Archivi categoria: video

16 febbraio 2010: “prosa in prosa” @ esc (frammenti low-res)

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Presentazione di “Prosa in prosa” (Le Lettere, collana fuoriformato, Firenze 2009), a cura di ESCargot, 16 febbraio 2010.
Il primo video è di Vincenzo Ostuni, il secondo di Sergio Garufi.
Su YouTube tutti i dettagli e i dati.

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La ristampa TIC 2020 di Prosa in prosa, con grafica di Enrico Pantani e interventi critici di Paolo Giovannetti e Gian Luca Picconi, è disponibile qui: https://ticedizioni.com/products/prosa-in-prosa

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“walden” aka “diaries, notes and sketches” / jonas mekas. 1969

16mm, colour – filmed 1964 to 1968

Poet Jonas Mekas, born in Lithuania in 1922, invented the diary form of film-making. ‘Walden’, his first completed diary film, is an epic portrait of the New York avant-garde art scene of the 60s, is also a groundbreaking work of personal cinema.

The film features figures of the scene such as Jonas Mekas, P. Adams Sitney, Tony Conrad, Stan Brakhage, Carl Th. Dreyer, Timothy Leary, Baba Ram Dass, Gregory Markopoulos, Allen Ginsberg, Andy Warhol, Jerome Hill, Barbet Schroeder, Jack Smith, Edie Sedgwick, Nico, Velvet Underground, Ken Jacobs, Hans Richter, Standish D. Lawder, Adolfas Mekas, Shirley Clarke, Jud Yalkut, Peter Kubelka, Michael Snow and Richard Foreman.

“Since 1950 I have been keeping a film diary. I have been walking around with my Bolex and reacting to the immediate reality: situations, friends, New York, seasons of the year. On some days I shoot ten frames, on others ten seconds, still on others ten minutes. Or I shoot nothing…. Walden contains material from the years 1964-1968 strung together in chronological order.” – Jonas Mekas

From: youtu.be/I5VghhMsIic

milano, 19 febbraio: into the word

INTO THE WORD
A cura di Andrea Inglese e Gianluca Codeghini

Sabato 19 febbraio 2022, dalle 16 alle 19, presso
ASSAB ONE – Milano

Carlo Dell’Acqua, Dario Bellini, Alessandro Broggi, Leonardo Canella, Polly & Company, Alessandra Cava, La Centrale Edizioni, Marilina Ciaco & Felice Vino, La Ciecamateria Edizioni, Cobra, Cose Cosmiche, Ermanno Cristini, Alessandra Greco, Mariangela Guatteri, Andrea Inglese & Gianluca Codeghini, Paola Lenarduzzi, Maurizio Mercuri, Iacopo Ninni & Agnese Leo, Giancarlo Norese, Luca Pancrazzi, Paola Pietronave, Riss(e), Segnature, Antonio Syxty & Lenny, Italo Testa & Cesare Saldicco, Enzo Umbaca.

Prendere la parola sembra un atto istantaneo – si rompe il silenzio, si formula l’enunciato – ma non è un atto automatico, di semplice conferma e rafforzamento di opinioni esistenti, di prontezza e riconoscibilità d’intervento. Ci ricordiamo che cosa ha voluto dire, un tempo, prendere la parola in pubblico, in un confronto democratico? Subentravano tantissimi fattori per comunicare al meglio le proprie idee, ci voleva controllo emotivo, una capacità di tradurre un’intuizione o una riflessione in un discorso efficace e attraverso una forma nuova.

Vogliamo ristabilire un legame tra discorso, pensiero e azione e ridare importanza a quel modo profondamente democratico di prendere la parola, di impegnarsi in essa e in quello che ne resta. Non è una questione di militanza ma di esercizio della parola in ambiti concreti e non predeterminati, un esercizio che va nella direzione di un gioco delle pluralità e poi torna nell’uno al punto tale da lasciare nella memoria il dubbio di aver vissuto tanto un legame di senso quanto un’esperienza di dissenso.

L’evento Into the word s’inserisce nella mostra personale di Gianluca Codeghini a cura di Elio Grazioli dal titolo Il sorriso si ferma quando vuole.

 

ASSABONE
Via privata Assab 1
20132 Milano
info@assab-one.org
www.assab-one.org

march 11th, 2011: earthquake, tsunami, fukushima (from nhk world)

3/11 – The Tsunami: The First 3 Days
NHK

.en: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/ondemand/video/3016087/

.fr: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/fr/ondemand/video/3016087/

.es: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/es/ondemand/video/3016087/

 

domenico ingenito, “gardens of medieval afghanistan”

Tuesday, February 1st 2022.

Gardens of Medieval Afghanistan: Exercising Literary Archaeology
Domenico Ingenito (UCLA)
Persian Studies Colloquium, McGill University
Abstract:

Persian poetry and the visual arts of medieval Central Asia and Iran cannot be fully appreciated without considering the socio-cultural role of gardens in Persianate societies and the way they informed both the poetic breadth of figurative arts and the visual dimensions of lyric expression.

Early Persian poems of praise were usually introduced by descriptions of natural and amatory vignettes revolving around stylized depictions of princely gardens, palaces, and pavilions. Through such portrayals, poets staged the contrast between the architecturally domesticated space of gardens and the untamed natural settings in which cosmic cycles offered a background for the social festivities presided over by the ruler. Usually discounted as idealized representations that lack historical veracity, such descriptions deserve to be analyzed in the context of the relationship between material culture and the aesthetic impact of poetic creativity.

By focusing on the case of the understudied city of Balkh, the winter capital of the Ghaznavid sultanate, this talk explores the role of gardens in the representation of natural and architectural landscapes in the panegyric poetry of the early Ghaznavids (999-1040 CE). Nestled in a lush oasis that was crossed by a network of rivers and canals, Balkh provided Ghaznavid poets with a complex ecology in which nature and ephemeral architecture overlapped at multiple levels.

The material and symbolic veracity of “architectural” poems and natural descriptions composed by Farrukhi Sistani and ‘Unsuri Balkhi between 1015 and 1035 CE will be compared against evidence provided by geographical and historiographical sources such as Hudud al-‘ālam and Tārikh-i Bayhaqi. These comparisons will help us locate the topographic position of key Ghaznavid gardens in Balkh and explain how ephemeral architectural landmarks emerged through the interaction between urbanized natural contexts and spaces of wilderness.

media burn / ant farm. 1975

“Media Burn” by Ant Farm. Excerpt from Ant Farm’s classic video art piece examining and satirizing the media, particularly the impact of television. On July 4, 1975, what a TV newscaster described as a “media circus” assembles at San Francisco’s Cow Palace Stadium. A pyramid of television sets are stacked, dowsed with kerosene, and set ablaze. Then a modified 1959 Cadillac El Dorado Biarritz, piloted by two drivers who are guided only by a video monitor between their bucket seats, crashes through the pyramid destroying the TV sets.

https://www.moma.org/collection/works/107284

https://www.facebook.com/geffreygrant.guy/posts/2638853436258211

ARTIST: Ant Farm NATIONALITY: United States DATE_OF_WORK: c. 1976–2004 MATERIALS: offset printing on paper DIMENSIONS: sheet: 11 x 8 1/2 in. CREDIT_LINE: University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive; Purchase made possible through a bequest of Thérèse Bonney by exchange, a partial gift of Chip Lord and Curtis Schreier and gifts from an anonymous donor and Harrison Fraker