media/médias, arts & culture - ISSN 1918-4026

Archive for 2009

Embracing sex, crime and trashy pop culture

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 17, 2009 at 1:18 pm

Broken Embraces

Broken Embraces is a Hitchcock-tinged thriller filled with many of the familiar Almodovar elements.  A film about filmmaking, it visually embraces sex, crime and trashy pop culture. Almodovar’s usual touch of wacko humour takes a back seat to a tension-filled dark drama.  A business magnate’s death causes a blind writer to recall the tragic events of 20 years ago.  As a former director he battled for the survival of his film and the love of its lead actress, played by a mesmerizing Penelope Cruz.  Past and present entangle and collide, as the writer’s story unfolds and a decades old mystery crashes inevitability into the present. What is the price of a deal with the devil? Unlimited power clashing with conscience, creative control, and tragically, lives. And the best revenge?  Re-embracing life and art as the writer stitches back together the shattered fragments of his past. As the pieces come together, Broken Embraces keeps the viewer engaged, all the way to its cathartic conclusion.

Broken Embraces

Spain 2009

Directed by Pedro Almodovar

Trailer

Willis Wong

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

More VIFF’s 2009 reviews

Highlights of the last day of VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 15, 2009 at 9:33 pm

Amreeka

Amreeka

(Canada , Kuwait , USA, 97 mins, 35mm)

Directed By: Cherien Dabis

In this immigrant story,  a Palestinian mother and her teenage son leave their Israeli-occupied homeland for Illinois. When Muna Farah (stage actress and director Nisreen Faour) gets a US green card in the mail, she is shocked. She had forgotten she applied for it back in the days when she was still married. Her son Fadi (Melkar Muallem), whose educational and job opportunities are so limited in the Palestinian territories, is overjoyed. He can’t wait to flee his home…

Ninja Assassin

Ninja Assassin

(USA, 2009, 99 mins, 35mm)

Directed By: James McTeigue

Director James McTeigue (V For Vendetta) and producers the Wachowski Brothers (The Matrix trilogy) crank up the B-movie action until the the severed body parts fly. There is a certain anarchic joy in watching naughty ninjas getting splattered, dispatched by whatever implement is handy, be it a sword, a shuriken or a car. But make no mistake: this is one bloody film.

Extraordinary Stories

Extraordinary Stories

Historias Extraordinarias

(Argentina, 2008, 250 mins, DigiBeta)

Directed By: Mariano Llinás

The three primary story lines (though there are countless others) concern men known only as X, Z and H, respectively, each of them minor bureaucratic functionaries in nondescript towns on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, who find themselves tossed by circumstance into unexpectedly complicated adventures. The first man witnesses a murder (before committing one himself); the second scours the countryside for clues about his predecessor, an international man of mystery with a possible sideline in illegal wildlife trafficking; the third travels up river in search of the large stone “monoliths” he has been hired to photograph. Each thread is a mini road movie of a sort, although like the film’s whimsical (and perhaps unreliable) omniscient narrator, Llinás shows markedly greater interest in the journey than in the destination.

Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands

Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands

(Canada, 2009, 43 mins, HDCAM)

Directed By: Peter Mettler

The horror. The poison. The appalling stinking shit-storm we’ve created. These words easily come to mind as one witnesses the sorry spectacle that is the Athabasca tar sands from the air. Who needs AntichristShock Troopers, or Apocalypse Now! when we’ve got our own Canadian hell-in-the-making in our back yard… As the film cannily asks, if we’ve done this, what will we do next? This is a stunning document that proves that a moving image can reveal space beyond ordinary human perception.

Queen to Play

Queen to Play

Joueuse

(France, 101 mins, 35mm)

Directed By: Caroline Bottaro

When Hélène (Sandrinne Bonnaire), a humble hotel worker at an up-scale resort perched above the Mediterranean, espies a couple locked in the throes of a passionate chess session (featuring a cameo from Jennifer Beals), her interest in the game is inflamed. Unfortunately, her husband has little interest in learning any new moves. Increasingly obsessed, Hélène spots a chess board in the home of Dr. Kröger (Kevin Kline in his first entirely French role), a scruffily patrician American recluse for whom she cleans house, and badgers him till he agrees to teach her the fundamentals.

More VIFF’s 2009 reviews

Italian Films at the Vancouver International Film Festival


Empire State Building Mashup

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 15, 2009 at 8:42 pm

Empire State Building Murders is gimmicky, a mashup.  Fiction as documentary or documentary as fiction?  Or perhaps a skillful blurring of boundaries?  Whatever the genre, for film noir fans the movie is a trip into nostalgia—crooked cops, shady ladies, murderous mobsters, rain-slicked streets and catchy lines:  “Before dawn he was sleeping with the fishes.” “She had a pair of knockers that would stop your heart.” And the cast is iconic—Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, Richard Widmark, Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall, and Lizbeth Scott.

Director William Karel mixed clips from 30s and 40s noir classics to create a cut-and-paste fictional narrative about mobster-ridden New York in that era. The back-story is recollected in interviews with Mickey Rooney, Cyd Charisse, Ben Gazzara, and Kirk Douglas playing much older versions of their characters.

Karel, known for historical and political documentaries, apparently likes to quote filmmaker Francois Truffaut: “A documentary is one thousand times more of a lie than a fiction, where things are clear from the beginning.”  With Empire State Building Murders, the director, whose 2002 mockumentary Dark Side of the Moon faked footage from the Apollo 11 Moon landing, is clearly in his element.

Empire State Building Murders

France, 2008

Director: William Karel

Sandra Peredo

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

Thursday’s highlights at VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 15, 2009 at 1:41 am

The Maid

The Maid

Directed By: Sebastián Silva

Winner, World Cinema Grand Jury Prize (drama), Sundance 2009.

Silva assails the richly fraught (and deeply funny) territory of Chilean society and socioeconomic relations with intelligence and empathy. Anchored by a formidable performance from Catalina Saavedra (who picked up a best actress award at Sundance) and dedicated to the director’s own childhood servants, The Maid earns its charm through precise attention to the details of character.

Kamui

Kamui

Directed By: Sai Yoichi

Kamui (played by new star Matsuyama Kenichi, also in Bare Essence of Life) has escaped rural poverty and family ties by becoming a ninja, but now wants a kind of freedom not permitted in feudal Japan, the freedom to live his own life. The plot finds him in an area controlled by the corrupt and effete Lord Gunbei, allying himself with the fisherman Hanbei and his family and then all but press-ganged into a band of shark hunters.

Afghan Star

Afghan Star

Directed By: Havana Marking

Winner, World Cinema Documentary Director and Audience awards, Sundance 2009.

After 30 years of war and Taliban rule, pop culture has returned to Afghanistan. Millions are watching Afghan Star–a Canadian Idol-style TV series in which people from across the country compete for a cash prize and a record deal. Documentary filmmaker Havana Marking follows the process as 2,000 would-be singers audition for a program that the organizers hope will “move people from guns to music.”



Inside the game: Grubby vs. Sky

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 14, 2009 at 10:47 pm

Beyond the Game is a documentary about Grubby and Sky, two of the best World Of Warcraft players in the world, as they prepare to face one another in a tournament of virtual battle.  This is the 2007 World Cyber Games, a high stakes annual video game battle whose participants are cheered by live audiences and richly rewarded by sponsors.  Madfrog, a retired champion, is also profiled and recalls the physical, mental, and emotional effects from his non-stop competitive gaming.  Throughout the film Grubby (Netherlands) and Sky (China) talk about their completely opposing strategies, even quoting from Sun Tzu’s classic text The Art of War.  This is serious business.

Beyond the Game

Interviews with friends and family reveal stories of struggle and sacrifice—especially with Sky, who escaped from the impoverished countryside to become a gaming superstar.  The camera provides an often intimate view of the players, lingering on closeups of intently focused eyes while keyboards clack and echo the rapid-fire decision-making necessary for survival inside the game.  Jos de Putter’s dynamic camera beautifully contrasts scenes from our mundane world with the colour-saturated, action packed virtual world within the game; the neon-lit internet cafes and media-hyped tournament becoming a jarring hybrid of the two.  Beyond the Game is a revealing profile of an unforgiving game and the toll it takes on its all too human players.

Beyond The Game

Directed by Jos de Putter

Netherlands 2008

Willis Wong

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

Puccini and the Girl(s)

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 14, 2009 at 3:06 pm

In 1908, Giacomo Puccini composer of Madam Butterfly, Tosca and La Boheme is ensconsed in his villa in Tuscany, writing his first opera in seven years—The Girl of the Golden West—set in a California mining town.  Puccini is a diehard philanderer, he is also creating operatic melodramas in his own life.  There are intimations that he is getting it on with a young servant girl.  He seems to have another lover (perhaps his stepdaughter) plus a passion for a singer who works in a floating tavern on the river  below his villa. And then there is the jealous wife.  In between he pounds on the piano.

What does it all mean? Not easy to know since director Paolo Benvenuti has chosen to forego dialogue, develop the narrative through the reading of original correspondences (the subtitles are virtually invisible), set every scene as a tableaux vivant and rely on music and lots of chiaroscuro to convey the emotional tone.

What does it all feel like?  A throwback to the silent screen.  Not for everyone.

Puccini and the girl

Director: Paolo Benvenuti

Italy 2008

Sandra Peredo

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

Wednesday’s highlights at VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009, documentary on October 14, 2009 at 1:00 am

Only When I Dance

Only When I Dance

Directed By: Beadie Finzi

Isabela and Irlan live and train in one of the violent favelas in Rio di Janiero. Backed by their formidable teacher, the pair embarks on a series of international competitions that will determine the course of their entire lives.

Autumn

Autumn

Directed By: Özcan Alper

A former student radical, after serving time as a political prisoner, returns home to his village on the Black Sea coast of northern Turkey. In the nearby town he develops a wary, stricken infatuation with a prostitute from across the border in Georgia, who seems to return his interest with equal wariness. But their romance, if you can call it that, is framed, indeed overwhelmed, by the dour grandeur of the forested mountains, the crashing of the surf and the silence of the snow…

Empire State Building Murders

Empire State Building Murders

Directed By: William Karel

Co-written by crime novelist and film obsessive Jerome Charyn (Movieland, Gangsters and Gold Diggers), this clever pastiche of old movie clips and new “documentary” footage recaptures a fascinating place and time: the Empire State Building in New York during the ’30s and ’40s. A French declaration of love for America and film noir, the film stands halfway between myth and reality, skillfully blurring fiction and nonfiction.

1999

1999

Directed By: Lenin M. Sivam

1999 presents us with a fresh voice in Canadian filmmaking. Emotional and eye-opening, Sivam’s film reminds us of the challenges and opportunities of immigrant life, and the devastating impacts of experiencing civil war.

Eccentricities of a Blond Hair Girl

Eccentricities of a Blond Hair Girl

Directed By: Manoel de Oliveira

Adapted from a short story by Eça de Queirós, Oliveira’s Blond Hair Girl depictes the life of Ricardo Trepa. And when Trêpa falls in love with the blond girl (Catarina Wallenstein) he spies in the window across the street, he is certain that while the image of the girl may be art itself, his unemployment makes the reality of romance impossible. At a spry 100 years of age, Manoel de Oliveira is certainly the oldest great film director in the world.

Camino

Camino

Directed By: Javier Fesser

Winner, Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress, Best New Actress, Best Supporting Actor, Best Screenplay, Goya Awards 2009.

Camino (Nerea Camacho), a vibrant eleven-year-old, is stricken with a terminal cancer that leaves her paralyzed. Her mother Gloria (Carme Elias), whose intense faith borders on fanaticism, urges the girl to embrace such suffering as it represents God’s will. As Camino drifts closer to death, vulture-like members of the church converge on her, considering her unwavering bravery grounds for beatification.

We Live in Public

We Live in Public

Directed By: Ondi Timoner

Masterfully incorporating a decade’s worth of footage, Timoner assembles a constantly riveting and often harrowing portrait of the one-time “Warhol of the Web”: Josh Harris.

Tuesday’s highlights at VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009, documentary on October 13, 2009 at 2:26 am

My Tehran for Sale

My Tehran for Sale

Directed By: Granaz Moussavi

One of the big hits of VIFF this year, in her debut feature, director/poet Granaz Moussavi draws deeply from her own experience. With an eye for telling, often painful detail (gossiping women in a medical clinic, or asylum-seekers clustered outside the Australian Embassy) and a truly terrific soundtrack (featuring Mohsen Namjou, known as the “Bob Dylan of Iran”) My Tehran for Sale reveals the humanity at the centre of this little-understood country and its people.

Where Are You?

Where Are You?

Directed By: Kobayashi Masahiro

Kobayashi’s films have always looked at single-minded characters in difficult-going-on-impossible situations, but their focus is narrowing down to questions of naked, emotional needs. Where Are You? may just be his crowning achievement.

Chloe

Chloe

Directed By: Atom Egoyan

Set in Toronto, and representing perhaps his most accessible outing to date, Atom Egoyan’s latest–based on Anne Fontaine’s French filmNathalie–deals with some seriously adult themes. Jealousy, the tenuous bonds of marriage, emotional duplicity–all are given a thorough going over in Chloe, thanks in no small part to Erin Cressida Wilson’s cogent script. Moore and Neeson are, as to be expected, both at the peak of their acting powers, but it is Amanda Seyfried’s show to steal, and steal it she does.

Lebanon

Lebanon

Directed By: Samuel Maoz

WINNER OF THE GOLDEN LION FOR BEST FILM – VENICE FILM FESTIVAL 2009

One of the young men in the tank, a new arrival Shmuel, is a clear surrogate for first-time director Shmulik (Samuel) Maoz, who based Lebanon on his own experiences as a gunner thrown into war for the first time. Despite being mostly set in the claustrophobic confines of a dark tank, Lebanon is an intensely cinematic film, a personal immersion in the look, feel, and even smell and taste of what war is like; this is a staggering film about four boys who had never been involved in anything violent before and found themselves forced to kill.

Ne change rien

Ne change rien

Directed By: Pedro Costa

Spawned from a short documentary Costa made with French actress Jeanne Balibar about her singing career, Ne change rien is a feature length dedication to Balibar’s alternative work (alternative to acting)—training, rehearsing and performing music.

Monday’s highlights at VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 11, 2009 at 6:00 pm

Mammoth

Mammoth

Directed By: Lukas Moodysson

Trailer

Mammoth, the first English-language project from Lukas Moodysson, one of Scandinavia’s most interesting and provocative writer-directors, finds him back in narrative mode after experiments such as A Hole In My Heartand Container confused the arthouse fans attracted to Show Me Love,Together, and Lilya 4-Ever. It’s a good-looking, smoothly directed, continent-hopping drama about parents and children, globalization and the ever-growing disconnect between rich and poor.

Assume Nothing

Assume Nothing

Directed By: Kirsty MacDonald

Trailer

Excellent Documentary!

‘What if “male” and “female” are not the only options? How do other genders express themselves through art? Inspired by the work of New Zealand photographer Rebecca Swan’s book of the same title, Kirsty MacDonald’s documentary Assume Nothing, does exactly that… Namely it suspends all conventional definitions of gender and sexuality and creates a free-floating borderless realm that celebrates difference, in all its contradiction and complexity.

Visual artist Shigeyuki Kihara, a Samoan/Japanese-born Fa’a fafine (meaning a person who embodies both male and female aspects), gives a surprisingly and mesmerizing open-minding interview.

Cooking with Stella

Cooking with Stella

Directed By: Dilip Mehta

Trailer

The fiction feature debut of photographer Dilip Mehta, co-written with his sister Deepa, Cooking with Stella is a perfectly judged charmer that wears its politics so lightly you’ll never mistake it for a Message Movie. It’s the story of Michael (Don McKellar) and Maya (Lisa Ray), a pair of new parents from Ottawa who arrive in New Delhi where Maya has landed a diplomatic post. Comfortable and insulated in their High Commission compound, they get their big taste of India from their cook, Stella.

Around the World with Joseph Stiglitz: Perils and Promises of Globalization

Around the World with Joseph Stiglitz: Perils and Promises of Globalization

Le monde selon Stiglitz

Directed By: Jacques Sarasin

Trailer

Jacques Sarasin’s portrait of Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize winner in Economics, former chief economist of the World Bank and author of the bestseller Globalization and its Discontents is both a hard-hitting account of globalization’s negative effects on the world and a primer on how we can turn things around.

Nora's Will

Nora’s Will

Directed By: Mariana Chenillo

Winner, Audience Award, Miami 2009, Morelia 2009.

Trailer

A master Machiavellian-style planner, an elderly woman named Nora has planned her death, down to the smallest detail. But even as she meticulously orchestrates the lives of those closest to her, most especially her ex-husband José, the contents of a mysterious photograph suggests other possibilities.

