Last call!  We’ll probably take down the submission links on the morning of 
April 1.  Thank you.

 

Best regards,


Adam

 

 

 

 

From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, March 23, 2021 at 7:35 PM
To: Adam Hyman <[email protected]>
Subject: Two Open Calls! for Filmmakers and Programmers

 

View this email in your browser 
 

Last Call for Two Open Calls!
And Alternative Film and
Video Events of Note
 

Greetings all. We have two open calls, both due March 31.

Open Call For Programmers
Call for Los Angeles Filmforum Program Proposals!

Los Angeles Filmforum is accepting program proposals for the 2021 calendar 
year. As a way to widen our net of curatorial possibilities and spark 
inspiration in our film communities during this unprecedented time, we would 
love to hear from you in this call for programming. 

We are looking for engaging ideas from first-time, emerging, or seasoned 
programmers and curators for single programs, program series, or other 
programmatic formats that highlight short or feature-length works.  Given the 
uncertainty of when theater venues will be open again to the public and to 
support the ongoing safety of our patrons, we ask that proposals be submitted 
for virtual viewing only.

Criteria:

The following criteria must be met for proposals to be considered:
    •    Each Program Running Time: 50-70 mins (preferred)
    •    All works must be able to be presented in a virtual screening 
environment 
    •    Proposals must include a post-screening Q&A component with featured 
filmmakers/artists 
    •    Programs must align with Los Angeles Filmforum's mission to exhibit 
non-commercial, independent, experimental, and progressive film and media art
    •    We ask that programmers refrain from programming their own works; 
however, all proposals will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
    •    If you have an idea for a series, please limit it to three programs at 
most.
    •    Priority will be given to programmers in Southern California, but we 
will not be limiting it to only people from the area
Submission Deadline: March 31, 2021 @ 11:59 pm PDT

To submit a proposal please complete this online Proposal Form: 
https://forms.gle/4cqXFCs3Qr4r2RVh8

Members from Filmforum's Programming Committee will review proposals and inform 
all participants in late April or May, 2021.

Selected guest programmers will receive a $250 stipend along with a $500 budget 
for artist fees/film rentals per program. Technical and promotional support 
from Filmforum will also be provided for all selected programs.

Program Committee Review Panel: 
Madison Brookshire
Jheanelle Brown
Kate Brown
Tuni Chatterji
Adam Hyman
Leeroy Kang

If you have any questions please contact:  [email protected] 
We look forward to your proposals. Please spread the word!
https://www.lafilmforum.org/open-calls-march-2021/
 

Open Call For Filmmakers
We’re announcing an open call for films started and completed during the 
pandemic.  We originally announced this with a deadline of February 28, but it 
was buried in another announcement and we received only a few, so we are 
extending the deadline to March 31, 11:59 pm PDT.
We are looking for short works (under 20 minutes) that can be screened 
digitally, assuming we will be holding the show(s) virtually in the late Spring.
We’re keeping it simple, and not having submission fees, although if we get too 
many, we may need to change that.  We would like to see experimental and 
animated works, not short narratives.  Your work on them should have started 
after March 15, 2020, and presumably they should in some way deal with the 
pandemic, observations and emotions you have dealt with in this period, and 
whatever else seems appropriate.  Abstract films are great; observations of 
places, essays on physical distancing, and so forth. Please email 
[email protected] with any questions.  We’ll be paying a small honorarium 
for each film screened!  To submit a film, please use the  form at 
https://forms.gle/uWMJeAqgyb3ETJ929 before March 31!
 

Greetings all,
Here are some noteworthy events coming up. 

The 59th Ann Arbor Film Festival is online now!
March 23-28, 2021
https://59aaff.eventive.org/
https://watch.eventive.org/59aaff
Lots of great films!
----------------
As Above, So Below, by Larry Clark
March 25, 2021 - 4:00 pm
Streaming online, through the UCLA Film & Television Archive
FREE RSVP
https://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/2021/03/25/as-above-so-below

