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[Commlist] "Displacement in Film and Visual Culture": BIMI-PItt Research Workshop
Thu May 09 21:40:45 GMT 2019
Here is a revised and updated programme for the BIMI-Pitt Research
Workshop next week -- "Displacement in Film and Visual Culture".
[...]
*_BIMI-PITT RESEARCH WORKSHOP: “DISPLACEMENT IN FILM AND VISUAL
CULTURE”, WEDNESDAY 15 – FRIDAY 17 MAY 2019_*
The third edition of the biennial research workshop organised by
Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image (BIMI) and the University of
Pittsburgh Film Programme will take place Wednesday 15 May to Friday 17
May 2019 in Birkbeck Cinema.
The idea of the workshop is to bring together faculty and postgraduate
students from Birkbeck and Pittsburgh to share their ongoing research,
to get to know each other in person, and to develop collaborative
research projects together.
Previous editions – “Cinema and the City” (2015) and “Urban Change”
(2017) – have been both productive and enjoyable occasions, generating
several joint research initiatives, including journal publications,
student and staff exchanges, public lectures, curatorial projects, and
study days.
The forthcoming edition is entitled “Displacement”, a theme that for the
purposes of the workshop can be interpreted from any angle or approach,
as long as there is some connection to film, moving image, or visual
culture.
The workshop is free and open to all, regardless of institutional
affiliation.
If you would like to attend the workshop, please register here, as this
will help us to know who is coming:
DAY ONE, Wednesday 15
May:https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bimi-pitt-research-workshop-displacement-in-film-and-visual-culture-tickets-60916029484
DAY TWO, Thursday 16 May:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bimi-pitt-research-workshop-displacement-in-film-and-visual-culture-tickets-60916380534
DAY THREE, Friday 17 May:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bimi-pitt-research-workshop-displacement-in-film-and-visual-culture-tickets-60916637302
Alternatively, you can let us know by email ((bimi /at/ bbk.ac.uk)
<mailto:(bimi /at/ bbk.ac.uk)>). We look forward to seeing you there, as it is
the quality of discussion and conversation that has made the previous
workshops such memorable events.
Below and attached, you will find the timetable for this year’s workshop…
Best wishes, Michael Temple, Catherine Grant, Matthew Barrington, on
behalf of Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image
[…]
*_TIMETABLE FOR BIMI-PITT RESEARCH WORKSHOP: “DISPLACEMENT IN FILM AND
VISUAL CULTURE”, WEDNESDAY 15 – FRIDAY 17 MAY 2019_*
**
*DAY ONE: Wednesday 15 May, Birkbeck Cinema*
**
*Morning session 10:30-12:30*
**
*Panel #1: Displacing Animation*
**
*_1.A. Unmoored Realism in Irish Animation: the Multiple Migrations of
Cartoon Saloon_*
Speaker: Alison Patterson (in collaboration with Dana Och)
*Abstract: *Irish cinema has inhabited an intermediate position since
its institutionalization. Before then “Irish Cinema” existed only in
between, in the glimpses of people and spaces in location shooting of
foreign productions. Irish animation’s history runs parallel to that of
live action film. We examine the work – labour and products – of the
Irish studio Cartoon Saloon, as it moves between national identity and
the pressures and opportunities in animation that is both
boundary-crossing and highly local. Stylistically, their films have been
described as between institutional styles of realism and
transnationalization of the superflat for their specifically Irish
features (/Secret of Kells/,/Song of the Sea/) and the third of the
“Irish Trilogy” (/Wolf Walkers/, in production). Additionally, Cartoon
Saloon has produced full features and segments set outside of Ireland
exploring alterity in body, dress, and religion, and streaming service
shows with transnational production, distribution and reception. Two
contemporaneous works – the studio’s contribution to the adaptation of
Khalil Gibran’s /The Prophet/(2014), and the “Storyteller’s Cavern” in
both /Song of the Sea/(2014) and /VR/(2017) – exemplify movement across
national borders and migration between media forms. Cartoon Saloon
articulates an identity both Irish and transnational, in its subjects,
techniques for perspective, and material form.
**
*_1.B. Technological Displacement in Animation: Imagery in the
Intermedial Space_*
Speaker: Olga Blackledge
*Abstract: *This presentation is concerned with the questions of
displacement in animation along the lines of technology and aesthetics.
