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[ecrea] Family Ties: Recollection and Representation conference
Thu Feb 16 14:11:54 GMT 2012
Dear colleagues
Just to remind you of the forthcoming 'Family Ties' conference at the
University of London on Friday 9th March 2012 that I have organised as
part of my visiting fellowship. Please see attached link for the
programme, abstracts and registration form.
*http://igrs.sas.ac.uk/events/conferences-workshops/family-ties.html*
Exploring the representation of family memories in autobiographical
writing, photography and artist’s film and video, the event features
speakers such as academics Prof. Marsha Meskimmon, Prof. Angela Kelly
and Dr. Nicky Bird, together with artists and filmmakers such as Trish
Morrissey, Sarah Pucill and Marjolaine Ryley.
*The closing date for receipt of registration is next* *Friday 24th
February 2012* (£35.00/£20.00 students). You can either post or email a
completed scan of the form to (Jane.Lewin /at/ sas.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Jane.Lewin /at/ sas.ac.uk)>.
The conference is accompanied by two free evening events generously
funded by the John Coffin Memorial Trust: a film screening and Q&A with
the artist filmmaker, Sarah Miles on the 8th March and an artist talk by
photographer and therapist, Rosy Martin on the 9th March from 6pm. You
do not have to register beforehand to attend these events. Please see
details below.
I very much hope that you will be able to attend.
Best wishes
Sally
Dr. Sally Waterman
www.sallywaterman.com <http://www.sallywaterman.com/>
*Thursday 8th March 2012*
Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of London, Malet Street,
London WC1E 7HU
18.00 Wine Reception
18.45 *Film screening of /2001-A Family Odyssey: Ophelia's Version/*
19.35 *Sarah Miles* in conversation with *Lucy Reynolds* (University of
the Arts)* *
Sarah Miles' /2001 - A Family Odyssey: Ophelia's Version/ (2002, 50') is
a poetic elliptical film exploring the hidden systemic powers of
identification within a family constellation through four generations.
Distant but familiar ancestors haunt the landscape like screen memories
and family members collaborate to perform representations of themselves.
A collage of family album; the filmmaker’s father’s photographic
archive, rushes of his unfinished film /The Host/; 16mm portraits,
music, voiceover and film clips including /Apocalypse Now, Badlands,
Belle De Jour and Breakfast at Tiffany’s/ reflect a complex layering of
narratives. Miles plays Shakespeare’s Ophelia as a bunny girl in violet
searching for material amidst a powerful dreamlike stream of drowned
family stories and screen Ophelia’s, Marianne Faithfull segues into
Catherine Deneuve into Marilyn Monroe. Representing Ophelia evolves into
an investigation of the limits of memory, the nature of storytelling,
the boundaries of art and the imagination itself. Past present and
future mix generating new meanings. Through this process of
constellation hidden forces are unveiled by Ophelia’s jaunt through
familial image-repertoire
(Film Forum, Los Angeles 2002).
Sarah Miles studied English and American studies at the University of
East Anglia (1980-1983). Miles' award-winning films combine fragmentary
and evocative narratives of family and memory with references from
cinema and literature. Her films have been screened internationally as
single screen and installation works at cinemas and galleries and
broadcast on Channel 4, Canal 4 and BBC2. Screenings at international
film festivals include Melbourne (Damsel Jam, 1993), Transmediale Berlin
international media art festival (Amaeru Fallout 1972, 1999), Oberhausen
(Magnificent Ray, 2000), Los Angeles (2001 A Family Odyssey: Ophelia’s
Version, 2002) and Rotterdam (No Place, 2006). Artist presentations
include Tate Britain; Arnolfini UK, Pacific Film Archive, Image Forum,
Japan and Los Angeles Film Forum. She has lectured in visual theory and
film production at Bournemouth College of Art and University for the
Creative Arts, Canterbury and Maidstone. She has received funding from
the Arts Council England, BFI, Film London, the Film & Video Umbrella
and South West Media Development Agency. Her work is held in The Artists
Film and Video Study Collection at Central St. Martins, London and she
is represented by LUX, London. She lives and works in London.
* *
*Friday 9th March 2012*
Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of London, Malet Street,
London WC1E 7HU
18.00 Wine Reception
18.30 *Rosy Martin ‘On Looking Back: Photography, Memory and Forgetting’*
It was the very paucity of what could be found within the family album
that prompted Jo Spence and I to begin our quest to open up the family
album to critical analysis, investigation and performative photography,
through re-enactment phototherapy.
The fading fragments do still hold emotional weight, as well as
possibilities for multiple re-readings, changing over time. The
performativity of speaking one’s stories in responses to the family
album images, and the acts of performance of the multiplicities of self
and others within re-enactment phototherapy offer different strategies
for engagement with the image, and that which it may show or occlude.
Yet – what of the need to hold onto the moment – when knowingly
confronting incipient loss? How might one use photography to reconsider
the all too familiar and once taken for granted? As my investigations
shift from contestation through to reparation, the questions remain as
to how to represent that which is hidden, denied or deferred. In trying
to find a language to address pre-bereavement, dementia, death, mourning
and reparation, drawing from my own specific lived experiences, I am, as
an artist, aiming to invite the audience to find their own resonances
and reflections.
Rosy Martin is an artist using self-portraiture, still life photography,
digital imaging and video, dealing with issues of gender, sexuality,
ageing, family dynamics, bereavement and reparation. In her practice she
aims to extend the range of potential meanings that lie within notions
of domestic photography and explore the relationships between
photography, memory, identities and unconscious processes. Working with
the late Jo Spence, from 1983, she evolved and developed a new
photographic practice - phototherapy - based upon re-enactment. Her work
has been exhibited internationally since 1985, including The
Photographers Gallery, London (1987), Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of
Photography (1991), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1998), Focal Point
Gallery, Southend-on-sea (2001) and Documenta 12, Kassel, Germany
(2007). She has held lecturing posts in visual culture and
art/photographic histories at Staffordshire University, Loughborough
University and Maidstone College of Art. She is a qualified
psychological therapist. Her essays have been included in the following
publications: 'Stilled' (Iris and Ffotogallery 2005); 'Gender Issues in
Art Therapy', (Jessica Kingsley, 2003); 'Feminist Approaches to Art
Therapy', (Routledge, 1997), 'What Can a Woman Do with a Camera?'
(Scarlet Press, 1995) and 'Family Snaps: the Meanings of Domestic
Photography' (Virago, 1991). She lives and works in London.
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