Camera/Movement and Moving Images/Moving Bodies
Amsterdam, Filmmuseum, 6 juli
15.00 uur, Moving Images/Moving Bodies
16.30 uur, Camera/Movement
Nederlands Instituut voor Mediakunst i.s.m. CAPTURE
Download NIMK & Capture in pdf Print program
Moving Images/Moving Bodies & Camera/Movement
Beach Birds
Dead Dreams of Monochrome Men
Light dark
Camera/Movement and Moving Images/Moving Bodies examine the context for dance as an artistic and visual discipline being articulated within screen-based work. These touring screening programmes which are part of a larger collaboration between CAPTURE and Netherlands Media Art Institute. Following the completion of the CAPTURE project this programme is now managed by Portland Green Cultural Projects.
Moving Images/Moving Bodies met:
- Ma Tête, Caitlin Hulscher NE, 1998, 2 minutes 20 sec
- Light/Dark, Abramovic/Ulay, NE, 1978, 9 minutes 19 sec
- Kings of the Hill, Yael Bartana, IL, 2003, 7 minutes 30 sec
- Circles, Jan van Munster, NE, 1972, 2 minutes 38 sec
- Tanz für eine Frau, Ulrike Rosenbach, DE, 1975, 8 minutes 32 sec
- Snap, Seoungho Cho, VS, 2006, 5 minutes 2 sec
- Movement in Light, Nan Hoover, NE, 1976, 3 minutes 57 sec
- Roadworks, Mona Hatoum, GB, 1985, 6 minutes 45 sec
- I, Soldier, Köken Ergun, TR, 2005, 7 minutes 14 sec
- Au quart de tour, Antonin de Bemels, BE, 2004, 6 minutes 25 sec
Camera/Movement met:
- Oskar Schlemmer, Hoop Dance + Pole Dance, (1927, from Man and Mask, Margaret Hasting, 1968)
- Busby Berkeley, Gold Diggers of 1933, ‘Shadow Waltz’ (1933)
- Rudolf Nureyev, Le Corsaire (Anthony Asquith, 1963)
- Maya Deren, A Study in Choreography for Camera (1945)
- Norman McLaren, Pas De Deux (1968)
- Merce Cunningham et al., Variations V (Stan VanDerBeek, 1965)
- Merce Cunningham, Beach Birds for Camera (Elliot Caplan, 1993)
- Lloyd Newson, Dead Dreams of Monochrome Men (David Hinton, 1990)
- Michael Clark, Prospero’s Books (Peter Greenaway, 1991)
- Michael Clark, The Late Michael Clark (Sophie Fiennes, 2000)
- Philippe Decoufle, Abracadabra (2001)
- Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Rosas Danst Rosas (Thierry De Mey, 1997)