Post-screening conversation with filmmaker Larry Clark and cultural critic 
Ernest Hardy.
As Above, So Below
U.S., 1973, Color and b&w, 52 min. Director: Larry Clark. Screenwriter: Larry 
Clark. With: Nathaniel Taylor, Gail Peters, Billy Middleton.
Free jazz, state propaganda, religious feeling and revolutionary action all 
roil the air in writer-director Larry Clark’s masterwork of the L.A. Rebellion. 
When Black veteran Jita Hadi (Nathaniel Taylor) arrives in South-Central Los 
Angeles after serving stints in Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Vietnam—a 
veritable guided tour of postwar American imperialism—he immediately recognizes 
the symptoms of a population under occupation in the wake of the 1965 Watts 
rebellion. At a local diner, a church service, and out on the streets, Hadi 
bears witness to the forces of oppression and reaction within and without the 
Black community while an underground army watches and waits. On the soundtrack, 
Horace Tapscott’s improvisational score plays against recorded HUAC testimony 
on the threat of Black nationalism while Clark (also director of Passing 
Through) intercuts scenes of Hadi’s political awakening with documentary 
footage of U.S. foreign interventionism and domestic police brutality. 
Politically radical and aesthetically inventive, As Above, So Below couples a 
far-reaching critique of American racial injustice with an expansive vision of 
the possibilities of Black resistance.
---------------
GENEVIEVE YUE PRESENTS: IMPLICIT MOVIES PROGRAM 1: SECRET CITY
Available on Demand, Mar 24-30
through the Metrograph Theater, New York
Multiple short films by Thom Andersen, Bill Brand, Mary Helena Clark, Alexandra 
Cuesta, Kevin Jerome Everson, Miko Revereza, Karen Yasinsky
USA / 1980-2018 / TRT: 80 MIN
Introduced by Genevieve Yue
https://metrograph.com/live-screenings/genevieve-yue-presents-implicit-movies-program-1-secret-city/
 
Within the city, there is another, secret city. It is full of people we don’t 
ordinarily see, who don’t always want to be seen. They round the loops of 
public transportation, stopping at convenience stores, nightclubs, and shop 
windows. Through their eyes, the city is cast in an unfamiliar light. Shadows 
grow tall, and echoes of movie refrains, of previous lives and memories, float 
through the air. A wonderful program with multiple films by people we've hosted 
at Filmforum, and Genevieve Yue was once a volunteer with us!

Program Includes:
Masstransiscope (Bill Brand, 1980/2008, 3 min) 
Disintegration 93-96 (Miko Revereza, 2017, 5 min)
The Tony Longo Trilogy (Thom Andersen, 2014, 14 min)
Audition (Karen Yasinsky, 2013, 4 min) 
Goddess & Richland Blue (Kevin Jerome Everson, 2018, 2 min., 4 min) 
The Dragon is the Frame (Mary Helena Clark, 2014, 14 min) 
Piensa en mí (Alexandra Cuesta, 2009, 15 min)
----------------- 
Pat O'Neill - Spectrum
17 - 31 March 2021 online through Philip Martin Gallery
https://philipmartingallery.com/exhibitions/131-pat-o-neill-spectrum/works/

Philip Martin Gallery is proud to present, “Spectrum,” an exhibition of 
photographs, collages and a film by filmmaker, photographer and artist, Pat 
O’Neill. A pioneer of the optical printer, O’Neill’s works explore photographic 
technique, perception and figuration.

Long recognized as a master of avant-garde film, Pat O’Neill is probably the 
first American to receive an MA in moving image art. O’Neill began his studies 
at University of California (Los Angeles, CA) in 1957, working with renowned 
designer Henry Dreyfuss. In 1961, he began studying with Robert Heinecken, who 
like O’Neill, was coming out of design. Heinecken was, according to O’Neill, 
“bringing photography and Pop Art together and breaking the mold for what was 
acceptable in photography at that time.” O’Neill collaborated with Heinecken, 
and fellow students Carl Cheng and Darryl Curran on a multi-screen slide 
projector work, “American/Image Ideal,” for the 1963 Aspen Design Conference, 
organized by Charles and Ray Eames. O’Neill recalls that Heinecken “welcomed 
transgressions of the purity of the medium. We were encouraged to distort the 
technology, cook the negative, cut up the print, and even use its surface to 
paint upon.”
---------------
Bodies of Animation: Analogue Tales from Latin America
Monday, March 29, 2021, 8 pm
https://www.redcat.org/event/bodies-animation-analogue-tales-latin-america
VIRTUAL EVENT
As part of the collective Moebius Animación, Juan Camilo González is dedicated 
to amplifying the voices of animators from Latin America. For this program of 
short films, he proposes a reading of analogue animation as a means to exorcise 
personal and collective traumas. By paying close attention to the materiality 
of these productions—an indexical trace of the bodily labor that went into the 
creative processes—the program underlines an experimental approach that 
recognizes animation as a vehicle of performative dimensions. These films 
reclaim lo-fi style, recycled animation techniques, and the use of analogue 
materials as aesthetic decisions rather than the outcome of economic 
limitations.The evening includes works by Joaquín Cociña, Cristobal León, and 
others.

In person via Zoom: curator Juan Camilo González Jiménez; filmmakers TBA
-------------------
The Arab Film & Media Institute Hosts
The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived
ساعة التحرير دقت
With an Exclusive LIVE Conversation with Director Heiny Srour
This Special Program opens on March 25th!
https://arabfilm.eventive.org/
https://watch.eventive.org/arabfilm/play/6046772992d66a00bdf1da20?mc_cid=afdf306b8b&mc_eid=057de89084
 
The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived was the first film by an Arab woman to 
screen at Cannes, where it was nominated for four awards and nominated for a 
Palme d'Or (Best film) in 1974. It is believed that her documentary film The 
Hour of Liberation Has Arrived was actually the first film by any female 
filmmaker to be screened at the festival.