Here, displacement is interpreted as a powerful force that increases the
potential of animation to create new imagery while integrating imagery
from other media. I argue that historically, technological shifts in
animation production – such as the shift to celluloid and the shift to
the digital – provoke several simultaneous processes, including the
following: the previous animation techniques, even though they were
displaced, did not disappear; they were integrated into the new
technology through style and aesthetics; displacement of older
technologies opened up a space for migration of other media into the
space of animation, thus increasing its intermediality.
The presentation will focus on the technological shift that took place
in Soviet animation in the 1930s, when animation production moved from a
variety of animation techniques, such as drawing on paper, cut-outs,
flat marionettes, and others, to the celluloid or cel technology. By
examining the animated film, /The Humpbacked Horse/(Soiuzmul’tfil’m,
dir. Ivan Ivanov-Vano, 1947), the presentation invites to discuss the
question of aesthetic consequences of this shift and its intermedial
potential.
*Lunch 12:30-13:30*
**
*Afternoon session 13:30-15:30*
**
*Panel #2: Technological Displacements *
**
*_2.A. The Virtual Walls: Metaphor, Mediation, and Making the
Experimental VR Film /47 KM/(2017) _*
Speaker: Jinying Li
*Abstract: *In China, the rapid economic development has displaced much
of the rural population from farmlands to factories. What is also
displaced is China’s socialist past, when walls were extensively used
for painting Maoist slogans and images. These socialist legacies are
largely gone in cities, but remain in rural villages. Filmmaker Zhang
Mengqi recorded the images of these abandoned walls in the latest
instalment of her documentary series /47km/. Combining theory with
practice, this talk critically contemplates the project that I
participated in collaboration with Zhang to remediate her documentary
/47km/into a VR film. I consider how the virtual walls can critically
engage with the history and politics of space-as-media, as well as the
ways in which this mediating space can be displaced and retrieved.
Drawing upon the “window” metaphor, I argue that it is the wall rather
than the window that fundamentally defines what VR really is. Shifting
the metaphor from “window” to “wall” is a theoretical reconsideration of
media not simply as systems of visual representation but as spatial
organization. The VR space in /47km/is such a mediating environment,
through which China’s forgotten socialist past that is displaced in the
rural wasteland is recorded, resurrected, and repurposed.
*_2.B. Displacement and Compression_*
Speaker: Jesse Anderson-Lehman
*Abstract*: Compression is what allows for media objects to be
displaced, to move from one place to another more readily and with less
friction. Easily distributed and shared file formats lend the
contemporary moving image a sense of both spatial and temporal
displacement, where a video uploaded to YouTube in 2015 can then pop up
again and go viral on Instagram in 2019. As platforms and technologies
are rapidly displaced, the images are constantly downloaded, decoded,
converted, encoded, and uploaded, whether on servers, in the cloud, or
on our phones or tablets. Compression algorithms are thus pivotal sites
of corporate manoeuvring, with standards agreed upon by the Motion
Picture Experts Group (MPEG) now facing competition from the Alliance
for Open Media (AOM), in which Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google,
Microsoft, and Netflix are all governing members. The presence of so
many contemporary media heavy-hitters in one consortium illustrates the
degree to which the “free” flow of “open” media makes for good business;
the displaced cultural condition that results only heightens the ease
with which corporate interests can exert an ever-greater influence on
our media consumption habits.
*__*
*Tea 15:30-16:15*
**
*Late afternoon session 16:15-17:30*
**
*_Art at the Frontier of Film Theory: Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen_*
Session led by Oliver Fuke and Nicolas Helm-Grovas
Group visit to the BIMI/Essay Film Festival produced exhibition “Art at
the Frontier of Film Theory: Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen”, Peltz
Gallery, Birkbeck; including presentation/discussion with curators,
Oliver Fuke and Nicolas Helm-Grovas, and with Laura Mulvey.
*ENDS 17:30*
[…]
*DAY TWO: Thursday 16 May, Birkbeck Cinema*
**
*Morning session 10:30-12:30*
**
*Panel #3: Displacing Cultures*
**
*_3.A. Displacing the “Last Western”: Remaking Eastwood and Rethinking
Japan_*
Speaker: Charles Exley
*Abstract: *I propose to consider the theme of displacement in the
western through a reading of Lee Sang-il’s 2013 film
/Unforgiven/(Yurusarezaru mono). Because it draws closely on Clint
Eastwood’s /Unforgiven/(1992), the work has been recognized as a
faithful remake of Eastwood’s iconic late western. At the same time, Lee
reframes the western to focus on displacement, calling particular
attention to the repression of political and ethnic ‘others’ in the
acquisition of frontier territory (Hokkaidō) in the 1860s. This
cinematic reworking of Eastwood is notable also for its transmedia
sensibility because it draws significantly from manga artist Tezuka
Osamu’s /Shumari/, a work which explores the imperial origins of the
frontier in Hokkaidō set at the same formative moment. In light of
recent European interest in the transnational western Lee’s complex film
offers a useful starting point for a larger discussion of how the
transposition of the western to East Asian soil adjusts our expectations
of what is overemphasized as being the most American of genres, and
indeed how displacement examined in this film might connect to other
examples of the transnational evolution of the western around the globe.