The White Ribbon

Directed By: Michael Haneke

Winner, Palme d’Or, Cannes 2009.

Trailer

With this new film, Michael Haneke returns to his classic themes of guilt, denial and violence as the mysterious symptoms of mass dysfunction. The White Ribbon is a period film set in a secluded northern German village on the eve of the first world war, shot in a pellucid monochrome, impeccably acted, and directed with this filmmaker’s icily exact rigour and severity.

Sunday’s highlights at VIFF 2009

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 10, 2009 at 11:59 pm

Rembrandt's J'accuse

Rembrandt’s J’accuse

Directed By: Peter Greenaway

Trailer

Peter Greenaway (The Tulse Luper Suitcases) directed Rembrandt’s J’accuse an essayistic documentary in which his fierce criticism of today’s visual illiteracy is argued by means of a forensic search of Rembrandt’s Nightwatch. Greenaway explains the background, the context, the conspiracy, the murder and the motives of all its 34 painted characters who have conspired to kill,,,,” The first line of the production synopsis of this dazzling investigation pretty much sums it up, but the great pleasure of our provocateur’s companion-piece tonightwatching is its playful complexity…

A Prophet

A Prophet

Directed By: Jacques Audiard

Winner, Grand Jury Prize, Cannes 2009.

Jacques Audiard’s A Prophet depicts the jailhouse coming-of-age of a French-Arab man (Tahar Rahim) who is strong-armed by a powerful Corsican inmate (Niels Arestrup) into murdering another Muslim. The Corsican takes him under his wing and teaches him about the workings of power. The young man bides his time, educates himself, consolidates his own base, turns the tables on his mentor, and leaves prison ready to claim his piece of the Paris underworld.

I Killed My Mother

I Killed My Mother

J’ai tu ma mère

Directed By: Xavier Dolan

Xavier Dolan’s debut feature may be the greatest Canadian film success story of the year. It received a triumvirate of prizes at the Cannes Festival’s Quinzaine and is the talk of the town–and a significant box office smash–in Québec. At just 17, Dolan penned the script for this semi-autobiographical story of a stormy relationship between a mother and her son. Call it therapy.

Dirty Paradise

Dirty Paradise

Directed By: Daniel Schweizer

Along the Amazon, the Wayana people live in a remote region of French Guiana, rich with flora, fauna and, unfortunately, gold. It is gold that has brought 10,000 illegal gold-seekers to the area, where they hide in the forests and cause ecological devastation. The primary rain forest is plundered and rivers and creeks are polluted by tons of mercury and mud. The authorities, the army and the French police say they are powerless… Meanwhile the mercury levels in the fish–a staple of the Wayana diet–are so high that many of the local children face severe neurological complications.

Battle for the Xingu

Battle for the Xingu

Directed By: Iara Lee

The Xingu River, a tributary of the Amazon, is home to more than 10,000 indigenous people whose traditional way of life has been suddenly threatened by the Brazilian government’s plans to build a massive hydro-electric dam. They are now fighting back…

Cedar Boys

Cedar Boys

Directed By: Serhat Caradee

Winner, Audience Award, Sydney 2009.

Trailer

Diretor Serhat Caradee—that critics have been compared with Martin Scorsese—understands the need to avoid being obvious, a hallmark of the mechanics of a modern crime story. This story of three ambitious but impoverished Lebanese boys from the west dropping into crime in Sidney Australia has a ring of truth that other movies simply miss completely. Very powerful piece.

Porgy and Me: In the World of Porgy and Bess

Porgy and Me: In the World of Porgy and Bess

Directed By: Susanna Boehm

In the (white) world of opera, Gershwin’s alternately celebrated and controversial opera Porgy and Bess is one of the very few works that takes people of colour as its subject. Susanna Boehm’s stirring documentary follows the cast of the New York Harlem Theatre Company on their European tour of Gershwin’s work. As the troupe travels from city to city, attracting stares from startled Austrians, the parallels between the opera and the real life experiences of individual singers are revealed in a series of deeply personal conversations.

Police, Adjective

Police, Adjective

Directed By: Corneliu Porumboiu

Winner, Jury Prize (Un Certain Regard), Cannes 2009.

Trailer

While Corneliu Porumboiu’s Police, Adjective is probably the smartest film of the year, its smartness never draws attention to itself; it’s smart without being clever. Maybe a little bit smarter than its protagonist, Cristi, an undercover cop who spends a lot of Police, Adjective on the beat in Vasilu, Romania, walking and watching–seeking out the truth but filtering it through his own perceptions.

Bluebeard

Bluebeard

Directed By: Catherine Breillat

Breillat (Romance X, Fat girlSex is Comedy) luxuriates in the fairytale period detail and the glories of particularly vivid digital video while giving the film a dreamlike quality that perfectly suits the material. And she doesn’t stint on twists in her tale, nor the occasional splattering of blood…

Broken Embraces

Directed By: Pedro Almodóvar

Ravishing in its artifice and outfitted with all of Pedro Almodóvar’s stylistic tricks, this lavish tale of desire, power, duplicity and fate is steeped in noir conventions and good humour. Broken Embraces provides Penelope Cruz with glamorous centre stage in a four-way love-story-cum-flashback-mystery, a superbly entertaining new film that’s his first foray into noir since 2004’s Bad Education. And as forays go, this one is a doozy…

ENJOY!

ZMD: Zombie Attack!

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009 on October 10, 2009 at 3:50 pm

ZMD: Zombies of Mass Destruction

Zombies of Mass Destruction is director Hamedani’s poke in the eye at America’s post 9/11 paranoia. When insanity happens the response is more insanity. On the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Iranian-American Frida returns to her white picket fence hometown of Port Gamble and is met with suspicion and…ZOMBIE ATTACK!  Once the first jugular is pierced, the first face peeled, an unrelenting zombie avalanche of gags and gore is let loose. The flesh-eating disaster brings out increasingly absurd reactions from “ZMD’s”  cast of characters, among them a hellfire priest, a gay couple and a survivalist. The politically-minded will see a satire on the arbitrary search for terrorists under every Persian rug.  And for those who come for the blood ZMD will fill the most voracious appetite of  gorehounds seeking splatter and zombie annihilation.

Director: Kevin Hamedani
U.S.A./2009

Willis Wong

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

INTERVIEW with Zombies of Mass Destruction’s director Kevin Hamedani and lead actor Doug Fahl by Willis Wong

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009, interview on October 9, 2009 at 9:47 pm

An October 5th Interview with ZMD: Zombies of Mass Destruction director Kevin Hamedani (photo above) and lead actor Doug Fahl at the Vancouver International Film Festival by Willis Wong for Intermedias Review.

Wong:  You’re obviously a great fan of zombie movies—ZMD references Peter Jackson’s “Dead Alive”, Romero’s “Dead” films, Boyle’s “28 Days Later”—what came first, zombie movie or political satire?

Hamedani:  Political satire.  I wanted to discuss my experiences post 9/11 and at first I actually wrote a serious  script that wasn’t even a horror film at all and I just wasn’t feeling it. At that time I had already made a few serious semi-autobiographical low budget films.  I was done with that and felt like doing something a little bit more fun, so just one morning over breakfast with a friend, talking, the idea of terrorists and a virus and zombies [came up]; at that time it was the terrorists that actually caused the problem.

W:  You’ve made the most of your budget, throwing in one gag and one gore scene after another, there’s a throwaway man-on-fire in the background, there’s a lot of post-production CG.  Was the filming pace frantic?

H:  Yes.  It was intense and insane, not enough time.

W:  Was there time to ad-lib?

H: Oh yeah, Cooper Hopkins, who played Lance–I had worked with him since high school. Actually we did plays together and he improvised a lot during my stage work, so I trusted him in doing that on film. A couple of funny lines are improvisations, and we improvised certain gags.
W: With the level of craziness post 9/11 and especially after the election of a black president, was it tough to out-crazy present day politics?

H:  Well, what you have to do is go over the top. What was going on in the last eight years was so absurd that if we didn’t have an absurd film, it wouldn’t have been good enough as a satire about that period, kind of like “Doctor Strangelove”–’There’s no fighting in the war room’, all those little lines, the guy riding on the nuclear bomb–that was a reaction to the idea that we could actually kill ourselves with this one bomb and that was when people were actually starting to realize that.   The fact that Middle Easterners were being beaten up in cabs or stopped because of their last name, for me growing up being exotic pre-2001, ‘Oh you’re Persian–that’s so cool’, and then overnight, all of a sudden my neighbors who I grew up with stopped waving at me when I would drive home from work.  That to me was so unbelievable and so absurd that I knew the film had to go as far as it could in terms of the gore being just ridiculous because that represented the violence in the time.  I knew I had to make fun of everybody from the white characters to the Iranian characters because I thought everyone was at fault.

W:  Right, nothing’s sacred, even the schoolteacher turns into Rambo.

H:  Yeah, she turns into a conservative type, and that happens in politics.

W:  Well, speaking of gore, there’s the face-peeling and the eyeball-eating scenes–was there anything cut out, left on the cutting room floor because it was too over-the-top?

H:  There was a zombie eating a foetus.  If I didn’t have to compromise, it would be in there.

W:  There’s a comic book series that shares the same name that might be turned into a Hollywood movie down the road. Is there room for two “ZMDs”?

H:  No, you can’t have two films with the same title.  We contacted them because I wrote the script prior to that comic even existing.  The script was started in 2004 and we didn’t find out about the comic until post-production.  We  were editing and then every week we’d do the research to find out if anyone was talking about us and then we found out this comic existed.  Our lawyers contacted their lawyers saying, ‘We need to discuss this, one of us needs to change the name, let’s just sit down and talk about it’, and they didn’t contact us.  I think they thought we were like a mini-dv, little low budget in-your-backyard kind of film.  I think that they just thought not to bother, and we tried our best to contact them, so OK, we’re almost done with our film and this is the title we had from the very beginning, so we kept it.  We were even considering changing the title, so we were thinking of additional titles. We were open to all that but they didn’t even contact us so we’ll see what happens when their film comes out.

W to Doug Fahl:  How did you enjoy wielding a shotgun, blood splatters–was it a new experience?

Fahl:  Yeah definitely, the whole film-making experience was new.  That was my first film; I had previously done commercial work.  It was a complete blast.

W:  A total dive into the genre.

F:  Yeah, once I was cast I was a little nervous, like am I going to be able to do this action stuff, you know?

H:  Really?  You were nervous?

F:  Well, I mean a little bit.  I’m nervous on any project, like am I going to be able to pull this off convincingly?  But once I got on set and realized even though it’s fast paced, the pace is very slow.  You have plenty of time to prepare for your scene as you’re waiting around, but the gore, the blood, although it’s sticky and uncomfortable and cold, I enjoyed every minute of it.  Even waiting around for hours it’s exciting.

W:  Was the majority of the movie shot at night?  How did you handle the schedule?

H:  I love it.

F:  You just get used to it.  You’re all on the same schedule.  When they say it’s breakfast it’s really midnight and lunch is at 3 am.  The town, we shot at Port Gamble, one little block, and that became our home for a month so It just felt like the street was our hallway and the post office was our kitchen.  We had the run of the town and it was very exciting. You could take a stroll down the street, watch the shooting, go over to the graveyard and relax.

Willis Wong

(Intermedias reviewer at VIFF 2009)

Read here Wong’s ZMD review

WATCH HERE THE TRAILER

More VIFF’s 2009 reviews

VIFF 2009 Highlights

In Cinema, Intermedias VIFF 2009, VIFF 2009, documentary on October 1, 2009 at 2:26 am

For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism
Dir: Gerald Peary (USA)

Andrew Sarris, Janet Maslin, J. Hoberman and Roger Ebert are among the critics featured in Gerald Peary’s entertaining and informative look at the writers who thought film mattered–and still do. A timely reminder of the role played by those Americans who sought to elevate the medium to the level of art.

THE EXPLODING GIRL
Dir: Bradley Rust Gray (USA)
Winner, Best Actress (Kazan), Tribeca 2009
An epileptic, Ivy has learned to control her feelings to lessen the stress on her body, but her repression eventually becomes too much of an anchor to bear.

Bradley Rust Gray’s (Salt) delicately delineated character study unfurls like a poetic meditation. Ivy (Zoe Kazan, granddaughter of Elia), newly returned from university and balancing a long-distance relationship with a burgeoning attraction to a close friend, holds the film’s titular focus with ease.

Today Is Better Than Two Tomorrows
Dir: Anna Rodgers (Laos/Ireland)

Two 11-year-old cousins living on the Mekong Delta in Laos find their rural lives turned upside down when their uncle insists they study in the city–and learn English. Anne Rodgers’ carefully etched documentary–four years in the making–shows how modernization can be both good and bad for rural Laotians.

To Die Like a Man
Dir: João Pedro Rodrigues (Portugal)

Set in Lisbon’s flourishing drag-queen demimonde during the late 1980s, João Pedro Rodrigues’ latest foray into the gay body politic is a sensitive and transfixing look at Tonia (Fernando Santos), an aging pre-op transsexual under pressure from her much younger junkie boyfriend to make her sexual transformation into something permanent. But this is no drag of a movie: Rodrigues achieves moments of pure magic with, other, less flamboyant, numbers sung or played on the soundtrack, most of them popular Portuguese songs. To Die Like a Man thus retains the feel of a kind of intimate, melodramatic musical, one of those behind-the-scenes portraits from the 1950s.

I Killed My Mother

I Killed My Mother

Directed by: Xavier Dolan

Xavier Dolan’s debut feature may be the greatest Canadian film success story of the year. It received a triumvirate of prizes at the Cannes Festival’s Quinzaine and is the talk of the town–and a significant box office smash–in Québec. At just 17, Dolan penned the script for this semi-autobiographical story of a stormy relationship between a mother and her son. Call it therapy.

Tetro
Dir: Francis Ford Coppola (USA)

Francis Ford Coppola returns with this pungent family drama set in Buenos Aires. Vincent Gallo is a failed artist and star-in-the-making Alden Ehrenreich is his estranged younger brother come calling to ask some pointed family questions. Klaus Maria Brandauer is their egomaniacal orchestra-conductor father. Also featuring Carmen Maura.

Backstory
Dir: Mark Lewis (UK/Canada/Germany/France)

Visual artist Mark Lewis explore the history and culture of cinema, fusing his curiosity about historical filmmaking techniques with a carefully aestheticized approach to cinema as both a fan-based and industrialized cultural phenomenon. Backstory explores the personalities and artistry behind rear projection technology in Hollywood and Cinema Museum visits a unique private collection.

The New Rijksmuseum

The New Rijksmuseum

Directed By: Oeke Hoogendijk

Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum is the epicenter of Dutch cultural life: it’s where they keep the Rembrandts, the Ruysdaels and the millions of artworks, documents and objects accumulated by a very wealthy country over several centuries. And like a lot of venerable cultural institutions it’s in the midst of a vast, expensive, controversial and yet-to-be completed reno. Oeke Hoogendijk’s documentary–as undidactic and clear-eyed as her 2002 The Holocaust Experience–with great economy manages and visual flair to dramatize a long, complex period of conception, planning, negotiation, halting progress and agonizing setbacks as charismatic director Ronald de Leeuw and his team of planners, architects and curators try and realize their ambitious vision.

Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire
Dir: Lee Daniels (USA)

“An urban nightmare with a surfeit of soul…. To simply call it harrowing or unsparing doesn’t quite cut it; Precious is also courageous and uncompromising, a shaken cocktail of debasement and elation, despair and hope… But this is, for all its scorched-earth emotion, a film to be loved.” — Variety.Winner, Grand Jury Prize, Sundance 2009.

Eccentricities of a Blond Hair Girl
Dir: Manoel de Oliveira (Portugal/France/Spain)

At a spry 100 years of age, Manoel de Oliveira is certainly the oldest great film director in the world. The inequities, curiosities and eccentricities of love take on new flesh in this “perfectly formed miniature.”–Screen Daily. Adapted from a short story by Eça de Queirós.

At the Edge of the World
Dir: Dan Stone

Few films offer as dramatic and spectacular a view of the Antarctic Ocean as does Dan Stone’s captivating documentary. Eco-activist Paul Watson and the Farley Mowat, along with her sister ship theRobert Hunter, may be in over their heads when they take on the Japanese whaling fleet…

Around the World with Joseph Stiglitz: Perils and Promises of Globalization
Le monde selon Stiglitz
Dir: Jacques Sarasin (France)

In Jacques Sarasin’s hard-hitting documentary about the perils and promises of globalization, Nobel laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz takes a tour of the world which starts in his hometown of Gary, Indiana, and encompasses developing countries like Ecuador and Botswana, as well as industrialized powers like India and China.

