
Technology and the Making of Experimental Film Culture
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 26 September 2023
- ISBN 9780197683385
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages278 pages
- Size 156x235x20 mm
- Weight 549 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 26 color plates + 25 b&w halftones 499
Categories
Short description:
Technology and the Making of Experimental Film Culture examines how the avant-garde embraced small-gauge media technologies such as the Bolex camera, 16mm reversal film stocks, commercial film laboratories, and low-budget optical printers, investing them with meaning and value. This book uses technology as a lens for examining the process of making: where ideas come from, how they are put into practice, and how arguments about those ideas foster cultural and artistic commitments and communities.
MoreLong description:
The Bolex camera, 16mm reversal film stocks, commercial film laboratories, and low-budget optical printers were the small-gauge media technologies that provided the infrastructure for experimental filmmaking at the height of its cultural impact. Technology and the Making of Experimental Film Culture examines how the avant-garde embraced these material resources and invested them with meanings and values adjacent to those of semiprofessional film culture.
By reasserting the physicality of the body in making time-lapse and kinesthetic sequences with the Bolex, filmmakers conversed with other art forms and integrated broader spheres of humanistic and scientific inquiry into their artistic process. Drawing from the photographic qualities of stocks such as Tri-X and Kodachrome, they discovered pliant metaphors that allowed them to connect their artistic practice to metaphysics, spiritualism, and Hollywood excess. By framing film labs as mystical or adversarial, they cultivated an oppositionality that valorized control over the artistic process. And by using the optical printer as a tool for excavating latent meaning out of found footage, they posited the reworking of images as fundamental to the exploration of personal and cultural identity.
Providing a wealth of new detail about the making of canonized avant-garde classics by such luminaries as Carolee Schneemann, Jack Smith, and Stan Brakhage, as well as rediscovering works from overlooked artists such as Chick Strand, Amy Halpern, and Gunvor Nelson, Technology and the Making of Experimental Film Culture uses technology as a lens for examining the process of making: where ideas come from, how they are put into practice, and how arguments about those ideas foster cultural and artistic commitments and communities.
Dr. John Powers examines how the avant-garde embraced these material resources and invested them with meanings and values adjacent to those of semiprofessional film culture.
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Proscriptive Orientations
Chapter 1. The Twitters of the Machine: The Bolex H-16 Camera In and Out of Control
Chapter 2. Untrue Truisms: The Paradoxes of Reversal Film Stock
Chapter 3. A Lab of One's Own: Personal Cinema Invades the Film Laboratory
Chapter 4. Holding the Jalopy Together: The Optical Printer and DIY Culture
Epilogue: Midwives for Existence
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index