Archivi tag: Jonas Mekas

settembre e ottobre in camera verde: annotazioni e programma

CENTRO CULTURALE LA CAMERA VERDE
…dal 1999…

Via Giovanni Miani 20 – 00154 Roma – t. 3405263877
www.lacameraverde.com    –     info@lacameraverde.com

 

IN GIRUM IMUS NOCTE ET CONSUMIMUR IGNI
XXIII Rassegna Cinematografica da Camera 2023
II parte

A cura di
Giovanni Andrea Semerano

 
 

1.
L’inquadratura è posta di traverso. Non c’è montaggio, è una lunga sequenza a camera fissa. Si vede una strada, un marciapiede, l’incessante battere della pioggia sull’asfalto. L’inquadratura resta ferma e storta. La pioggia crea grandi pozzanghere. L’audio non c’è. È una ripresa in super 8, in B/N, sono circa tre minuti di pellicola, e solo verso la fine, un’anziana signora completamente bagnata, entra nell’inquadratura di spalle e resta di spalle. Cammina lentamente, dopo qualche passo barcolla fino a scivolare in terra. Quando cade rovinosamente, l’inquadratura continua per un altro minuto circa, la donna resta immobile per terra. Poi la pellicola s’interrompe.
È un cortometraggio strano, dopo averlo visto una certa ansia s’insinua nei pensieri. Un’unica sequenza. Non ci sono titoli, né alcuna indicazione tecnica sulla bobina del super 8. Un Anonimo. Su un foglietto sgualcito dal tempo, c’è scritto, con una macchina da scrivere: “bianco di neve/contro bianco di pietra/sulla montagna/e come chi passò le gole fra erte rupi…”.

2.
Il 23 settembre, a Pisa, si inaugura lo Studio Guerra. Trasferitosi da Milano, riapre sotto l’ombra della torre più unica e straordinaria del globo terrestre! Come a Milano, sarà uno spazio che vivrà di mostre, concerti, incontri, presentazioni di libri, proiezioni…e altro. Con il contributo prezioso di Ondavideo di Sandra Lischi. www.matiasguerra.com.
La Stanza riapre il 27 settembre con Truffaut, Murnau e una due giorni per Roberto Rossellini con il film L’età del ferro diretto dal figlio Renzo. E il documentario di Carlo Tuzii e Silvia D’Amico Bendicò, Numero Uno Roberto Rossellini immagini inedite di un maestro del cinema, che con estrema tenerezza filmano un ritratto di Roberto Rossellini a pochi mesi dalla scomparsa. Nel mese di ottobre una autentica CAMERA-MEKAS. E gli omaggi a Jean Vigo e a Maya Deren.

3.
[ continua qui: https://slowforward.files.wordpress.com/2023/09/la-camera-verde-programma-settembre-ottobre-2023.pdf ]

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Giovanni Cozzani a Piane di Bronzo (Tuscania), in “Gelsomina”. Fotografia di Luigi Francini

a roma, fino al 26 febbraio: “jonas mekas. images are real”

https://culture.roma.it/appuntamento/images-are-real/

Jonas Mekas 100! – il programma internazionale di manifestazioni che celebra il centesimo anniversario dalla nascita del regista e teorico di origine lituana – approda in Italia con la mostra Images Are Real e una serie di eventi a cura di Francesco Urbano Ragazzi che ha accompagnato Mekas in svariati progetti d’arte da Venezia a New York, a Seoul, a Reykjavík.

Allestita presso il Padiglione 9b del Mattatoio di Roma, promossa da Roma Culture e dall’Azienda Speciale Palaexpo con la partnership del Lithuanian Culture Institute, Images Are Real guarda in retrospettiva alla sessantennale attività di Jonas Mekas (Biržai 1922 – New York 2019) dentro e oltre la storia del cinema d’avanguardia. Presentando un’ampia selezione di opere che va dagli anni Sessanta fino alla fine degli anni Dieci del nostro secolo, il progetto espositivo si propone di leggere il lavoro del filmmaker lituano come … >>> continua qui

a milano: “fluxus, arte per tutti” (dalla collezione luigi bonotto)

da ArteMagazine:

https://artemagazine.it/2022/11/22/museo-novecento-di-milano-fluxus-arte-per-tutti-edizioni-italiane-dalla-collezione-luigi-bonotto/

