience was engaging rather than anything more profound. I wouldn’t go as far as to say it trivialised the work but there wasn’t the engagement or immersion I would have appreciated.

I think I first encountered Jarman’s work (that is his personal cinema’ rather than his features) in a touring programme by the Arts Council which came to Plymouth Arts Centre cinema. I remember being struck by Gerald’s Film which was slowed down, with the frame-rate maybe 3fps on screen, although presumably projected via a 16mm blow-up.

Jarman described the origins of his Super 8 practice as being the home movies his father shot, then being an early adopter of Super 8 when he was loaned a camera. This was a personal practice that ran alongside his professional work as a designer for Ken Russell’s The Devils and for the ballet. Also, he was a painter, writer and gardener.

Over the years I did also see his features in the cinema: Jubilee, Caravaggio, The Tempest etc. I remember going from the Arts Centre down to the Minerva for a few well-earned pints after the The Last of England.

Film of Dust – to the lab!

Today I took a strip of Super 8, a strip of Standard 8 and a strip of 16mm to the Plymouth University’s Electron Microscopy Centre. In a ziplock bag was also the single frame of Super 8 cut from the from the (physically) unedited Womad  film – the act of cutting is in the video below:

The footage was shot as the journey of a flâneur along the coastal path – the liminal land/sea southern boundary of the City of Plymouth. The flâneur, in the modernist sense, seemed an appropriate stance for the filmmaker as the route traversed the varied and disparate results of urban planning, from the semi-derelict industrial to accessible tourist spots. Patrick Keiller suggests:

“The present day flâneur carries a camera” and warns of “the lonely life of the street photographer, who acts the flâneur in the hope of recording glimpses of the marvellous with his camera. His is a difficult task, for poetic insights so rarely survive their capture on the emulsion.” (Keiller, 1981/2)

The Film

Continue reading “Sea Front – some thoughts”

Dust

Essay Film and Narrative Techniques: Screenwriting Non-fiction

First Symposium of the BAFTSS ‘Essay Film’ Research Group
18 and 19 November 2017, University of York, UK
Organised by BAFTSS and The Interdisciplinary Centre for Narrative Studies, University of York

Troubling dialogues: fitting words into place

nicosia-graffiti
Nicosia graffiti on underground car park

Abstract

By Stuart Moore and Kayla Parker

This paper examines the screenwriting processes developed during the creation of a collaborative essay film. The strategy emerges through its authors’ shared production experience, allowing the intertwining of their subjectivities with political and social histories. Using their practice research project, Father-land as a case study, the authors critically reflect on their evolving dialogic methodology developed through collaboration.

Continue reading “Essay Film and Narrative Techniques: Screenwriting Non-fiction”

Plymouth University Arts Institute brochure features Father-land project

Nicosia

Plymouth University Arts Institute brochure about last year’s Cyprus residency.

Father-land: troubled dialogues in a divided island

Words and pictures: Kayla Parker and Stuart Moore

The practice research conducted by Kayla Parker and her colleague Stuart Moore at University of the West of England, Bristol, investigates notions of home and (dis)placement in the divided island of Cyprus. Through intertwining subjectivities with political and social histories, the legacies of colonialism, occupation, and the Cold War, the research outcomes will be shared as an essay film, a poetic form of documentary that blurs traditional genre boundaries, being a form of non-fiction that employs fictional techniques.

Continue reading “Plymouth University Arts Institute brochure features Father-land project”