*_3.B. _**_The Visual Ecstasy of 1980s Bombay: The Disco, and Disco
Films as Contraband_*
**
Speaker: Silpa Mukherjee
*__*
*Abstract: *My presentation will showcase an aggregation of ephemera,
photographs, flyers and gossip columns from English language Indian film
magazines. These will resonate in the flicker of the images from the
“disco films” made in 1980s Bombay. The presentation will be moored to
clips from disco song sequences from these films. I am keen on mapping
this lost decade of underground media culture. I refer to this affective
visual infrastructure of disco as contraband. The precarious quality of
disco life becomes the contraband object. The scale of desire, risk and
guilt associated with this displaced and displacing alien culture is
significant for the project. Using the conceptual anchor of disco as
contraband the project engages with chance encounters with rapidly
morphing new media cultures which forged an alternative sensorium with a
new range of tastes. Displacement here is a tangible event locatable in
the newness of disco films, and in the transgressive charge and
materiality of the discotheque; in its actual hosting of contraband
bodies and events, and allowing the exchange of physical contraband. The
presentation will generate a visual sleazeography linked to the
contradictory impulses of desire and paranoia.
*Lunch 12:30-13:30*
**
*Afternoon session 13:30-15:30*
**
*Panel #4: Queer Displacements*
**
*_4.A. What makes Wong Kar-wai’s /Happy Together/a Queer Film? The
Border, Diaspora, and Disorientation_*
Speaker: Carlos Rivera
*Abstract:*The 1997 queer melodrama /Happy Together/relates the journey
two gay men, Lai Yiu-fai and Ho Po-wing, make from Hong Kong to
Argentina. Inspired by a lampshade depicting a waterfall procured by
Po-wing, the pair embark on a South American trip to the Iguaçu Falls in
an attempt to salvage their relationship. This natural border
constitutes the queer protagonists’ object of contemplation and desire.
As I will argue, we encounter recurring images – namely, the passport,
the lampshade, and the waterfalls – comprising a Deleuzian amalgam of
affection-images. In turn, these affection-images exude a common
quality: a highly fluid, polysemic border that, at once, enables and
restricts the movement of queer desires. The film, via its canny
employment of close-ups, transmutes the border into an aggregate of
affection-images susceptible to differing interpretative interventions.
Considering the effects of cinematographic techniques like the close-up,
this sense of disorientation is what renders the film queer. The film’s
queerness lies in how the border ends up having different, conflicting
meanings and sensations for the protagonists that vacillate from hope to
anger and from despair to perplexity.
*__*
*_4.B. Becoming /Trans/: Moving the Still and Queering the Archive _*
Speaker: Jonathan Devine
*Abstract: *My presentation mobilizes the theme of “Displacement” by
looking at the representation of trans* (transgender, transsexual,
nonbinary, and so on) subjecthood in /Trans /(Chris Arnold, 2012), a
nonlinear documentary that exhibits a kaleidoscope of different and
varied trans* experiences. I respond to Jay Prosser’s claim in /Second
Skins/that still photography can be at odds with the trans* experience,
a queer transformation that indicates movement, while photography as a
medium ostensibly portrays something that is in stasis. Such
displacement is thus not only bodily, but also temporal. In /Trans/, it
stems from how the movement of still, photographic images evinces a
temporality where past, present (and sometimes future) are presented
concurrently, owing to zooms, dissolves, and fades (in and out). This
style of documentary plays an important role when looking at different
representational forms in trans* history, such as the case study, the
clinic, pictures, and oral history.//Rather than being reduced to a form
of “irregularity” or “mental illness,” queer/trans* subjects have a
voice, and are presented as trustworthy in contributing to their archive
via a first-person narrative. By allowing his interview subjects to
openly express their queer, nonlinear entanglement of past, present, and
future, Arnold rather moves towards a sort of sympathetic voyeurism.