Srour was vocal about the position of women in Arab society, and in 1978, along 
with Tunisian director Salma Baccar and Arab cinema historian Magda Wassef, she 
announced a new assistance fund "for the self-expression of women in cinema." 
Read more about filmmaker Heiny Srour on our blog

The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived will become available for on-demand 
streaming on March 25th.  You can buy a ticket just to this event, or watch all 
the movies in the showcase with a pass.  To learn more about the complete 
lineup of AFMI's 6 Days | 6 Nights - Revolutionary Arab Women in the Arts, 
visit Arab Cinema Reimagined, 
https://arabfilm.eventive.org/welcome?mc_cid=afdf306b8b&mc_eid=057de89084
---------------
JJJJJerome Ellis: Three Psalms
Saturday, April 3, 2021, 8:00 pm
at REDCAT
https://www.redcat.org/event/jjjjjerome-ellis-three-psalms
Virtual Event
TWO PSALMS was filmed in Ellis' apartment on May 18, 2018 and features 
musicians Catherine Brookman, Starr Busby, Haruna Lee, James Harrison Monaco, 
Ronald Peet, and Shu Wang. The piece's three movements are settings of Psalm 42 
and Psalm 23 from the Hebrew Bible, in both English and Latin translations, 
with spoken interludes. During the evening, REDCAT will also present a new 
commissioned psalm setting, as Ellis continues his ongoing contemplation of 
devotion, yearning, and uncertainty. 

JJJJJerome Ellis is a stuttering, Afro-Caribbean composer, performer, and 
writer. His current practice explores Blackness, music, and disabled speech as 
forces of refusal and healing. He is a 2019 MacDowell Colony Fellow, a writer 
in residence at Lincoln Center Theater, and a 2015 Fulbright Fellow.
----------------
Prismatic Ground Film Festival of Experimental Documentaries
April 8-18, 2021
Streaming through the festival's duration at prismaticground.com and through 
maysles.org:

Prismatic Ground is a new film festival centered on experimental documentary. 
The inaugural edition of the festival, founded by Inney Prakash, will be hosted 
virtually in partnership with Maysles Documentary Center and Screen Slate. 
Catch the ‘Opening Night,’ ‘Centerpiece,’ and ‘Closing Night’ events live via 
Screen Slate's Twitch channel. The rest of the films, split into four loosely 
themed sections or ‘waves’, will be available for the festival’s duration at 
prismaticground.com and through maysles.org. On April 10, at 4PM ET, Prismatic 
Ground will present the inaugural Ground Glass Award for outstanding 
contribution in the field of experimental media to Lynne Sachs. Other live 
engagements TBA.
--------------
Conference: “There is no such thing as documentary”
Conference hosted by the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore
The conference is past but the panels are now online
http://ntu.ccasingapore.org/events/conference-there-is-no-such-thing-as-documentary/
 
As the concluding programme of the exhibition Trinh T. Minh-ha. Films. (17 
October 2020 – 28 February 2021) at NTU CCA Singapore, this four-part 
conference brings together scholars and practitioners across filmic, 
anthropological and curatorial disciplines, addressing notions of 
multivocality, performativity, and truth in fiction, through Trinh’s practice 
as a filmmaker and theorist.

As Trinh wrote: “There is no such thing as documentary…The words will not ring 
true.” Both a response and homage to Trinh’s provocation, and at once a close 
but also an opening, the conference extends multiple threads of inquiry beyond 
the ontological frames presented in Trinh’s films, to further explore the 
theoretical parallels and proximities between arrangement and composition, 
territorialisation and deterritorisalisation, that underscore Trinh’s cinematic 
works.
------------
The FIAF Programming Game
Multiple great archival programs, available through
https://www.fiafnet.org/pages/Training/2021-Winter-School-Programmes.html#pgm_294
  
 

 

Los Angeles Filmforum screenings are supported by the Los Angeles County Board 
of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts & Culture; the 
Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles; The California Community 
Foundation with the Getty Foundation, the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts 
and the Wilhelm Family Foundation. Special support provided by the Academy of 
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.  We also depend on our members, ticket 
buyers, and individual donors.
 
Los Angeles Filmforum is the city’s longest-running organization dedicated to 
weekly screenings of experimental film, documentaries, video art, and 
experimental animation. 2021 is our 46th year!

Memberships available, $75 single, $125 dual, $40 single student, or $225 for 
Silver Nitrate membership!
Contact us at [email protected].
Find us online at http://lafilmforum.org.
Become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @LosAngFilmforum!

 

 

 

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