The Age of Stupid
Dir: Franny Armstrong (UK)

I hate this film. I felt as if I was watching all my own excuses for not doing anything about climate change being stripped away from me. And it’s tender and funny and wise as well. Can I just pretend I never saw it?–screenwriter William Nicholson. “The most powerful piece of cultural discourse on climate change ever produced.”—author Mark Lynas

Rembrandt’s J’accuse
Dir: Peter Greenaway (Netherlands)

Peter Greenaway’s visually and intellectually compelling docudrama recreates the time, the place and the exceedingly seedy politics that produced Rembrandt’s celebrated masterpiece The Night Watch . As the director argues that the painting is indeed a murder mystery rendered in oils, the film enters the realm of a tour de force.

Face
Lian
Dir: Tsai Ming-liang (France, Taiwan)

Tsai Ming-liang’s hallucinatory, spectacular, intriguing, sexy, musical masterpiece is set almost entirely inside (and underneath) the Louvre Museum in Paris. A Taiwanese director comes to Paris to film a surreal version of Salome with supermodel Laetitia Casta, but becomes enmeshed in a web of spectacularly photographed fantasy.

In Sidebar on September 10, 2009 at 12:00 am

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    Film Festival

    VIFF 2009

    Vancouver International Film Festival October 1 – 16

    An Open Mind is Advised

    Check it out VIFF’s Trailer  Subtitles

    VIFF News

    Additional post-festival screenings:

    VIFF 2009 Winners

    I Killed My MotherThe jury for the Canadian Images program awarded the inaugural Canwest Award for Best Canadian Feature Film and its $20,000 cash prize to director Xavier Dolan of Montreal for I KILLED MY MOTHER (J’ai tué ma mere). The winner was selected from 19 films in competition.

    The Last ActThe Canadian Images jury has awarded a $2,000 cash award to directors Jan Binsse and David Tougas of Montreal for their film THE LAST ACT (Le dernier acte). The competition was open to first-time filmmakers.
    65_RedRoses65 Red Roses (Canada/BC) directed by Nimisha Mukerjee and Philip Lyall, won the NFB’s Most Popular Canadian Documentary award. And, Women in Film & Television Vancouver presented its Artistic Merit Award toNimisha Mukerji, co-director, producer and editor, and Gillian Lowry, co-producer, of 65 RED ROSES.
    Soundtrack for a RevolutionSOUNDTRACK FOR A REVOLUTION (USA), directed by Bill Guttentag, has won the Rogers People’s Choice Award. All of the festival’s 377 films – dramas and nonfiction, short, mid- and feature length – were eligible.
    Facing AliThe audience chose FACING ALI (Canada/BC), directed by Pete McCormack for the second annual documentary Audience Award for most popular nonfiction film.
    At the Edge of the WorldAT THE EDGE OF THE WORLD (USA), directed by Dan Stone, has won the VIFF Environmental Film Audience Award.

    EIGHTEEN WINS VIFF DRAGONS & TIGERS AWARD FOR YOUNG CINEMA

    The Festival has announced EIGHTEEN directed by JANG Kun-Jae of South Korea has won the 16th annual Dragons & Tigers Award for Young Cinema and a cash prize of $10,000.

    Our favorites/Coup de coeur:

    The Man Who Bottled Clouds

    The Man Who Bottled Clouds

    The Man Who Bottled Clouds

    The Man Who Bottled Clouds

    O homem que engarrafava nuvens

    Directed By: Lírio Ferreira

    A fabulous Brazilian music documentary and a treasure trove of performances from the man who started it all, Humberto Teixeira, through to contemporary luminaries—Os Mutantes, Bebel Gilberto (photo above), Caetano Veloso, Chico Buarque, David Byrne (photo below), Gal Costa, Gilberto Gil, Maria Bethânia, etc. singing Teixeira’s sertaneja music style: Baião! Don’t miss it!

    The Wind and the Water

    The Wind and the Water

    Burwa dii Ebo

    Directed By: Vero Bollow and Igar Yala Collective

    The first feature film ever from the country of Panama is a disarming and strikingly beautiful drama made by a collective of young indigenous filmmakers from Kuna Yala–an archipelago consisting of 365 islands in the Caribbean. Its focus is the lure of the city and modernity for young people anywhere, and the forgetting of what makes life worthwhile.

    More VIFF’s 2009 reviews

    We recommend

    Click here and check out this book and more at Amazon.com

    Click here and check out this book and more at Amazon.com

    Check this and other dvds and books at Amazon.ca

    Check this and other dvds and books at Amazon.ca

    TIFF 2009 Highlights

    In Cinema, TIFF 2009 on September 9, 2009 at 9:52 pm

    Antichrist Lars von Trier, Denmark/Sweden/France/Italy 
    North American Premiere
    This is a groundbreaking, deeply disturbing and graphic nightmare vision about gender relations from one of the most important and influential directors of the last 30 years. The film is a break from von Trier’s previous work in terms of aesthetics, resembling a Japanese horror movie reimagined by Andrei Tarkovsky. Antichrist features unforgettable and courageous performances by Charlotte Gainsbourg and Willem Dafoe. 

    Carmel Amos Gitaï, Israel/France/Italy 
    World Premiere
    History in the Middle East is a complex mix of the present and the past. Then, there is also the personal and Gitaï is uniquely placed to reflect on his own past as a soldier and as the father of a young man caught up in the present conflicts that engulf the region. 

    Honeymoons Goran Paskaljevic, Serbia/Albania/Italy 
    North American Premiere
    Two young married couples take off and travel abroad to the promised lands of better opportunities, but hope collapses when their expectations disappear into thin air and their dreams turn into nightmares. 

    Melody for a Street Organ Kira Muratova, Ukraine 
    North American Premiere
    Two young orphan siblings travel to Moscow in search of their missing father. Scared of being separated and sent to orphanages, they hope to reunite with the last link of their shattered family.

    Mr. Nobody Jaco Van Dormael, France/Germany/Canada/Belgium 
    North American Premiere
    Mr. Nobody tells the story of Nemo (Jared Leto), the world’s oldest man. In 2092, Mars has become a trendy vacation destination and humans have achieved immortality, thanks to advances in genetics. At the age of 120 years, Nemo is the last mortal left on Earth. His death is drawing near, and media from all over the world are eager to cover the event. Nemo doesn’t really remember who he is, and is only able, while under hypnosis, to call up a few snippets of disordered memories. Also starring Sarah Polley, Diane Kruger, Linh-Dan Pham and Rhys Ifans.

    Le Refuge François Ozon, France 
    World Premiere
    The French master returns with this unsettling tale of a rich, beautiful young woman who finds herself pregnant after her boyfriend dies of an overdose. Retreating to a seaside home, she is joined by his brother. 

    Vincere Marco Bellocchio, Italy 
    North American Premiere
    This fictionalized portrait of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini concentrates on his youthful years before he rose to power in Italy. It uncovers the details of his first marriage and the child he had with a passionate woman whom he later totally disowned and abandoned. 

    Vision Margarethe von Trotta, Germany 
    Canadian Premiere
    One of the major auteurs to emerge from the New German Cinema, Margarethe von Trotta returns to the Festival with Vision, a study of the remarkable Hildegard von Bingen, the Benedictine nun who emerged as a Renaissance woman before there was a Renaissance. 

    White Material Claire Denis, France 
    North American Premiere
    A family of French expatriates living in an African country where they own a coffee plantation find that their livelihood is threatened by the outbreak of civil war. They struggle to keep their lives together in the face of rival factions fighting for power and gun-toting child soldiers who have no sympathy for their plight. 

    The White Ribbon Michael Haneke, Germany/Austria/France/Italy 
    North American Premiere
    In Protestant Northern Germany on the eve of World War I, strange incidents begin to occur in a village community and increasingly take the form of a ritual of punishment. This latest work from Michael Haneke won the Palme d’Or for best film at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. 

    The Window Buddhadeb Dasgupta, India 
    World Premiere
    When Bimal decides to give something back to his alma mater, he chooses to replace the broken window of his favourite classroom. Plans to pay for this gesture go awry and he cannot bear to tell his fiancée.

    The 34th edition of  the Toronto International Film Festival running September 10 through 19, 2009. Over these ten days, 335 films from 64 countries will screen, including 271 feature-length films, 72 per cent of which are world, international or North American premieres and 71 of which are feature directorial debuts.

    Iranian Contemporary Artist Speaks of exile, Diaspora, and Displacement

    In Global Art Database, art, photography, video on June 24, 2009 at 1:24 pm
    Shirin Neshat

    Shirin Neshat

    Shirin Neshat started her artmaking in 1993, and her first exhibition was a set of photos called Women of Allah which proposed the issues of Neshat’s displacement within Islamic ideology and art. Born in 1957, Iran, she is one of the well-known, American-based contemporary artists of today, who has gone beyond to explore the issues of exile, diaspora, belonging, and displacement. In her series of photos, Neshat present the militant Muslim women that subvert the stereotype and examines the Islamic idea of martyrdom. All photographs are in black and white and in most of her photographs, she is including the Farsi or Arabic text on faces or hands, chador (which is the women cover), and showing gun in few of them.

    Few years later, Neshat began working on video and sound installations which result Rapture in 1999, which was influenced by her Fervor. These two works including her earlier work called Turbulent has composed a “trilogy on human identity, inflected by differences in gender and culture, which situates the work at the heart of art world preoccupations today.”

    Shirin Neshat, Rapture, 1999, video still. Images courtesy of the artist and Barbara Gladstone Gallery.

    Shirin Neshat, Rapture, 1999, video still. Images courtesy of the artist and Barbara Gladstone Gallery.

    Rapture is a twelve minute poetic video in black and white which focuses on the differentiation of gender role both visually and spatially and addresses to the traditional and cultural aspect of patriarchy and fundamentalist society of Iran. After visiting Iran, Neshat started analyzing the differences between the western and eastern cultures and this emphasis has made a great impact on all of her artworks. Neshat’s powerful art is characterized by a visual lyricism and elegant beauty that is always captivating and occasionally confusing.

    In today globalized world, artists such as Shirin Neshat play a significant role to represent the differences between the cultures of her homeland and home she currently lives in. As an Iranian, I feel privileged to look at Neshat’s work and compare and contrast my personal experiences through the different worlds. Also the foreign viewers, who never had experienced the Islamic country such as Iran, will definitely enjoy and get a sense of the way Neshat has illustrated her works through her own view.

    By Jaleh Fotoohi

    Check these two PBS interviews with Charlie Rose:  January 2002 and June 2006

    Related Reviews: Global Art Database,Visual Art,Photography,Video

    Manga Ormolu – Hybrid cultures in a globalized world

    In Exhibition, Global Art Database, Vancouver Art Gallery, Visual Art, anime, art on March 26, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    Manga Ormolu is one of Brendan Lee Satish Tang’s ceramic series, which amalgamates Ming Dynasty style porcelain with figures from Japanese anime and manga. The set is inspired by French ormolu, where Chinese ceramics were gilded with gold or bronze. Here Ming-style vases are usurped by futuristic robotic prosthetics, representing the ongoing process of globalization (as known as colonialism, nationalism, and capitalism) and of cultural appropriation. Tang criticizes the rate and extent of which globalization is increasing as we pass through various technological revolutions from agricultural, industrial, to now digital. The boundaries which define one’s identity are subjected to constant change, but now at an even faster pace.

    Manga Ormolu version 4.0-c by Brendan Tang

    Manga Ormolu version 4.0-c by Brendan Tang

    The message of traditions taken over by technology and globalization and of cultures hybridizing and merging together reflects his personal history. Tang is born in Ireland to Trinidadian parents – father of Chinese decent and mother of Indian decent and now lives in Canada. Being ethnically-mixed and culturally diverse, he claims that he is used to a hybridized identity. Through Manga Ormolu, he wishes to address the issue of transformations in culture and identity in an amusing and not so serious fashion, while motivating viewers to become aware of globalization and to reflect on the realities of their world. 

    By Athena Wong

    Related Reviews: Global Art Database,Visual Art, Exhibition, Vancouver Art Gallery

    Homelessness in Noah Becker’s Eyes

    In Uncategorized on March 22, 2009 at 5:11 pm

    Noah Becker is a Victoria, British Columbia based multi visual artist, jazz musician/ saxophonist, and a founder and publisher of international contemporary art magazine, Whitehot magazine.

    “His paintings reveal fantastical worlds where time and space are suspended in an alternative reality. The artist depicts familiar icons in absurd configuration, offering a way commentary on the state of contemporary culture. His practice as an artist is multi-faceted, his ability as a painter is matched by his aptitude as a jazz musician”. (Kathleen Ritter, curator of How Soon is Now)

     

    Noah Becker, Untitled Realms Series (Homeless) 2007 11 x 14 pencil on paper

    Noah Becker, Untitled Realms Series (Homeless) 2007 11" x 14" pencil on paper

    Becker is exposing Untitled Realms Series, both in drawings with pencil, pen, and oil on paintings in different sizes, from an 8.5”x 11” smallest to 48”x48” biggest. There is a sense of unity and equality within most of his works. For example, most of his drawings and paintings are done in a circle which signifies the earth, then Becker layers or overlaps his ideas within this circle which makes it more complex and abstract but recognizable. There are a lot of little details to notice, every time you look at them, you realize something new that you missed the last time. I had to watch his works few times in order to grasp the depth of them. Of course, Becker’s art pieces are presenting the social issues or events of our everyday life. For example, in his painting entitled homeless which is both drawn with pencil on paper and in another version, oil on canvas, he illustrates the reality of homelessness in our society/world which we see every day. A person who is sleeping on the bench, or made a shelter with boxes, a person who carries a buggy full of bottles, a person carrying a sign which might say: “hunger 4 food” or “need sum monee”. In his paintings he uses very bright colors. In the Homeless piece, he uses a bright light blue for the background then the circle (earth) in the centre presenting the homeless with these bright green, red, yellow, etc colors to capture the viewer’s attention. Becker’s perspective is to illustrate some of the social and political issues of the world.  Artworks such as Homeless, Slave vs. Master, War Scene, Poverty and Wealth are examples of social and political context.

    Becker’s paintings and drawings are currently being exhibited at the Vancouver Art Gallery till May 3, 2009 as part of a new exhibition called How Soon Is Now that displays more than thirty local artists. These artists are presenting contemporary works of art in different media such as sculpture, video, audio, drawing, painting, architectural intervention, and site-specific projects and events. I highly recommend you to see it so you can get a sense of Becker’s idea and other artists as such.

    By Jaleh Fotoohi


    Related Reviews: Global Art Database,Visual Art, Exhibition, Vancouver Art Gallery

    Immigration and Domination, Landscape: For the Birds

    In Global Art Database, Installation, Vancouver Art Gallery, audio, society on March 22, 2009 at 4:25 pm

    How Soon is Now is currently showing at The Vancouver Art Gallery, featuring contemporary works of over thirty artists from British Columbia. Each piece is from local artists, but the ideas behind them are not limited to local issues. Many of these artists have displayed the effect of the globalized world within their local artworks.

    Abbas Akhavan

    Abbas Akhavan

    Abbas Akhavan was born in Tehran Iran, but has been living in Canada for thirteen years, currently residing in Vancouver. His work entitled “Landscape: For the Birds” is an intriguing piece that explores the issues of immigration. There is nothing installed, instead the viewer is directed to the gallery window where they are instructed to listen to the starlings outside. As Vancouverites we may hear these starlings everyday but probably know very little about their history. Starlings are originally from Asia and Europe but sometime in the 19th century they were introduced to Canada and began to take over. Starting off with only ninety birds, their numbers are currently at 200 million. Starlings can easily adapt to urban life and nest anywhere. They are a particularly aggressive species of bird that are known for pushing other birds out of their nests. This fierce competitive nature usually results in them taking over from the once dominant local bird species.

    By pointing to the viewer in the direction of these starlings, Akhavan is conjointly pointing out Canada’s own history of immigration. During the gold rush of 1890 people emigrated from Europe and Asia in vast numbers. These newcomers quickly built homes and drove out the native tribes. Comparable to starlings, these immigrants quickly took over and became the dominant ones.