In mostra sono esposte edizioni di: Eric Andersen, Ay-O, Joseph Beuys, George Brecht, John Cage, Giuseppe Chiari, Philip Corner, Willem De Ridder, Jean Dupuy, Robert Filliou, Albert M. Fine, Henry Flynt, Ken Friedman, Al Hansen, Geoffrey Hendricks, Dick Higgins, Joe Jones, Allan Kaprow, Milan Knizak, Alison Knowles, Jackson Mac Low, George Maciunas, Walter Marchetti, Jonas Mekas, Larry Miller, Charlotte Moorman, Claes Oldenburg, Yoko Ono, Nam June Paik, Ben Patterson, Dieter Roth, Takako Saito, Tomas Schmit, Carolee Schneemann, Mieko Shiomi, Gianni-Emilio Simonetti, Daniel Spoerri, Ben Vautier, Wolf Vostell, Robert Watts, Emmett Williams e altri.

articolo completo e informazioni qui: https://artemagazine.it/2022/11/22/museo-novecento-di-milano-fluxus-arte-per-tutti-edizioni-italiane-dalla-collezione-luigi-bonotto/

“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

“everything is important” / jonas mekas. 2015

from: https://www.ffur.eu/2019/07/12/the-internet-saga-jonas-mekas/
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anti-100 years of cinema manifesto / jonas mekas. 1996

“As you well know it was God who created this Earth and everything on it. And he thought it was all great. All painters and poets and musicians sang and celebrated the creation and that was all OK. But not for real. Something was missing. So about 100 years ago God decided to create the motion picture camera. And he did so. And then he created a filmmaker and said ‘now here is an instrument called motion picture camera. Now go and film and celebrate the beauty of the creation and the dreams of human spirit, and have fun with it.’

But the devil did not like that. So he placed a money bag in front of the camera and said to the filmmakers ‘why do you want to celebrate the beauty of the world and the spirit of it if you can make money with this instrument?’ And, believe it or not, all filmmakers ran after the money bag. The Lord realized he had made a mistake. So some 25 years later, to correct his mistake, God created independent avant-garde filmmakers and said, ‘here is the camera. Take it and go into the world and sing the beauty of all creation and have fun with it. But you will have a difficult time doing it, and you will never make any money with this instrument.’

Thus spoke the Lord to Viking Eggeling, Germaine Dulac, Jean Epstein, Fernand Leger, Dmitri Kirsanoff, Marcel Duchamp, Hans Richter, Luis Bunuel, Man Ray, Cavalcanti, Jean Cocteau, and Maya Deren, and Sidney Peterson, and Kenneth Anger, Gregory Markopoulos, Stan Brakhage, Marie Menken, Bruce Baillie, Francis Lee, Harry Smith and Jack Smith and Ken Jacobs, Ernie Gehr, Ron Rice, Michael Snow, Joseph Cornell, Peter Kubelka, Hollis Frampton and Barbara Rubin, Paul Sharits, Robert Beavers, Christopher McLain, and Kurt Kren, Robert Breer, Dore O, Isidore Isou, Antonio De Bernardi, Maurice Lemaitre, and Bruce Conner, and Klaus Wyborny, Boris Lehman, Bruce Elder, Taka Iimura, Abigail Child, Andrew Noren and too many others. Many others all over the world. And they took their Bolex’s and their little 8 and Super-8 cameras and began filming the beauty of this world, and the complex adventures of the human spirit, and they’re having great fun doing it. And the films bring no money and do not do what’s called useful.

And the museums all over the world are celebrating the one hundredth anniversary of cinema, costing them millions of dollars the cinema makes, all going gaga about their Hollywoods. But there is no mention of the avant-garde or the independents of our cinema.

I have seen the brochures, the programs of the museums and archives and cinematheques around the world. But these say, ‘we don’t care about your cinema.’ In the times of bigness, spectaculars, one hundred million movie productions, I want to speak for the small, invisible acts of human spirit, so subtle, so small, that they die when brought out under the clean lights. I want to celebrate the small forms of cinema, the lyrical form, the poem, the watercolor, etude, sketch, portrait, arabesque, and bagatelle, and little 8mm songs. In the times when everybody wants to succeed and sell, I want to celebrate those who embrace social and daily tailor to pursue the invisible, the personal things that bring no money and no bread and make no contemporary history, art history or any other history. I am for art which we do for each other, as friends.

I am standing in the middle of the information highway and laughing, because a butterfly on a little flower somewhere in China just fluttered its wings, and I know that the entire history, culture will drastically change because of that fluttering. A super-8 millimeter camera just made a little soft buzz somewhere, somewhere on the lower east side of New York, and the world will never be the same.

The real history of cinema is invisible history. History of friends getting together, doing the thing they love. For us, the cinema is beginning with every new buzz of the projector, with every new buzz of our cameras. With every new buzz of our cameras, our hearts jump forward my friends.”

 

Jonas Mekas, February 11, 1996, American Center, Paris
from: https://www.matiasguerra.com/jonas-mekas-manifesto.php