**
*Tea 15:30-16:15*
**
*Late afternoon session 16:15-17:30*
**
*_Displacement and the Compass Project_*
Session led by Michael Darko and Leslie Topp
This special session, chaired by Leslie Topp (chair of the Compass
Project steering group), will present an ongoing artistic collaboration
between Anna Konik, a video installation artist from Warsaw, and a group
of Compass Project students, all studying at Birkbeck while in the
asylum process. Students from the Compass Project are currently
undertaking a collaboration with Anna Konik, a Warsaw-based video artist
whose work includes the video installation /In the Same City Under the
Same Sky/, which focused on the narratives of women migrants in Europe
and explored empathy and its limits. Compass Project students are
working with Anna to produce an art documentary or video installation,
titled /Eight Days a Week/, inspired byKrzysztof Kieślowski's /Seven
Days a Week/, which will show each day a fragment of the life of a
different person looking at the complexity of their journey in different
cultural, political, social contexts as well the reality of
displacement. With another Compass student (to be confirmed), Michael
Darko will present the group’s work in progress on the project,
alongside a screening of selections from Anna Konik's previous project.
*ENDS 17:30*
[…]
*DAY THREE: Friday 17 May, Birkbeck Cinema*
**
*Morning session 10:30-12:30*
**
*Panel #5: Displacing Communities*
*_5.A. “Because We Feel We Must”: Freeways, Displacement, and the
Cinematic Aesthetics of Infrastructure Development_*
Speaker: John Taylor
The construction of the United States Interstate Highway System
displaced countless people, homes, and communities, and profoundly
reconfigured the way that American spaces and built environments were
perceived and represented in media. While the system is most often
understood as a manifestation of Cold War-era defense policy, my work
shows that it was also an aesthetic project to remake the way the nation
understood itself, a project that entailed the displacement and
relocation of citizens from /old/rural and urban spaces into
/new/suburban spaces of futurity. In this presentation I will show
government and corporate sponsored films from the 1950s to the 1970s
that articulate an aesthetic politics of highway and infrastructure
planning. These films were critical to making the case for freeways to
the general public and to those freeway planners aimed to displace. I
will further show that such government and corporate sponsored films
demonstrate that Interstate planners and stakeholders were operating
within a coherent representational ideology that both influenced and was
influenced by mainstream commercial film and television, which similarly
facilitated the displacement and erasure of communities.
**
*_5.B. Black Space Matters: Contested Community Activism in Processes of
Urban Renewal in Pittsburgh_*
Speaker: William Ackah
*Abstract: *One of the most prominent historical neighbourhoods in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is the Hill District. At its heyday in the
post Second World War period it was home to over 80,000 African
Americans and was a dynamic multi-cultural urban space known as the
second Harlem. Nine of the ten plays by Pulitzer Prize winning
playwright August Wilson based on each decade of the 20^th Century were
set in the Hill. Today the Hill District is home to less than 20,000
African-Americans the majority of whom earn less than $20,000 dollars
per annum. This paper explores the changing dynamics of the
neighbourhood since the Second World War and assesses the impact that
urban policy making has had on fortunes of the community. In particular
the paper focuses on the role played by African American church leaders
and community activists in trying to preserve the unique historical
black cultural legacy of the Hill whilst trying to navigate a policy
environment concerned with regenerating the area and changing its class
and racial make-up.
**
*Lunch 12:30-13:30*
**
*Afternoon session 13:30-15:00*
**
*_Young Voices @ EFF: Curating Essay Films by Young Filmmakers
_**__*
Session led by Lily Ford, Sarah Joshi, and Janet McCabe
This session focuses on a small-scale project involving the screening of
essay films made by young filmmakers (16-22years old), programmed by
students on MA Film Programming and Curating. The filmmakers are alumni
of three different programmes: the Pittsburgh-London Film Program (with
the University of Pittsburgh), the Making Images course at the Phoenix
Cinema, East Finchley, and the Hidden Persuaders film workshops for
Camden sixth-formers run by Birkbeck and the Derek Jarman Lab. The aim
is not only to introduce the idea of the essay film as a film practice,
but also to delve into questions of what it is to programme such films
for an audience. This collaborative session will involve staff and film
programmers in conversation, discussing what it is to conceive of and
direct an essay film, but also how to interpret, curate and present
these kinds of films in a publicly accessible way.
**
*ENDS 15:00*
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