    Click here to hear
    Click here to hear 

    European Starling sound

    “Landscape: For the birds” has successfully taken the global issue of immigration (of people and of birds) into a very localized area of the Vancouver Art Gallery. It shows how even a work that involves listening outside a window in Vancouver can point to worldwide issues.

    by Kathryn Schmidt

     

     

    Related Reviews: MusicGlobal Art Database, ExhibitionVancouver Art Gallery

    Temporality and Fragility in Kristi Malakoff’s “Skull”

    In Exhibition, Global Art Database, Vancouver Art Gallery, Visual Art, art, society on March 21, 2009 at 12:45 pm

    One of Kristi Malakoff’s current pieces at the Vancouver Art Gallery, entitled “Skull” brings together two opposing feelings, that of life and death, and through looking at celebratory ideas of death Malakoff is also bringing together the global with the local. The piece covers a large white wall in the gallery, and at closer look one is able to see the fine craftsmanship that Malakoff has put into this work. A labour intensive piece the work consists of over 12000 cut out paper flowers, mounted on the wall to form the design of a skull. Fifty different types of flowers are displayed, and have all been photographed by Malakoff, and then cut out one by one, and reassembled in the gallery space. The work speaks of death and beauty, both through the initial design; flowers into a skull, as well as the fact that the piece itself is so delicate, and ultimately will be destroyed once the exhibition is over. Life is fleeting, just as this project in fleeting, in the temporality of it, the bright colours and impressive detail will all be taken down, therefore the work must be celebrated while it is still here.

    “Skull” by Kristi Malakoff

    “Skull” by Kristi Malakoff

    Also in terms of celebration this work brings up ideas around celebrations of death, such as The Day of the Dead, in Mexican culture. This is where Malakoff’s work leaves the local space of the Vancouver Art Gallery and becomes a global piece of work, that cross-culturally can be talked about, and understand in the same, yet different ways as well. Celebrations of death are something that happens across cultures, not just in Mexico, similar celebrations occur in Spain, and the Philippines. In this way this large skull allows viewers to think about death, and how it is celebrated in their own culture compared to other cultures. Malakoff uses a beautiful design to show off the beauty in life, and juxtaposes this with an image that is understood globally to be one of death or destruction, in this way she is speaking to a larger audience, and making her point more globally understood, instead of only understood for the space of the Vancouver Art Gallery.
    A common theme of fragility and temporality occurs throughout Malakoff’s pieces, and she is able to use a theme such as this to provoke cross-cultural discussion around her work, as well as aesthetically, the fragility of her work can be appreciated for both its beauty as well as the hard work that evidently went into it. A large-scale piece such as this screams to be talked about, and that is exactly what “Skull” achieves, discussion around the beauty of the work as well as discussion around the larger themes the work represents.

    Kristi Malakoff’s Star and Target

    Kristi Malakoff’s "Star" and "Target" (both on the floor)

     

    Two other Kristi Malakoff pieces are currently being displayed at the Vancouver Art Gallery now, both her piece “Target” which is made of layers and layers of crate paper, as well as “Star” which has been constructed with actors tape in the shape of a star on the gallery floor, can also be seen in the “How Soon Is Now” exhibit, running until May 3rd, 2009.

    By Heather Palmer


    Related Reviews: Society, Global Art Database,Visual Art, Exhibition, Vancouver Art Gallery

    How Soon Is Now

    In Exhibition, Global Art Database, Installation, Vancouver Art Gallery, Visual Art, anime on March 18, 2009 at 10:20 pm

    “How Soon Is Now” is an exhibition that is happening now until May 3rd, 2009 at the Vancouver Art Gallery. The exhibition introduces selected artists from the province of British Columbia whose work utilizes range of forms such as sculpture, painting, video, audio installation work and more.

    In one part of the gallery, a series of works that are bizarre yet at the same time eye pleasing, is Brendan Lee Saish Tang’s Manga Ormolu. Tang, born in Dublin and raised in Nanaimo BC, links his interest in hybridity to his family background, which includes a number of generations of ethnic intermarriage and intercontinental migration across India, China, Trinidad, Ireland and Canada.

     

    Brendan Tang (in front of the Vancouver Art Gallery)

    Brendan Tang (in front of the Vancouver Art Gallery)

    Manga Ormolu version 3.0-b

    Manga Ormolu version 3.0-b

    Manga Ormolu enters the dialogue on contemporary culture, technology, and globalization through the relationship between ceramic tradition (using the form of Chinese Ming dynasty vessels) and techno-Pop Art. The futuristic update of the Ming vessels recalls the 18th century French gilded ormolu, where historic Chinese vessels were transformed into curiosity pieces for aristocrats. But here, robotic prosthetics inspired by anime (Japanese animation) and manga (the beloved comics and picture novels of Japan) subvert elitism with the accessibility of popular culture (Brendan TangArtist’s Website).

    The title “How Soon Is Now” evokes one characteristic of the work in the exhibition: a sense of immediacy that speaks to the present moment (19th issue of Glance, news and event of the Vancouver Art Gallery). Through developed technology, it is un-questionable that the world is coming closer. Hence, Tang’s work flawlessly fits with the title of the exhibition and just like his background he has created work that mirrors the hybridization as a cultural effect of globalization.

     

    Raymond Boisjoly—Expanding Fields. Christmas lights and wooden construction.

    Raymond Boisjoly—Expanding Fields. Christmas lights and wooden construction.

    Wood and lights compose Raymond Boisjoly’s Beginnings and Latecomers, a unique hybrid of cultural ideas.  Made of yellow cedar, the sculpture is adorned by Christmas lights of different colours.  The lights form to outline figures similar to those found on totem poles.  This mixture of West Coast Native symbolism with Christian-based tradition evokes a strange juxtaposition, creating an odd, desecrated version of a totem pole.  

    Boisjoly offers a unique translation of local Aboriginal tradition and culture. His representation of a totem pole, bright lights and all, is one for the modern, market-oriented world.  Today, artists are expected to go beyond their local art communities and serve and appeal to a more global market.  I see Boisjoly’s work as a critique of this idea, bringing to the viewer’s attention how Native culture has become a cheap commodity.  Aboriginal icons and beliefs have been appropriated time and again in order to make money in the name of celebrating local art tradition.  This is at the expense of true Native culture, however, as traditions are boxed up into packaged products for the mass consumer.

     

    Noah Becker in the studio. Photo Big Tiny Smalls

    Noah Becker in the studio. Photo Big Tiny Smalls

    Noah Becker’s piece entitled, Dysfunctional Landscape, is currently being featured at the “How Soon Is Now”.  This artist’s work is labelled as “commenting on contemporary culture.”  Becker’s, Dysfunctional Landscape, consists of a mountain structure broken down with levels of several tiers, containing both objects and human figures.  This frame provides the piece with a downward motion, containing an end when the bottom of the work is reached.  In the depiction, objects appear to be passed and shared.  Some are left on the floor, while others are in use.  These individual abstract fragments include a person with a marionette puppet and the act of building in progress.  While all these individual identities are presented in the piece, so are segregated entities. 

    The notion of globalization is here evident.  Individuals choose to partake as consumers in the shared concepts and notions of cultures outside of their own, even if they are not aware of their involvement.  Together people are building a universal point of recognition; however humans are still members of their personal culture.  The scattered objects represent the notion that there is no infinite answer to the implications of globalization.  Cultural overlap exists, however no one is quite sure how to encompass identity into a single definition.  In other words, the lack of certainty of the meaning and repercussions of globalization is represented.

    Other Artists in the exhibition:

    Jackson 2bears, Abbas Akhavan, Sonny Assu, Cedric, Nathan and Jim Bomford, Aaron Carpenter, Hadley+Maxwell, Antonia Hirsch, Allison Hrabluik, Instant Coffee, Christian Kliegel, Germaine Koh, Laiwan, Kristi Malakoff, Kyla Mallett, Luanne Martineau, Damian Moppett, The Music Appreciation Society, Lucy Pullen, Marina Roy, Samuel Roy-Bois, Carol Sawyer, Kevin Schmidt, Kathy Slade, Ken Singer, Mark Soo, Erica Stocking, Dan Starling, Kara Uzelman, Holly Ward, Paul Wong, Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky.

     

    Next Talk: Pleased To Meet You: Socialibility and Art Thursday, March 26, 7pm In the Gallery Panelists: Abbas Akhavan, Instant Coffee, Laiwan and Holly Ward; Moderator: Lorna Brown With: PDA for your PDA (Public Display of Affection for your Personal Digital Assistant) Laiwan will present this participatory event as a complement to the panel. Bring your PDA. 

    Jen Lee, Matthew Sy and Melissa Assalone

    Related Reviews: Society, Global Art Database,Visual Art, Exhibition, Vancouver Art Gallery

    Busting through Globalization: A Look at Adbusters One Flag competition

    In Global Art Database, cyberspace, society on March 16, 2009 at 7:49 am

    Adbusters, a not-for-profit organization, describes itself as “a global network of culture jammers and creatives working to change the way information flows, the way corporations wield power, and the way meaning is produced in our society.” With the want to change a capitalist driven world, this British Columbian based company has worked since 1988 to change the way we think about consumerism, and the impacts we make on our world.

                In a time where we are “faced with some of the most daunting global challenges in human history, ” (Adbusters.org) Adbusters is running its “One Flag Competition,” to find a flag that is representative of all cultures, all communities, and ultimately of the world as a global community. From over 1000 entries, the competition has been narrowed down to 32 flags, to vote from. Out of these 32 flags a common theme of unity, and globalization arises. Looking at just one of these flags, one can see how a piece of art can represent a host of ideas, and in turn make a stand for a world in which we are able to work together.

    Flag Of Pop World by Andy Shawber

    Flag Of Pop World by Andy Shawber

                Flag of the Pop World, a piece by Andy Shawber of Seattle, Washington, is representative of how “our national identities are increasingly becoming abstract,” because of the increase of globalization. We continue to live together in this world, the colours we create, being side by side in his flag.  This piece uses a range of colours across the spectrum, which “depicts the blend of national colors as kitschy and banal” (Shawber). By using all those colours that are seen in flags around the world and mashing them all together, to create something new, Shawber is able to disassociate these colours with what they originally have represented and instead create a new flag that shows the break down of each individual country to form a new global community.

                The idea of finding one flag that is able to represent the world coming together to survive, as a single nation seems to be an unattainable ideal. Yet when one takes a look at the rate of globalization, and the already increasing coming together, in this world, a flag to represent, and support the idea of working together as one, is changing. A flag such as the ones represented in this competition, shows an awareness of what is going on around us, and shows that we are not only living as individuals, but are a part of something bigger around us, something that is subject to change and always subject to improvement. A contest such as this brings awareness to a larger group of people, using art to create change and consciousness of what is going on in the world around us.

                This work as a piece of global art shows how expression through art, literature, etc… is able to create representational ideas, that can bring forth ideas with just one look. This contest is able to use the created images to bring up ideas of globalization with just one look at each flag.

    By Heather Palmer

    Related Reviews: Society, Global Art Database,Cyberspace

    Inside the mind of Jacques Resch

    In Global Art Database, Visual Art on March 4, 2009 at 10:39 am

    "Le Diabolo" by Jacques Resch

    A French surrealist artist born in 1945, Jacques Resch became a physics and chemistry teacher while painting and drawing on the side. Resch’s works are strongly influenced by what he perceives as onrushing problems that plague the world such as pollution, political and social instability, poverty, and even the modern day insistence and obsession with technology. According to his biography, Resch prefers to create his work spontaneously with no edits, as it is his point of view that these errors show and emphasize the feebleness of human nature and the limits of the human creature. Indeed, at first glance many of Resch’s paintings are difficult to take in due to its multi-layered characteristics. Pieces such as the “Le Diabolo” depict people, none of whom look happy, living, perhaps imprisoned, inside distorted structures. In this painting the people have become an inseparable part of the very structure that they had created.

    "Le Vagabond" by Jacques Resch

    In “Le Vagabon”, a human figure is seen walking on stilts with a heavy load on his back. But as to who is in control of the body comes into question as two faces (one of an old man and another of a child) emerge from the man. The ground is littered with garbage which the man dutifully avoids using his wooden stilts while carrying his own rubbish on his back. Resch brings into question the manner in which perspective comes to play on how we define boundaries, especially when defining human progress. When viewing his works one begins to wonder as to the extent that the very objects and events that we have created and started have in turn defined our very existence and influenced our perception of the human condition.

    Anthony Bornia

     

    Related Reviews: Visual Art, Global Art Database

    Screen Culture: Intermediality and Interculturality Conference – Abstracts

    In Conference, Screen Culture Database on March 3, 2009 at 11:30 am

    Conference organizer: Hudson MOURA

    SFU downtown Vancouver campus

    8:30 am—6:00 pm, March 12th, 2009

    Room 1600

    Free admission

     

    Abstracts

     

    The Fragmented Frame: the Poetics of the Split-Screen

    The split-screen has a long yet relatively under-theorized place in the history of the moving image.  Salt finds examples as early as 1901 – including several instances of the use of the split-screen to simultaneously represent two sides of a telephone call.  Gance used the split-screen spectacularly in the closing sequence to his masterpiece, Napoleon.  The use of this technique has never disappeared, but despite a brief explosion in the late sixties and early seventies, it has generally remained a minor trope in the poetics of the moving image.  However, it is more in evidence in a range of contemporary films, sometimes as a tour-de-force (Timecode, The Tracey Fragments), but more commonly integrated and subordinated within the overall single-screen aesthetic.

    This resurgence of the split-screen is supported by ongoing cultural changes in the production, distribution and reception of the moving image.  The computer desktop, electronic games, television news, print comics and graphic novels have accustomed us to reading the many-windowed visual screen.  Contemporary domestic media technologies privilege the pleasure of complex moving image narratives and visual constructions.  Larger high-definition video screens provide the visual arena for the display of multiple images, and ever-increasing home playback options support the repeated viewing of more intricately faceted storylines and imagery. 

    Some contemporary media theorists recognize the potential of this form of cinematic expression.  Manovich argues that the twentieth century moving image devalued what he calls “spatial montage” but that the digital imperatives of this century – both technical and cultural – are favorable to a more spatialized aesthetic that includes the split-screen. Spielman maintains that the digital moving image uniquely privileges the collaged and the spatial.  Willis notes that contemporary filmmakers such as Greenaway and Figgis use digital capabilities to break what Greenaway calls “the tyranny of the frame” and make expressive use of a multi-windowed cinematic environment. 

    However, there is little theoretical work on the poetics or cinematic design of the split-screen.  This paper argues for a robust approach to the deconstruction and analysis of split-screen sequences.  This approach examines the phenomenon at three levels: the narrative, the structural and the graphic.  This three-level analysis is applied in a close-reading of Jewison’s Thomas Crown Affair (1968) and against contemporary examples such as Rules of Attraction (2002), Conversations with Other Women (2005) and the television series 24.

    Jim BIZZOCCHI is an Assistant Professor in the School of Interactive Art and Technology at Simon Fraser University. Jim teaches Game Design, Interactive Narrative, and Video Production. His research interests include the emergent aesthetics of digital video experience, the design of interactive narrative, and the development of educational games and simulations. He has presented and published widely in a variety of academic conferences, journals and books. Jim is an experienced educational technologist, and is a past-president of the Canadian Association for Distance Education. Finally, Jim is a practicing video artist, producing original video works that complement his scholarly writing.

     

    Everything new is old again: Potlatch as an intermedial, intercultural Kwakwakwakw event.

    Drawing on Chapple and Kattenbelt’s concept of intermediality as “a space where the boundaries soften and we are in-between and within a mixing of space, media and realities (2006),” I offer an ethnographic analysis by way of a “thick description” of a contemporary Kwakwakwakw potlatch.  A potlatch is a time and place specific event that is simultaneously theatre (scripted songs, music and speeches are enacted by people wearing appropriate regalia, and choreographed dances are performed according to rules and aesthetic conventions in the specialized building of a Big House); and performance (while marked events, potlatches are shaped by and reciprocally shape the social relations/performances of everyday life beyond the event, and improvisations demanded by the living politics of affective relations sometimes uphold and sometimes subvert the letter of scripted laws); and film set where recordings that will circulate among local households, and museums, film festivals, universities and cultural centres around the world are made by Kwakwakwakw and non-Kwakwakwakw professionals and amateurs.  Diverse audiences constituted by local people including performers when they are not “on stage”, members of the Kwakwakwakw diaspora, and invited and uninvited strangers, witness/watch/participate/feast/interpret/contest. Locating a contemporary potlatch within a historical context I argue that Kwakwakwakw have incorporated new media to serve old ends since colonization of the northwest coast of British Columbia began in the late 18th century. By tracing the social/political life of diverse media (face-to-face communication, witnessed live performance, photography, film and video) engaged in a contemporary potlatch, I propose that the Kwakwakwakw story offers insights into the creative potential of spaces in between, and into possibilities of resistance and survival through dark times.

    Dara CULHANE, Associate Professor of Anthropology, received her B.A. in Sociology and Anthropology in 1985 and her Ph.D. in Anthropology in 1994 from Simon Fraser University. Her work has concentrated on historical and contemporary relations between Aboriginal peoples and the Canadian Nation State; politics of indigenous women’s health; collaborative research methodologies; and urban studies. From 1992-1994 Dr. Culhane served as Deputy Director of Social and Cultural Research for the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.

     

    Facebook City

    A wealth of recent scholarship is devoted to social networking sites (sns) as mediated publics (Boyd, D. M., & Ellison, N. B., 2007), and online environments as architecture (Mitchell, 1995; Beckmann, 1998; Adams, 1997; Kwinter, 1996). Yet connecting facebook—the sixth-most visited global internet site—with urban patterns, built environments, and networked publics—sites, spaces, places—has been less theorized. The proposed analysis will begin by engaging with some of the above-mentioned theoretical framings (and come back to others, throughout the course of the discussion). I shall then propose a framework for conceiving of facebook, specifically, as a virtual metropolis: an autonomous city-state, a semi-permeable and protected hierarchical network of citizens and technologies, an elaborate online trailer park, with neighbourhoods, gated communities, places and non-places, archives, and nighttime economies, town halls, malls—and with intricate lattices of circulation, transportation and navigation forming and reforming as connective tissue. As Paul C. Adams notes: “… metaphor does not contain meaning; it provides a starting point for the construction of meaning” (1997, 156). By applying the city-ness metaphor to facebook, I intend not to propose a constrictive or totalizing model; rather, I aim to bring facebook’s current critical positioning forward from being confined within discourses of identity politics, power relations, and subject-formation. We may then invite its topographical rethinking as a self-contained yet morphological region, a built environment transposed upon—in addition to shadowing—the physical domain, existing within a networked and mobile society, housing collective, urban pockets of linked populations, and enabling new forms of social agency.

    Ryan DIDUCK is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Communication Studies at McGill University. He attained his MA in film studies, as well as a BFA with great distinction at the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema at Concordia University. His current research investigates advertising across emerging, networked and mobile media.

     

    Multi-Screen Narrative in The Tracey Fragments

    In cinema, particularly in films adapted from novels, the challenge of depicting subjectivity has been daunting.  Traditional techniques such as narration, flashbacks, dream/fantasy sequences and point-of-view cinematography have been augmented by increasingly sophisticated digital sound and image technologies, but the depiction of interior mental states in a sensation-based medium remains a difficult and often awkward task in comparison to the abstract and fluent language of the novelist.                   

    In Bruce McDonald’s The Tracey Fragments (2007), first-person narrative is expressed through multiple images which can simultaneously show the character’s past, present, and future as well as nightmares and fantasies, all on screen at the same time in a constantly changing mosaic.  The film is based on Maureen Medved’s fragmentary and highly subjective novel, narrated by a fifteen-year-old girl, which was also adapted as a graphic novel.  McDonald’s choice to translate the novel’s stream-of-consciousness style into a barrage of simultaneous images gives it a unique ability to express the racing, unreliable mind of its teenaged narrator.

    I will describe how Eisenstein’s concept of spatial montage, as articulated in the extreme form of The Tracey Fragments, expresses the phenomenology of ‘being-in-the-world. ’ Lev Manovich says of multi-screen imagery, “Time becomes spatialized, distributed over the surface of the screen. In spatial montage, nothing is potentially forgotten, nothing is erased.” (The Language of New Media, 272). Further, according to Deleuze, sensation “has no sides at all, it is both [subject and object] indissolubly…at the same time I become in sensation and something arrives through sensation, one through the other, one in the other.”  In its best moments, The Tracey Fragments represents this becoming in sensation simultaneously for both its fictional central character and for the viewer of the film.

    Patricia GRUBEN, Filmmaker, Associate Professor of Film at the School for the Contemporary Arts and Director of Praxis Centre for Screenwriters. Has written and directed several experimental narrative shorts, two dramatic features and a feature-length documentary, which have been screened internationally in cinemas, on television, and at numerous festivals. Also works as a script consultant and screenwriter, and has published several articles and book chapters on Canadian filmmakers, screenplay structure, and adaptation. She is Director of the SFU Field School in Art & Culture of Contemporary India.

     

    Capturing Transnationality and Transculturality: A Case Study of Experimental Film

    Japan is occasionally portrayed as a mono-ethnic, mono-lingual nation by filmmakers and researchers. Conveying such image and message to the audience is, what Elizabeth Ellsworth (1997) calls, “mode of address”. Ellsworth indicates the interaction between address and response is crucial for the creation of the bilateral relationship between filmmakers/researchers and their audience and for the emergence of alternative views.

    Applying Ellsworth’s concept, I seek to examine transnationality and transculturality seen in The Fourth Dimension (2001) created by a post-colonial thinker and filmmaker Trinh T. Minh-ha. This “experimental” film on Japan and its culture demonstrates how First/Third Worlds and East/West are intricately intermingled and coexist beyond dichotomies and boundaries. Moreover, it complicates the relationship between filmmaker, filmed subject, and viewer as well as the notion of space and time, from the perspective of the storyteller as a traveler and global/transnational citizen. How do national, cultural, and ethnic borders shift and become blurred in Trinh’s film? How does the fact that the film has been screened mainly in North America deconstruct and reconfigure the cultural borders between the United States, Canada, and Japan? What kind of alternative perspective resisting the conventional notion of territoriality is emerging? Incorporating a projection of an experimental video (5 min.) produced by the researcher herself as a global/transnational citizen educated in Japan, the United States, and Canada, this proposed presentation will contribute to better understanding of what it means to go global/transnational, in other words, transgress national, cultural, and ethnic borders.

    Hiroko HARA is currently pursuing her PhD studies in Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia. Her research interests include global citizenship, postcolonial theory, film and video production, visual culture, and media education. Hiroko is an experimental filmmaker and has produced films and videos screened at conferences and film festivals in Canada and the United States.

     

    How Jack Bauer and El Cid Pulled the Philosopher’s Beard: Real Time and the Rules of Aristotelian Unity

    No wonder Henry VI struck the continental cognoscenti as culturally barbaric. Not only did William Shakespeare treat the Maid of Orleans like a Satanic whore who deserved everything she got; he allowed months, and even years, to elapse before the story ended. Thus, when Pierre Corneille chose to extend the “running of time” of Le Cid to 30 hours (in order to allow his hero to fight a fatal duel with his fiancėe’s father, defeat the Moors who unexpectedly arrive to besiege his city, escape the death penalty and romantically reconcile with his beloved), even this relatively minor breach of the Aristotelian Rules of Unity produced one of the most vehement polemics of the seventeenth century. Every season of the twenty-first century TV series 24, conversely, takes exactly 1,440 minutes of real time to unfold. Of course, thanks to the mixed blessings of modern technology, people can travel a lot farther in a day than they could 2,500 years ago, and wreak far more havoc…especially if the laws of probability are cast in abeyance. Ironically, both these cultural manifestation serve to underline just how artificial the great Athenian’s prescriptions really were. They also underline their peculiar attractiveness, even in a digital age that has long since absorbed the rules of Elizabethan drama, the nineteenth century novel, the comic strip, the video game and other narrative forms into its arsenal of narrative strategies. Comparing Versailles’ apprehension of El Cid to Hollywood’s depiction of a contemporary secret agent (who simultaneously embodies the worst fears of left and right wing American viewers) is one way of exploring how much things have changed over the past two and a half millennia, and how much they have remained the same.

    Mark HARRIS has taught in the Film Studies Department at the University of British Columbia since receiving his doctorate in Comparative Literature in the late 1990s, and continue to publish widely, in both academic and journalistic circles.

     

    Gender and the Advent of Remediated Dating

    Working within a framework that understands dating as a gendered and (re)mediated phenomenon, whether ‘offline’ or ‘on,’ this analysis looks to the ways urban professionals in Vancouver practice online dating as both an everyday activity and an engagement with practices of identification and subjectification. By employing three of the four universal laws of media propounded by Marshall McLuhan, I descriptively illustrate how online dating remediates and remixes gender and practices of relationship formation by and through the medium of the Internet. I use only three of the four laws because it is my firm contention that online dating has not obsolesced any form of conventional or traditional dating practices. Rather, I take this as the first indication and evidence that online dating is not, and can never be, an entirely new and different means of relationship formation, human interaction, or intimate engagement. I further buttress this contention by suggesting that practices of online dating: 1) enhance relationships of power through the primacy of the visual in online potential date and mate selection and the (almost) inevitable face-to-face interaction that it is succeeded by; 2) retrieves gendered stereotypes and the norms and patterns of behaviour reminiscent of more conventional forms of dating; and 3) can and does subvert these gendered power relations by producing inverted and shifted gendered patterns and practices of dating. By arguing that online dating is a different, that is, remediated, but not entirely ‘new,’ form of dating which continues to be thoroughly embedded in gendered norms, I hope to meld new media and social/feminist theory to answer the question of what difference ‘difference’ makes in intimate relationship formation by and through the Internet.

    Jacqueline Schoemaker HOLMES is a PhD Candidate at the University of British Columbia in the Department of Sociology. Her dissertation work involves an investigation into the online dating practices of Vancouver’s professionals. This eight-month ethnographic study centers on the concept of remediated dating, which highlights the gendered and technologically-mediated nature of contemporary human lives and identities.

     

    Queer Asia On Screen

    This presentation explores elements of intermediality in the cinemas of “Queer Asia,” the designation of which is itself an inter-cultural phenomenon that results from both the development of new media technology and the globalization of queer sexual cultures. I will discuss three points of intersection between cinema and new media in the Queer Asian context: (1) active forms of queer spectatorship facilitated by the internet, (2) digital production and the D.I.Y ethos, and (3) new media as a cinematic theme.

    Helen Hok-Sze LEUNGassistant professor at Department of Women’s Studies, Simon Fraser University. Her research focuses on queer theory; cultural and literary theory; gender and sexuality in Hong Kong cinema and culture.

     

    Mystical mirror images in Persian painting and interactive media

    “Know the world is a mirror from head to foot / In every atom are a hundred blazing suns,” the fourteenth-century Shaykh Mahmud Shabistani wrote.  An immersive illusion that satisfies the senses, and yet draws the beholder into an awareness of the “metadata” that created the illusion: that is Persian painting of the sixteenth century; and it also characterizes digital fictions of our time. Intriguing mirroring occurs between Sixteenth-century Sufi and Illuminationist thought and modern philosophy, in ways that shed light on these art forms: for example, Al-Suhrawardi’s conception of the universe as a flow of light is strikingly similar to that of Henri Bergson. This talk will explore a few of these parallel mirror images.

    Laura U. MARKS is the Dena Wosk University Professor in Art and Culture Studies in the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University. She is the author of The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses (2002) and Touch: Sensuous Theory and Multisensory Media (2002), and has curated programs of film, video, and new media for venues around the world. Dr. Marks is currently researching an Islamic genealogy of new media art, as well as contemporary cinema in the Arab world; a book prospectively titled Enfoldment and Infinity: An Islamic Genealogy of New Media Art is forthcoming from MIT Press.

     

    Screen people (working progress—video)

    How much are people mediating their daily experience? Are we living a new conception of the city technologically saturated and mediated? How can we film these invisible and virtual connections?  

    Hudson MOURA received a Ph.D. in film studies and comparative literature at the Université de Montréal and he completed a postdoctoral fellowship in intercultural cinema at the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University. He is sessional lecturer at the University of British Columbia and has been teaching at Simon Fraser University since 2006 in film studies and art and culture. He is visiting professor at the graduate program in Communication, Culture and Arts at University of Algarve, Portugal. He taught at the Université de Montréal and university colleges in Brazil. He is a videomaker and editor of the e-journal Intermídias (www.intermidias.com), which publishes articles on culture and media. Dr. Moura has had many refereed articles published in Canadian, Brazilian, French, Mexican and Portuguese publications. He is the guest editor of a special issue focusing on contemporary Brazilian cinema for the Université de Montréal’s journal Cinémas. Currently his research focuses on screen culture, subtitles, global art, intercultural documentary and emergent cinemas.

     

    Gaming that Feels Real: Indexicality in Alternate Reality Games

    Alternate  Reality Games (ARG) characteristically  blur the line between simulation and reality.  While traditional games have demarcated boundaries, what Huizinga (1950) calls the “magic circle,” and video games are marked by their obligation to screens, ARGs are conducted through the use of everyday media without an explicit interface or markedness. ARG-pioneer Jane McGonigal (2003) refers to this as the game’s “immersive aesthetic.” Gamers are addressed through their everyday media networks with messages, puzzles and artifacts that uphold the verisimilitude. Without an explicit label, the game is played everywhere and anywhere at anytime.  The genre blends the performative with the narrative and the ludic.

    Whereas the audience’s traditional fascination with the television text lies in its iconicity, that is, its likeness to the reality it portrays, Fernando Andacht comparatively demonstrates how the reality television audience’s intrigue with the text lies in the indexical relationship generated by the portrayed self-reflexivity.  He argues how the screen’s predominant iconic logic is ambivalent about the realness, or ‘facticity,’ of the object it refers to.  A punning the role iconicity plays in creating sex appeal, Andacht has termed the index appeal the audience fascination with the contiguous relationship reality television offers.  Similarly, this presentation will argue how ARGs’ realist aesthetic and hard-core gamers’ fascination of the genre is dependent on the game’s index appeal. 

    Steve PAYETTE is a MA student in Media Studies at the University of Ottawa. His current research interest converges on social media and indexicality.

     

    Immersive Advertising, Mash-ups and Children’s Participatory Culture

    Young people across the developed world are growing up in increasingly participatory cultures. Such environments are dominated by multimodal screens that allow users greater opportunity to transform their personal reactions to the images, sounds, and narratives of consumer-media culture into forms of social interaction. Of course what young people do with mass media culture is rarely revolutionary or shockingly new. And yet, in many ways it has never been easier for adolescents to produce their own cultural expressions, to use the images, sounds and texts from consumer-media culture to produce new representations. As a result, children and youth now seem to have increasing opportunity to alternate between and even remix their roles as media consumers and producers.

    In interesting ways, these developments have been felt acutely in the field of youth marketing (Grimes and Shade, 2005; Buckingham, 2007; Zwick et al, 2008). In this paper I examine the development of video mash-up programs as part of the commercial websites of both public and private children’s and youth’s broadcasters. As used here, mash-ups are typically short videos or collages produced by editing together (or remixing) video and audio resources that were made for another purpose. I concentrate on mash-ups because they are really only one example of the immersive advertising techniques commercial broadcasters are using today in order to attract and hold on to adolescents’ attention. What makes mash-ups especially interesting, however, is that they represent a particular regime of visibility, a way of governing (in Foucault’s sense) children and youth conduct in a manner ideally suited to a culture of participation. To make this clear, I examine the role of mash-ups on CBC’s website for kids as well as CBC’s web resources directed at older youth. I situate these strategies in relation to other immersive advertising practices and suggest how the development of such practices structures young people’s agency in a participatory culture.

    Stuart POYNTZ, assistant Professor at the School of Communication, Simon Fraser University. His research and teach interests include: children, media and digital culture; history of media literacy; theories of the public sphere; critical pedagogy; film and historical representation.

     

    The Perceptual Capacities of Cameras and Other Ocular Devices in Seven Silent Films by Alfred Hitchcock, E. A. Dupont, and F. W. Murnau

    Working together at Universum Film Aktien Gesellschaft (Ufa), Berlin, in 1924-1925, Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) and Ewald André Dupont (1891-1956) came under the influence of F. W. Murnau (1888-1931) and other young German and Austro-Hungarian directors, such as Fritz Lang.  At Ufa Hitchcock directed his first feature film, The Pleasure Garden, which premiered in Munich on November 3, 1925, and Dupont, who had already directed twenty-four series and feature films in Germany, 1918-1925, directed Varieté, released November 16, 1925 in Berlin.  Both filmmakers became skilled in the aesthetics and cinematography of expressionism, notably as exploited in the ocular properties of the camera and the concomitant perceptual capacities of visual reproduction and visual reception.  After leaving Germany, Hitchcock and Dupont discovered the freedom to experiment further with these ocular properties at British International Pictures, at Elstree, Hertfordshire, England, with its new accent on a trans-national style.  At BIP Dupont made five films, 1926-1931, Hitchcock fourteen films, 1927-1932.  This paper examines the surface logistics of visual reproduction and reception with reference to the movie camera and other ocular devices in Dupont’s Varieté (1925), Moulin Rouge (1928), and Piccadilly (1929), Hitchcock’s The Pleasure Garden (1925) and Easy Virtue (1928), and F. W. Murnau’s Der Letzte Mann (1924) and Sunrise (1927), and proposes the origin of intermediality in the self-reflexive camera and the insert title of silent film and the origin of trans-national screen culture in the transition from silent to sound film.

    Paul Matthew ST. PIERRE is the Acting Director and associate professor of World Literature. His specializations include postcolonial literature; World Literature and Orature in English: Indigenous, Canadian, West Indian, African, New Zealand, Australian, Indian, British; critical theory; narratology; metafiction; biosemiotics; film studies and performance studies. He is the author of A Portrait of the Artist as Australian: L’Oeuvre Bizarre de Barry Humphries (2004), Song and Sketch Transcripts of British Music Hall Performers Elsie and Doris Waters (2003), and Music Hall Mimesis in British Film, 1895 – 1960 (Farleigh Dickinson UP, forthcoming 2009).

     

    Screen culture, intermediality and interculturality in Eden Robinson’s Blood Sports. 

    Eden Robinson’s novel is influenced by video, film, television and video-game and consequently suggests the existence of a screen culture society.  It employs narrative techniques that evoke these forms of media, exemplifying Irena Rajewsky’s conception of intermedial referencing.  The section entitled ‘Jag’ uses a screenplay format to illustrate the contents of home videos taken by the character Jeremy.  ‘Roll’ resembles participation in the violent and unfamiliar world of a video-game as it is written in the second person perspective—‘you’ assume the viewpoint of the character Tom, alone, lost and suffering from amnesia in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.  Robinson also utilises vernacular language and mass culture intertexts, lending her complexly structured novel accessibility and blurring distinctions between literary and popular culture. 

    Moreover, Robinson’s character Jeremy portrays the problems of confusing reality and virtuality.  Jeremy manipulates and tortures acquaintances as though he were a Hollywood gangster.  He creates a series of gruesome home videos, compulsively filming his harrowing effect on the lives of those close to him.  Throughout the novel there is a tension between the violence and confusion that result from Jeremy’s psychosis and the playful celebration of screen culture that is a consequence of Robinson’s multimedia interests. 

    Does Robinson echo the warnings of Baudrillard by illustrating the worst eventualities of hyperreality?  Or does she celebrate the creative possibilities of bridging diverse media, defying categorisation in this respect as well cultural classification—Robinson is Haisla/Heiltsuk yet refuses to be limited to writing about native experience.  Thus her work might be considered to be intercultural as well as intermedial.  I explore these issues, relating them to the broad idea of a screen society and to the particular location featured in the novel, Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside neighbourhood.

    Rachel WALLS is a second year doctoral candidate at the American and Canadian Studies Department at the University of Nottingham, U.K.  Her research explores voyeurism and surveillance in representations of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.  She is currently enjoying a month long research trip to Vancouver with the assistance of the Universitas 21 organisation which links the University of Nottingham and the English department at the University of British Columbia.  

    Related Posts: Screen Culture Conference – Schedule, Call for Papers,Screen Culture Database

    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: Anti Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus V

    In Article, Music on March 1, 2009 at 8:05 pm
    On Music

     

    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

     

    Lecture Vincennes – May 3rd, 1977

    Gilles Deleuze: You’re the one who’s introducing this notion of translation. In what music do you find it ?

    Richard Pinhas: I couple this notion of translation with those of interference and harmonic resonance. It’s a music that plays tirelessly with speeds, slownesses, strong differentiations or a complex repetition, or even both at once, there’s nothing exclusive about it, it’s a music which is built on totally inclusive syntheses. I suppose that it’s the music I like, it goes from Hendrix to Phil Glass by way of Ravel, Reich, Fripp and Eno.

    Deleuze: It makes a large group of problems, it’s very good. Shall we begin right here ? One thing disturbed me in what we did last time. We had spoken of the notions of mass and class, and of their utilization from the point of view of the problems which occupied us, and I tried to say a certain number of things. And then Guattari in turn said a certain number of things, and I was struck that we said opposite things. I told myself that it’s perfect, but have those who listened been as sensitive as me, or was it the opposite? Well then, we commence upon this story of time. It would be necessary to find a definition of “pulsation,” or else we cannot be understood. Or shall we bypass the difference between a pulsed time and a non-pulsed time? It’s quite variable….

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    Screen Culture: Intermediality and Interculturality Conference – Schedule

    In Conference, Screen Culture Database on March 1, 2009 at 12:13 pm

    Conference organizer: Hudson MOURA

    SFU downtown Vancouver campus

    8:30 am—6:00 pm, March 12th, 2009

    Room 1600

    Free admission

     

    8:30 Participants’ gathering for a coffee

     

    8:45—10:15                  Intermedial narrative 

    Moderator: Laura U. MARKS, Dena Wosk University Professor in Art and Culture Studies, School for the Contemporary Arts, SFU

    Multi-Screen Narrative in The Tracey Fragments

    Patricia GRUBEN, Associate Professor in Film Studies, School for the Contemporary Arts, SFU and Director of Praxis Centre for Screenwriters

    The Fragmented Frame: the Poetics of the Split-Screen

    Jim BIZZOCCHI, Assistant Professor, School of Interactive Arts, SFU

    Screen Culture, Intermediality and Interculturality in Eden Robinson’s Blood Sports

    Rachel WALLS, PhD candidate, American and Canadian Studies, University of Nottingham, U.K.

     

    10:15—10:30                  Break

     

    10:30—12:00                  Intermedial gaze: queer, gender and children

    Moderator: Peter DICKINSON, Associate Professor, English Department, SFU

    Queer Asia On Screen

    Helen Hok-Sze LEUNG, Assistant Professor, Department of Women’s Studies, SFU

    Gender and the Advent of Remediated Dating

    Jacqueline Schoemaker HOLMES, PhD candidate, Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia

    Immersive Advertising, Mash-ups and Children’s Participatory Culture

    Stuart POYNTZ, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University

     

    12:00—1:30                  Lunch off-location

     

    1:30—3:00                  Camera, reality, and real time

    Moderator: Patricia GRUBEN, Associate Professor in Film Studies, School for the Contemporary Arts, SFU and Director of Praxis Centre for Screenwriters

    How Jack Bauer and El Cid Pulled the Philosopher’s Beard: Real Time and the Rules of Aristotelian Unity

    Mark HARRIS, Sessional Lecturer, Film Studies, University of British Columbia

    Facebook City

    Ryan DIDUCK, Ph.D. candidate, Communication Studies, McGill University

    The Perceptual Capacities of Cameras and Other Ocular Devices in Seven Silent Films by Alfred Hitchcock, E. A. Dupont, and F. W. Murnau

    Paul Matthew ST. PIERRE, Associate Professor, Department of English, SFU

     

    3:00—3:15                  Break

     

    3:15—4:45                  Media and interculturality

    Moderator: Dorothy Barenscott, Postdoctoral Fellow, Cultural Studies, Trent University

    Mystical Mirror Images in Persian Painting and Interactive Media

    Laura U. MARKS, Dena Wosk University Professor in Art and Culture Studies, School for the Contemporary Arts, SFU

    Capturing Transnationality and Transculturality: A Case Study of Experimental Film

    Hiroko HARA, PhD candidate, Educational Studies, University of British Columbia

    Everything new is Old Again: Potlatch as an Intermedial, Intercultural Kwakwakwakw Event

    Dara CULHANE, Associate Professor, Anthropology, SFU

     

    4:45—5:00 Break

     

    5:00—5:30                  Screen society

    Screen People (working progress—video)

    Hudson MOURA, Sessional Lecturer, School for the Contemporary Arts, SFU

     

    Simon Fraser University

    School for the Contemporary Arts

    Downtown Vancouver campus

    515 West Hastings Street

    Vancouver, Room 1600

    Free admission

    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: Anti Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus III

    In Article, Global Art Database, Philosophy, society on March 1, 2009 at 1:49 pm
    Dualism, monism and multiplicities
    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

    Lecture Vincennes – March 26th, 1973

    Desire-Pleasure-Jouissance

    In the Archaeology of Knowledge, Foucault said some profound things about statements [énoncés] that concern several domains at once, even if not at the same time. I take two very vague examples. There is a moment in the Greek City when statements of a new type emerge, and these statements of a new type emerge within assignable temporal arrangements, in several domains. They can be statements concerning love, concerning marriage, concerning war, yet we feel that there is a kind of kinship or community among these statements. We have seen certain thinkers try to give explanations of how statements emerge in diverse domains that have this kind of kinship. In Greece, for example, during the “hoplite” reform, new types of statements concerning war and strategy emerge, but also new statements concerning marriage and politics. All this, it has been said, cannot be unrelated. There are some people who immediately say, for example, that there is a system of analogies or a system of homologies, and that perhaps all these statements refer to a common structure. They are called: structuralists. Others will say that these productions of statements depend on a certain domain which is determinative in relation to the others. Such people, for example, we will call: Marxists.

    Perhaps it would be better to look for something else.

    There’s a book from which one can learn many things, entitled Sexual Life in Ancient China [by Robert H. van Gulik (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1961)]. This book shows clearly that manuals of love and manuals of military strategy are indiscernible, and that new strategic and military statements are produced at the same time as new amorous statements. That’s curious. I ask myself: OK, how can we extract ourselves, at the same time, from a structuralist vision that seeks correspondences, analogies, and homologies, and from a Marxist vision that seeks determinants. I indeed see one possible hypothesis, but it’s so confused . . . . It’s perfect. It would consist in saying: at a given moment, for reasons that, of course, must still be determined, it is as if a social space were covered by what we would have to call an abstract machine. We would have to give a name to this non-qualified abstract machine, a name that would mark its absence of qualification, so that everything will be clear. We could call it — at the same time, this abstract machine, at a given moment, will break with the abstract machine of the preceding epochs — in other words, it will always be at the cutting edge [à la pointe], thus it would receive the name machinic point [pointe machinique]. It would be the machinic point of a group or a given collectivity; it would indicate, within a group and at a given moment, the maximum of deterritorialization as well as, and at the same time, its power of innovation. This is somewhat abstract at the moment, it’s like algebra. It’s this abstract machine which, in conditions that will have to be determined, it’s this machinic point of deterritorialization that is reterritorialized in this or that machine, or in this or that military machine, amorous machine, productive of new statements. This is a possible hypothesis. I have the impression that there are things in Leroi-Gourhan we could use here, we would have to see how that works. This machinic point would indicate a kind of speed of deterritorialization. There are systems of indices under which reterritorializations are made in qualified machines, war machines, machines of love, machines of marriage….

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    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: Anti Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus IV

    In Article, Global Art Database, Philosophy, society on February 28, 2009 at 1:56 pm
    Lecture Vincennes – January 14th, 1974

    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

    I must pass by a kind of terminological detour. This detour consists in recalling a certain terminology. We find that, in the whole current of the Middle Ages up to and including the seventeenth century, a certain problem is posed concerning the nature of being. And this problem concerning the nature of being adopted some very precise notions: equivocity, analogy, univocity.

    At first sight these terms appear dead to us. They make up part of the great discussions of Scholasticism, but the great metaphysical disputes always hide something else: people are never burned or tortured over ideological questions, even less over metaphysical ones. I would like for us to try to feel what was very concretely in question in these stories which were presented under an abstract form: is being equivocal, is it analogical, is it univocal? And after all, this is not because today, except among the seminarians, we have abandoned these terms, not because we do not continue to think in them and through them. I would like to content myself with very simple definitions.

    There are people who said: being is equivocal. They argued, they burned one another for things like that. But “being is equivocal” meant a precise thing: being is said in several senses. That means: being is said in several senses of that of which it is said. That is to say that the implication [sous-entendu] of the proposition was already: being is said of something. I’m not even interested in knowing if it’s an ontological problem; it’s a problem of utterances [ÈnoncÈs] as well. Being is stated [s'Ènonce] in several senses of that of which it is stated. Concretely, what does that mean? One assumes that a table is not in the same manner as an animal and that an animal is not in the same manner as a man; that a man is not in the same manner as God. Therefore there are several senses of being….

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    The B-boy Subculture: whenever they dance, wherever they are in the world

    In Cinema, Global Art Database on February 25, 2009 at 5:55 pm

    Benson Lee’s film Planet B-Boy (2007) follows the lives of various dance crews around the world and documents their experiences within the B-boy subculture. The documentary focuses on the 2005 Battle of the Year, an annual global competition that culminates with the crowning of the best b-boy crew of the year. B-boying, or breakdancing, began in the 1970s as part of the hip-hop movement in the United States. By the 1980s and 1990s, b-boying had spread across Europe, and then to Asia and South America, with each country adding its own cultural influences to the dance form. The film specifically follows crews from Japan, South Korea, France, and the United States as they prepare for the international competition in Germany. The film includes in depth interviews with the dancers, coaches, friends, and families, as each crew struggles to balance their personal lives with their dance lives.

    What I found most interesting about Planet B-Boy is the similar experiences of each dance crew. All of the dancers go through similar struggles: seeking parent’s approval, wanting to build a better life, fighting discrimination. A Korean b-boy dances despite his father’s harsh criticism just as an adolescent b-boy from France struggles to help his mother understand his alternative lifestyle. B-boying has become a shared medium for self-expression. Although they are from different continents, each crew is connected by the b-boy subculture. This belonging to a shared subculture often conflicts with their feelings of belonging to their own country. Each crew strives to win for their country, yet shares the wish to promote the b-boy culture and lifestyle. In the end, these b-boys belong to a culture that has no physical location. Instead, their culture is lived out whenever they dance, wherever they are in the world.

    Matthew Sy

     

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    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: Anti Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus II

    In Article, Global Art Database, Philosophy, society on February 25, 2009 at 1:06 pm
    Capitalism, flows, the decoding of flows, capitalism and schizophrenia, psychoanalysis, Spinoza   

    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

     

    Lecture Vincennes –  November 16th, 1971

    What is it that moves over the body of a society? It is always flows, and a person is always a cutting off [coupure] of a flow. A person is always a point of departure for the production of a flow, a point of destination for the reception of a flow, a flow of any kind; or, better yet, an interception of many flows.

    If a person has hair, this hair can move through many stages: the hairstyle of a young girl is not the same as that of a married woman, it is not the same as that of a widow: there is a whole hairstyle code. A person, insofar as she styles her hair, typically presents herself as an interceptor in relation to flows of hair that exceed her and exceed her case and these flows of hair are themselves coded according to very different codes: widow code, young girl code, married woman code, etc. This is ultimately the essential problem of coding and of the territorialization which is always coding flows with it, as a fundamental means of operation: marking persons (because persons are situated at the interception and at the cutting off [coupure] of flows, they exist at the points where flows are cut off [coupure])….

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    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: “Musical Time”

    In Article, Music, Philosophy on February 25, 2009 at 12:39 pm

    Lecture 1978

    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

    I would like to make an initial remark on the method employed. Pierre Boulez has chosen five works: the relations among these works are not relations of influence, dependence or ***** [inaudible], nor of progression or evolution from one work to the other either. There would be virtual relations among these works, rather, which are only released [se dégagent] in their confrontation. And when these works confront one another in this way, in a sort of cycle, one specific contour [profil] of musical time X rises up. So it’s not at all a method of abstraction which would go towards a general concept of time in music. Boulez obviously could have chosen another cycle: for example a work by Bartok, one by Stravinsky, one by Varèse, one by Berio… This would then release another specific contour of time, or the specific contour of a variable other than time. Then we could superimpose all these contours, make a veritable map [carte] of variations, which would follow the musical singularities each time, instead of extracting a generality on the basis of what are called examples.

    But in the precise case of the cycle chosen by Boulez, what one sees or hears is a non-pulsed time [which] is released from pulsed time. Work I shows this release by a very precise play of physical displacements. Works II, III and IV each show a different aspect of this non-pulsed time, without claiming to exhaust all possible aspects. Finally V (Carter) shows how non-pulsed time can restore [redonner] a variable pulsation of a new type.

    Well, the question would be to know what this non-pulsed time consists of, this floating [flottant] time which is almost what Proust called “a little time in the pure state….

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    The babel jungle

    In Cinema, Global Art Database, Installation, anime, video on February 24, 2009 at 5:49 pm

    Walt Disney was a firm believer in utopias.  In all of his animated movies he strived to create lands that were full of harmony, acceptance and love.  One classic example is The Jungle Book (1967), a movie about a boy who is raised by wolves.  Both he and all the animals can talk to one another and more or less get along.  But what’s more significant than the utopian plots of Disney movies is their attempt at reaching global audiences.  Among many other movies, The Jungle Book was translated into twenty-four languages and distributed across the world. 

    Thirty-five years after this movie was released, Pierre Bismuth (a French contemporary artist) decided to investigate Disney’s so-called ‘universality’ further.  Bismuth examined every translation of The Jungle Book and decided which character would best fit with each language.  For example, he decided that the patrolling elephants would speak German.  Except for the elephant general’s wife who would speak French, alluding to when France and Germany worked together in WWII.  He also purposely put Latin languages next to Semite languages in reference to issues in Palestine. 

    In this video-installation for Manifesta 4 entitled The Jungle Book Project (2002, video on plasma screen), Bismuth transformed this childhood tale into a tower of Babel.  When God made everyone speak a different language, they could no longer understand one another enough to finish building their tower to heaven.  And when Bismuth made each of the nineteen characters speak nineteen different languages, he achieved a similar effect.  Nobody can understand one another within the movie, nor can those watching.  Both the viewer and the characters in the movie become isolated by which languages they speak.  “By mixing the languages in only one film,” says Bismuth in an interview, “you transform something that should be understandable by each of us into something that is incomprehensible to everybody.” 

    Bismuth is pointing out that although we live in a globalized world, we are far from being in a utopia.  Movie companies like Disney may try and push their ideals onto other countries, but we are still divided and isolated by our languages and cultures. 

    Kathryn Schmidt 


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    Bottari: what comes next?

    In Global Art Database, art on February 24, 2009 at 5:11 pm

    Sooja Kim’s Cities on the Move – 2727 kilometers Bottari Truck (1997) is an eleven-day performance piece where the artist fills a truck with bottari (bundles), and travels all over South Korea. The word bottari in the Korean language is defined as bundles wrapped in large cloth, where non-breakables items such as clothing, household utensils and books are kept. A Korean critic Airung Kim suggests that bottari is a symbol of not knowing one’s direction. This is significant in a country like Korea where a great number of people were obligated to leave their residences for reasons such as war or unemployment.

    Today, Koreans leave their country to immigrate to North America in order to obtain better education and life. Therefore, bottari historically symbolizes both the refugees and tradesmen, transferring their belongings from one place to another. Furthermore, it represents mobility in an unlimited space, yet it remains as containers for what it holds. As the song in Laurie Anderson’s performance Empty Places (1989) tells us “we don’t know where we come from/we don’t know what we are”, Sooja Kim utilizes bottari as her “medium” to exemplify the universal notion of transition in life. Whether moving from one place to another or one phase of life to another, she evokes the questions of- what comes next? 

    Jen Lee 

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    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: Anti Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus I

    In Article, Global Art Database, Philosophy, society on February 24, 2009 at 1:26 pm
    The nature of flows
    Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

    Lecture Vincennes – December 14th, 1971

    I would like to pursue the problem of the economy of flows; last time, someone wanted a more precise definition of flows, more precise, that is, than something which flows upon the socius. What I call the socius is not society, but rather a particular social instance which plays the role of a full body. Every society presents itself as a socius or full body upon which all kinds of flows flow and are interrupted, and the social investment of desire is this basic operation of the break-flow to which we can easily give the name of schizz. It is not yet important for us to have a real definition of flows, but it is important, as a starting point, to have a nominal definition and this nominal definition must provide us with an initial system of concepts. As a point of departure for our search for a nominal definition of flows, I’ll take a recent study by a specialist in the flows of political economy: “Flows and stocks,” by Daniel ENTIER. Stocks and flows are two primary notions in modern political economy, remarked upon by Keynes, such that we find in Keynesian economy the first great theory of flows in his “General theory of employment, interest and money.” Entier informs us that, “from the economic point of view, we can call flows the values of the quantities of goods and services or money that are transmitted from one pole to another”; the first concept to be placed in relation with that of flows is that of pole: a flow, inasmuch as it flows on the socius, enters by one pole and exits by another. At our last session, we had tried to show that flows implicated codes, in the sense that a flow could be called economic insofar as something passed, and where something else blocked it and made it pass; the example given was that of the rules of alliance in so-called primitive societies, where taboos represent a blockage of the flow of possible marriages; the first permitted marriages, i.e. the first permitted incests, called preferential unions, which are, in fact, hardly ever realized, represent something like the first modes of passage: something passes, something is blocked (this blockage taking the form of incest taboos), something passes, the preferential unions, something blocks it and makes it pass, for example the maternal [utérine] uncle….

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    Expanding global linkage in photography

    In Global Art Database, photography on February 22, 2009 at 3:03 pm

    Tim Barber is an American born, Canadian educated, photographer living and working in New York City. In 2005 he created Tinyvices.com, an online gallery aimed at showcasing the work of emerging photographs and artists from around the globe. It functions as an online gallery, community publication, editorial project and archive. Allowing these young artists to showcase their work creates a venue with an engrossing personal perspective despite the fact that it is online.

    photo by Sean Dack

    Anyone is able to submit images to the site regardless of location, education, or intent. Barber has been quoted to say he “wanted to create a simple, accessible and almost neutral venue to show stuff – my own and others.” Every type of image can be found on this site, from intimate snap shot moments to highly technical landscape photography. This site has even begun publishing books of its contributors as well as organizing several shows around the world. This site is an integral piece of stimulation to artists entering the ever-expanding global linkage of artists working in similar mediums. It allows unprecedented visual material for others to be inspired by and thus create their own work with.

    Gordon Nicholas

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    Deleuze’s Lecture Series: “Theory of Multiplicities in Bergson”

    In Article, Philosophy on February 22, 2009 at 12:31 pm

    Lecture – 1970
    by Gilles Deleuze

    Gilles Deleuze

    … I wanted to propose to you an investigation [recherche] into the history of a word, a still very partial, very localized history. That word is “multiplicity.” There is a very current use of multiplicity: for example, I say: a multiplicity of numbers, a multiplicity of acts, a multiplicity of states of consciousness, a multiplicity of shocks [ébranlements]. Here “multiplicity” is employed as a barely nominalized adjective. And it’s true that Bergson often expressed himself thus. But at other times, the word “multiplicity” is employed in the strong sense, as a true substantive, thus, from the second chapter of Time and Free Will onward, the number is a multiplicity, which does not mean the same thing at all as a multiplicity of numbers.

    Why do we feel that this use of multiplicity, as a substantive, is at once unusual and important? (The concept of multiplicity, Time and Free Will 224-26) It’s because, so long as we employ the adjective multiple, we only think a predicate that we necessarily place in a relation of opposition and complementarity with the predicate ONE: the one and the multiple, the thing is one or multiple, and it’s even one and multiple. On the contrary, when we employ the substantive multiplicity, we already indicate thereby that we have surpassed [dépassé] the opposition of predicates one/multiple, that we are already set up on a completely different terrain, and on this terrain we are necessarily led to distinguish types of multiplicity….

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    When Bollywood meets Hollywood

    In Cinema, Global Art Database on February 22, 2009 at 2:53 am

    The film Slumdog Millionaire is possibly the most successful collaboration between Bollywood and Hollywood filmmakers in terms of the publicity and acclaim it has received from critics and the public. Yet its success as a big budget film should not eclipse the fact that in many ways it is an exercise in global art practice as well. The story, lifted from a recent Indian novel is brought to life by British filmmaker Danny Boyle incorporates elements of the traditional Bollywood style into the film.

    It is an interesting mix of cultures because it involved Hollywood appropriating film styles from an India cultural product that originated from trying to emulate Hollywood type films. It reflects the global flow of culture that Hollywood’s crowning achievement this year is one that borrows heavily from an eastern tradition of filmmaking. It speaks to the surfeit of ideas that has befallen the western culture factory and the need to reach out to other cultures in order to develop new and meaningful narratives. It is a sign of the times that the tide of global culture is now flowing the other way and that for Hollywood to continue to be relevant it must borrow engage in a dialogue with other cultures.

    Zorn Pink

     

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    Liu Bolin: Almost Invisible

    In Global Art Database, photography on February 22, 2009 at 1:53 am

    The photographs have been entitled “Almost Invisible” as well as “The Invisible Man in China” in various Internet sites, but despite the suggestive titles the meaning behind a series of Liu Bolin’s works of art are far from indiscernible.  The series features men, women, and children painted to blend seamlessly into the background to create the illusion of disappearing.  Bolin’s first piece in the series was in an organized group exhibition called “Demolish! Demolish! Demolish!” when Bolin and his peers found that their local arts centre was to be demolished.  Bolin created a piece that he called “Hidden-Demolition” which featured a person painted to be camouflage seamlessly with the background and photographed.  His intent was to voice the strength of the artists and how despite the demolition of their beloved studio, their, the artists’, spirits would live on. 

    Bolin then followed this with a series he called “Urban Camouflage” as a reflection of China’s political and cultural climate.  In the series, Bolin reflects of how individuals have become a part of their backgrounds, a part of the city itself; molded and shaped by their experiences with each other and of the city, as the actors in the site become a part of it, its history and its meaning.  So the actors are seamlessly painted into the background, an intangible connection between country and citizen reflected through the visual impact in the photos.  His intention and social commentary is reflected well in his photographs.  Photos of barely visible people, half-vanishing into their backgrounds, initiate an idea that questions the division between man, government, and environment, as well as a reflection on representation; whether they are about fading individuals or ideals, Bolin successfully captures in his photographs that which cannot be seen. 

    Anthony Bornia

    Read the article Space, Scene and Actors by Sui Jianguo  

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    Global Traffickers of Music

    In Global Art Database, Music on February 21, 2009 at 10:47 pm

    Up, Bustle and Out is a group from Bristol, England that travel around the world to different locations in order to make music with the local musicians of different countries. The core of the group consists of two members, ‘Clandestine ‘Ein” and Rupert Mould, who travel the world recording in different countries and locales which have included Jamaica, Tibet, Cuba, Mexico, Palestine infusing their music with influences from each place. Their practice belongs in the realm of global art as they seek to navigate and negotiate new ways of interacting with other cultures that them come in contact with.

    Up, Bustle and Out

    Up, Bustle and Out - click on the photo to download a song preview in mp3

    Instead of stealing these musical traditions and recording them on their own,  Up, Bustle and Out often recruit local talent to play and sing on their recordings, providing a non-exploitative, collaborative process that could be useful in creating a meaningful form of global art. They can be seen as global traffickers of music as they go to different countries and ‘translate’ their musical traditions into a cultural form that is more accessible to western sensibilities. Yet in doing so they run the risk of misinterpretation or creating only a surface understanding of other countries’ musical traditions and forms or creating a two way dialogue that is limited in scope and doesn’t take the scheme of the global project into consideration.

    Zorn Pink

     

    Transmission of the Invisible: transmission of an almost-lost tradition to the modern global world

    In Dance, Global Art Database on February 11, 2009 at 4:42 am

    Choreographer Peter Chin

    What happens to the culture of a country that is subjected to civil war, genocide, poverty, corruption and foreign industrial domination? One thing is for certain, the people will lack time and energy to express themselves through art forms. Even if they find means to produce artistic expressions, the traditional skills required is gone with those who lost their lives in the war. As 10 percent of dance artists were killed in the Khmer Rouge genocide, a large part of the repertoire disappeared. That is why Peter Chin, musician, performance artist, artistic director, travelled to Cambodia in 2004, to study and research on classical Khmer dance and music before such traditional art further fades into history. Chin wishes to rediscover, salvage, and revive Cambodian dance because Cambodian identity lies within these cultural forms.

    Transmission of the Invisible, a challenging project put together by two Cambodian and three Canadian artists, demonstrates a traditional dance form to a backdrop of images highlighting the aftermath of the civil war. The title is inspired by Chin’s learning experience in Cambodia, when other students called out, “We never used to do it like that!” or “Not that fast!” in the spirit of an ancestral teacher. Chin comments in an interview with NOW Magazine that “[t]here really is a transmission of the invisible through other realms of time and space.” Rooted in Cambodian culture is the concept of ancestral worship and respect and Buddhist ideologies, which is seen on the projected screens and heard in the music.

    Chin feels that the current Cambodian dance expressions are a mix traditional and contemporary and he is in contact with both. Transmission of the Invisible bridges these two styles, “glocalizing” if you will, by reviving the essence of Khmer dance in the local Cambodian communities and showcasing Cambodian culture to the global world. Hans Belting claims that performance arts in theatre serve the purpose of remembrance as it is removed from its local setting. At times it is seen as inauthentic, but I believe in the case of the Khmer dance, sharing with the world will strengthen the continuation of the Cambodian culture.

    Discover why Peter Chin is described as a “renaissance man” and “a genuine international and global character” by visiting Tribal Crackling Wind Dance Company.

    Athena Wong

    Related Posts: Dance, Global Art Database

    Fast Food Change: Supersize Me

    In Global Art Database, documentary, society on February 10, 2009 at 8:59 pm

    Writer and director Morgan Spurlock documented the effects of a nation’s love of fast food, and what the consequences to something like this would be, in his 2004 smash-hit documentary Supersize Me. Although this movie was released five years ago, one is able to see the global impact it made, as well as the continuing effects of North America’s fast food eating epidemic. Throughout the film consumers will compare the size of McDonalds meals in the USA compared to the size of meals in say France, or some other part of Europe, only to prove that they would not only consume the food in America as the European chains seem to taste better, but as well because of the amount of food given in America.

     

    Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock in Supersize Me (2004)

    Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock in Supersize Me (2004)

    The sizes of fast food meals have increased, and through the eyes of Morgan Spurlock the viewers see how his thirty-day fast food binge can go horribly wrong. A documentary such as this speaks to a host of people and uses a concept that is understood globally (that of obesity, and fast food chains) and displays it using the medium of film to cross culturally spread the word. By using America as its base for criticism it shows other countries both where they can go as far as obesity and over eating in their own country, as well as shows exactly what an over consumption of fatty foods can do to you.

    The effects Supersize Me has made on chains of McDonalds restaurants is clear, although McDonalds does not admit to any affect this film had on their corporation, they have still changed their menu slightly to cater to a healthier lifestyle. Kids meals with apple slices and juice options, as well as salads, and wraps on their main menu. This documentary was meant for global viewing, and it has changed the ways in which fast food chains run their business, it was successful in both showing a global epidemic and well as fostering change. 

    Heather Palmer 

    Related Posts: Documentary, Society, Global Art Database

    Chinatown: diasporic nostalgia

    In Intermedias gallery, photography on February 7, 2009 at 10:26 pm
    Photos by Monika Koch

    Lostintranslation_Monica Koch_Vancouver2008

    Chinatown is a space that combines nostalgia for the ‘old world’ of the homeland, with the ‘new world’ and all its material extensions.  

     

      

    Buddha_Monica Koch_Vancouver2008

     

    Apartment_Monica Koch_Vancouver2008

     

    This nostalgia is even more at contrast with China’s position now, as a country rapidly transforming into an industrial/economic superpower. 


    Chinatown1_Monica Koch_Vancouver2008

     

    Chinatown2_Monica Koch_Vancouver2008

    Related Posts: Photography, Intermedias Gallery

    Dan Perjovschi: What happened to us? What is happening to the world we live in?

    In Global Art Database, Visual Art, museum on February 6, 2009 at 5:03 pm

    Dan Perjovschi is an anti-communist and visual artist, mixing drawings, cartoons and graffiti in artistic pieces drawn directly on the walls of museums and contemporary art spaces all over the world. What fascinates me about his work is the great sense of humour and satire about the actual facts that are happening in today’s globalized world. Perjovschi takes the simplest and most ordinary ideas and issues of the society such as clothing, or our everyday to-do lists and represents them in a totally different and most humorous way that makes the viewer realize that these “little” issues are no longer little anymore. What he identifies is the actual reality of our lives “with a profound ability to respond to his context, he deploys irony to comment cuttingly on local and global politics, economics, social and culture” (Perjovschi’s website, 2009) that we tend to ignore or bypass without regards. As we can see in one of his amazing works, figure 1.1 (photo below), he argues that capitalism in today’s world has become separated into two parts: capital and ism which separate people into two groups: capital becomes one person with the highest power and ism is the workers and employers with less power in the society.

     

    figure 1.1

    figure 1.1

     

    Also, the way Perjovschi signifies his art pieces is another phenomena. He draws his pieces on the walls as the audiences are watching and attending the exhibition. In figure 1.2 (photo below) we witness Perjovschi drawing on the walls of the gallery, and if we look closely we recognize the relevance of these issues in our lives. For instance, he draws two pair of pants one simple and the other ripped, and on top of the simple one there is a $25 price and on top of the ripped pants is a $125 price. It makes you laugh because it is true and is a reflection of the reality of our economic world.

    figure 1.2

    figure 1.2 - Projects 85: Dan Perjovschi, What happened to us? t MoMA

     

    Dan Perjovschi has introduced a new way to present globalization and its issues which people tend to grasp more when it is exhibited as little simple cartoons which speak of nothing but the reality. I believe he is a great artist who draws the most problematic issues of our society and world in the “simplest” way and that is why he makes a significant contribution in the art world. I encourage you to check out Dan Perjovschi’s website and also look at some of his interviews below. You will definitely enjoy them!

    Jaleh Fotoohi


    Related Posts: Visual Art, Museum, Global Art Database

    Dancing with Matt Harding at the Internet as a way to find happiness and global reliability

    In Dance, Global Art Database, cyberspace on February 5, 2009 at 2:16 pm

    In 2006, Matt Harding embarked on a 6 month trip through 39 countries to dance in front of famous landmarks. This was because after seeing his 2003 dancing video Stride Gum Sponsored Matt to do the trip again, but of course in more countries this time. However, in 2007 now quasi-famous Harding realized that his bad dancing was not that interesting and that his overflowing inbox proved that there were thousands of others that could dance just as badly as he could. That being the case, Stride sent him on another trip. The big difference on this trip was that Harding would invite the people from the cities that he visited to dance with him.


    This viral video, that is one that has gained worldwide popularity, is an excellent example of how easy it can be to transcend cultural boundaries. From Canada, to the United States to the continent of Africa the people in his videos are not only dancing but they are happy. Dancing is one of the only forms of expression that seems to “transcend political boundaries that exist in nearly all human societies” [1]. Harding realized that he could capture something that would be meaningful to a lot of people – a way for us to bound and forget about our differences for a moment. His video allows the people of the world to shed their anger towards one another and dance for the sake of dancing – let everything go and be silly for a few minutes of your life. 

     

     

    Not everyone has been impressed or moved by his video. In fact, there is a following claming that his videos were Photoshopped. In another video, Matt Harding responds to these vicious rumours by sarcastically claiming that, yes indeed, the videos are fake. I think the whole rumour thing is ridiculous. There will always be individuals and groups that will try and destroy something that is not trying to hurt anyone. That being said, I believe that there are far more people that know what is real and will try and make a difference because of Harding’s videos.

     

    These videos are some of the simplest examples proving how globalized and interconnected we have become. Regardless of whether we agree or disagree on things, we do share distinct commonalities and we can bond over the simplest of emotions and expressions. I believe that through dancing, Harding has managed to bring every single person all over the world together. Happiness is contagious; can you watch the video without smiling?

    Tara Turley-Dean

    Related Posts: Dance, Cyberspace, Global Art Database

    Alighiero Boetti: Political Map of the World (1971-1989)

    In Global Art Database, Visual Art, society on February 2, 2009 at 10:11 am

    Alighiero Boetti, born in Italy in 1940, was part of the Arte Povera movement that began in 1967.  This movement favoured traditionally ‘low’ forms of art like craft, design, embroidery and printing as a way to reject ‘high’ art.  In addition to this, Boetti was interested in different cultures, systems of classification, geography, order, chance and collaboration. 

    Alighiero e Boetti. (Italian, 1940-1994). Map of the World. 1989. Embroidery on fabric, 46 1/4" x 7' 3 3/4" x 2" (117.5 x 227.7 x 5.1 cm). Scott Burton Fund. © 2009 Estate of Alighiero Boetti

    These interests are brought to the forefront in his series, “Political Map of the World.”  In 1971, Boetti took his designs for a map of the world to artisans in Afghanistan. Boetti handed over creative control to the artisans and acknowledged their partnership by surrounding the map with Italian and Farsi writing. The artisans worked in fabric and used each country’s flag to represent it on the map.  Each country is put on an equal plane because they are all represented in the same way. Boetti wanted to focus on each territory as a unified whole and did not want to show the smaller divisions within each country, not even acknowledging national identity. 

    But what makes this work truly global is that it evolved as the world did. Every time the geography of a country changed, a new version of the map had to be created. Looking at each map allows the viewer to see where the world was politically at the moment in time when the map was made.  Showing, for example, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the division of the Soviet Union. It lets the viewer see how countries worldwide dealt with the concepts of power and territory. 

    By taking his ideas to people in another country, representing each country as a whole in the same way, and by making new versions according to global changes, Boetti’s “Political Map of the World” is certainly a global work of art. 

    Kathryn Schmidt

    Related Posts: Visual Art, Society, Global Art Database

    Fusion music: the disappearance of local music

    In Culture, Global Art Database, Music on February 2, 2009 at 3:13 am

    Musicians in Exile (1992), directed by Jacques Holender, follows the lives of severalmusicians who had fled their country. This film illustrates the musical styles the displaced musicians brought with them and how through their music they find their identity in a home away from home. The music is not particularly joyful or exciting, but melancholic and powerful. These musicians are reconnected to their homeland and the people they have left behind through their music. As they incorporate their feelings and reflection of the exile experience into their songs, they continue to share these sentiments with others who seek to belong.

    Diaspora art, in Hans Belting book (Art History after Modernism, 2003, 63-73), meant a genre of art that people in exile would produce in order to reclaim a part of their identity. It however no longer considers as world art, as they have left the old identity behind and created a new style in the new world. Similarly, the musicians here are not producing world music but a fusion of world beats styles to grasp as part of their identity. Fusion music better represents today’s globalized world and diasporic peoples, as local music no longer exists. From an anthropological perspective, I believe that local music or art cease to exist due to influences from explorers, neighboring villages and even the radio and television.

    Athena Wong

    Related Posts: Music, Culture, Global Art Database

    Globally understood: Food as a basic need. A look at Pierre Leichner’s Food Wars

    In Global Art Database, Visual Art, art on February 2, 2009 at 2:50 am

    Pierre Leichner’s exhibit Food Wars is currently running at the Maple Ridge Art Gallery, and consists of sculptures as well as photographs depicting a societal view of issues of food of the current generation. The exhibit consists of large sculptures of shrimp tales and their varying stages of infection as well as photographs in which army men have been positioned throughout food items in order to create a scene about the battle of food. The sculptures have been beautifully crafted and within each one the viewer is exposed to some sort of abnormality, that which does not belong in the food.

    This exhibit is successful in discussingcurrent issues when it comes to what we eat and what is going into our food to keep it preserved. As well, the issue of food becoming so abstract and foreign from what it originally is, as it becomes pre-packaged, etc. that we loose track of what food is considered natural anymore. An exhibit such as this can be put into the category of global art in that it is able to discuss an issue that can be understood world wide, food is everyone’s basic need, and a piece like this is able to question the complex way in which food has evolved to more than just a basic need but a battle, or for some people a struggle for survival.

    Heather Palmer

     

    Related Reviews: Visual Art, Global Art Database

    Conjure One: global network of music

    In Global Art Database, Music on February 2, 2009 at 2:27 am

    At first listen, Conjure One’s self-titled album (2002) is just a standard electro-pop record. Delve deeper, however, to find that each track has been masterfully composed, layering lush musical textures and combining cultural influences. The artist behind Conjure One is Vancouver native Rhys Fulber, who recorded the album over three years in Vancouver, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, and London. Stunning guest vocalist Chemda Khalili, who sings exclusively in Arabic on four of the tracks, adds a Middle Eastern feel to the album and evokes an almost primitive and primal sound.  Other guest vocalists include Poe, Sinead O’Connor, and Marie-Claire D’Ubaldo, each adding a more traditional pop sound.

    Live music video for Redemption: Conjure One and guest vocalist, Chemda Khalili

    Essentially what Fulber has done is create a cohesive global sound by gathering instrumentation, samples, and musicians from around the world through a number of digital means. Throughout the album, Fulber samples percussive beats he collected traveling around the Mediterranean and loops them against live string orchestration and his electronic keyboard driven melodies. String orchestration was composed in London and recorded in Vancouver. Sinead O’Connor recorded her vocals on Tears From the Moon from Ireland via Ednet, a phone patch network. (As a result, Fulber and O’Connor have never physically met.) These musical contributions from around the world are harvested by Fulber and transfused together. The end product is a single global musical effort made possible by the global network of communication. 

    Matthew Sy 

    Related Reviews: Music, Global Art Database

    Sebastião Salgado

    In Global Art Database, photography on February 2, 2009 at 1:31 am

    The photographs of Sebastião Salgado, are some of the rawest accounts of the disparity of human civilization. Compositionally and graphically, Salgado’s photographs are both stunning and beautiful. His use of strong contrast delivers such a raw punch of power to his images. It is impossible for the viewer not to be taken aback by the sheer force of his deep blacks, and pure whites. He is also a master of composing his shots in order to draw the viewer into the heart of the image; there is always something to lead the viewer’s eye.

     

    School in refugee camp. Afghanistan, 1996 Photo by Sebastião Salgado

    School in refugee camp. Afghanistan, 1996 Photo by Sebastião Salgado

    I find it difficult to think that some critics of Salgado find his work too beautiful to successfully provoke society into clearly seeing the message behind his work. Yes, Salgado’s photographs are beautiful.  But it is this initial realization or intrigue which first gets the viewer to look at his pictures. Without the captivity that these photographs exude on the viewer, it is impossible for them to truly reflect on the state of the individual in our massively capitalistic society. I find Salgado’s photography to be both visually and socially captivating. He is a master photographer and humanitarian. It is his accounts of the workingman in our world, which truly bring to light the social situations we are living in today. 

    Check here Salgado’s lectures at UC Berkeley

    Gordon Nicholas 

    Related Reviews: Photography, Global Art Database

    Call for Papers

    In Call For Papers on February 2, 2009 at 12:57 am

    CFP: Popular Culture and Politics: Perspectives from Canada

    Eds. Tim Nieguth (Laurentian University) and Shauna Wilton (University
    of Alberta)

    We invite scholarly contributions for an edited volume on the
    relationship between popular culture and politics. Political culture and
    political traditions have long occupied a central place in Canadian
    political science. Not surprisingly, their study has been characterized
    by theoretical, conceptual and methodological diversity. Canadian
    inquiries into the relationship between culture and politics have run
    the gamut from civic culture to fragment thesis and formative events
    approaches. They have covered an equally varied field of subject
    matters, ranging from the emergence of post-materialism and a decline of
    deference to the nature of Canada’s founding traditions.

    Despite this considerable (and fruitful) diversity, Canadian studies of
    culture and politics have tended to focus on explicitly political ideas,
    beliefs and attitudes, their transmission, and their transformation.
    Canadian political scientists have paid relatively little attention to
    popular culture and its interconnections with the political. While the
    political implications of popular culture have not escaped academic
    analysis, they have typically been scrutinized through the lenses of
    media studies, cultural studies, and sociology.

    The proposed volume is based on the notion that popular culture matters
    to understanding politics. Popular culture matters politically, for
    instance, because it can transport particular notions of politics,
    society, and the nature of power and identity. In consequence, popular
    culture can serve as a vehicle for the reinforcement of or resistance to
    dominant political values and ideologies. Popular culture can also serve
    as a site for engagement with particular values, attitudes or beliefs –
    an engagement that forms part and parcel of individual and collective
    identity formation processes.

    We welcome submissions of original, previously unpublished work on any
    aspect of popular culture and politics, including (but not limited to)
    the following broad themes:

    - Political sociology
    - Collective identities
    - Political economy
    - Geopolitics

    Please submit paper proposals of about 500 words to
    tnieguth@laurentian.ca by way of Microsoft Word attachments. Proposals
    should clearly explain the paper’s relevance to a Canadian audience.
    Please include a short biographical statement and full contact
    information with your submission.

    Submission deadline: June 15, 2009.

    For further information, please feel free to contact the editors at:

    Tim Nieguth
    Department of Political Science
    Laurentian University
    935 Ramsey Lake Road
    Sudbury, ON, P3E 2C6
    Tel.: (705) 675-1151, ext: 4329
    Email: tnieguth@laurentian.ca
    – 

    CFP: Islam and gender in Asia and the diaspora

    This Special Issue of the Journal of International Women’s Studies (JIWS) solicits articles on Islam and Gender with a focus on Asia. Submissions will address women’s lives, gender dynamics and Muslim women’s movements, including both formal movements and subtle, informal,everyday acts of resistance. The special issue will include a broad range of discussions on how Muslim women strategize and negotiate their lives and/or movements to accommodate and/or resist Islamic dominance in terms of the nation state, constitutions and dominant cultural norms. We are seeking articles that tackle the above stated issues, specifically covering the regions of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, S.E. Asia and any Muslim demographic from the pertinent region as well as the diaspora, including refugee populations.

    Scholars and activists are invited to submit unpublished manuscripts that are currently not under review. Please consult the JIWS web site (www.bridgew.edu/jiws/) for submission guidelines including length, format and bibilographical/referencing styles. Forward all submissions via email attachment to the special issue editors, Huma Ahmed-Ghosh at (ghosh[at]mail.sdsu.edu) or Rahat Imran at (rai[at]sfu.ca) by April 1, 2009.

    New economic and social policies for an interactive age

    In Global Art Database, Visual Art, art on February 2, 2009 at 12:15 am

    Oliver Russler’s Alternative Economics, Alternative Societies is a thematic interactive art installation that challenges the audience to look their own country’s economic policies verses another country’s economic policies; what works and what does not work is very often debatable. The piece includes interviews from people all over the world, from the United States to Mexico to Denmark and their ideas for different social and economic models. They also come from a variety of disciplines from economists to political scientists, from authors and to historians. However, they all have one thing in common; they all reject a capitalist system of rule; proving that while very often our cultures disagree on many concepts, but there are some rejections that are universal.

     

    Alternative Economics, Alternative Societies 2003 - 2008, (ongoing), installation

    Alternative Economics, Alternative Societies 2003 - 2008, (ongoing), installation

     

    All of the interviews have been translated into English with the intention that Russle wanted to appeal to a more global market. On the floor and the wall near each television screen is a quote that is significant to the alternate model that is being talked about in the particular interview that is playing. It is a simple way that can introduce almost anyone from anywhere to each television screen.

    This ongoing and continually developing installation has travelled to museums all over the world and is breaking down cultural barriers to continually show our global culture more ways to see how we can work together to change things. He chooses not to focus on the ways in which we are different and the concepts that only cause friction and tension.

    Tara Turley-Dean

    Related Reviews: Art, Global Art Database

    A Search for Home: exploring family history

    In Cinema on January 12, 2009 at 11:09 am

              The film A search for home, an experimental documentary directed by Gillian Greenfeld, tells the story of a young woman traveling to Russia to find out about her family history. There are many aspect of the film that give it a very personal touch. As the viewer, one feels that one is traveling in and out of private and public realms along with the filmmaker. There is little sense of distance between myself as the audience and the world I am entering through the screen.

                The film begins with a serious of shots that include classical art, classical music scores and views of an old city. In the background classical music is playing. The rapid transition from one image to another creates a vivid sense of movement and speed. There are also a few shots of people dancing together on a street at night. Together these shots convey the cultural flavour of another place, and the sense of traveling and distancing one’s self from home or familiarity. As the audience we adopt the filmmaker’s gaze that looks onto these events as a foreigner.

                The opening sequence of scenes comes to an abrupt stop when we are introduced to the filmmaker. The shot is close-up, informal and personal and it takes place in what seems to be the kitchen of someone’s home. The way in which the filmmaker speaks to the camera is much like a visual diary or a homemade video. The quality of the image indicates that the camera is handheld. Later there is a shot of the filmmaker at the airport commenting on her trip to Moscow. The opening sequence of shots introduces the film’s subject for the audience. We know that we are watching a film about a young woman who travels to Moscow to explore her family history. However, this initial sequence is also telling because it establishes the characteristic style of the film.

                The narrative style of the film is more expressive than didactic. The filmmaker doesn’t reveal for the viewer exactly where she is going, whom she is speaking to or why she is doing it. Rather, we learn about what is happening by simply watching a succession of events unfold. Some scenes are not very clearly filmed and yet they successfully evoke a sense of place, the people that are present and the time. For example, there is a scene filmed during a family dinner. At one point the image becomes blurred, the speech is almost inaudible, the movements of the camera are sweeping. Although we can’t recollect exactly what we’ve seen or what has been said the sense of being in someone’s private space, in their home, while they are having a meal, is well communicated.

                Much of the story of the film is told in this manner. The viewer is left with a superficial and brief account of the filmmaker’s experience. Although shots of the music concerts, subway tunnels and trains aid in providing a cultural context, the transitions from one event to another are too scattered and spontaneous. It is difficult to discern the filmmaker’s intention because it lacks clarity. Sub-headings are used to introduce some historical contexts but they are vague and brief. The use of maps would have been helpful for the audience to relate the location of the filmmaker at the beginning of the film and her movement within Russia.

                The use of flashbacks and music, such as traditional Yiddish songs, effectively situate the story in a particular time and space. But it was interesting to note that although many of the shots are taken in a personal manner (close-ups, in people’s homes), I felt very little emotional relation to the people presented in the film, including the filmmaker. This may have been because the camera only spends a short time with each person and therefore does not allow the viewer to relate at a deeper level with the people on film. The viewer isn’t exposed to the complexities of the lives of the people in the film that are necessary for emotional attachment. 

    Paulina Rodriguez