Wonderful !!!

Envoyé à partir de Courrier pour Windows

De : Fred Camper
Envoyé le :vendredi 30 décembre 2022 00:30
À : [email protected]
Objet :[Frameworks] My new book on Brakhage, and related screenings

I am pleased to announce the publication of my book, Seeking Brakhage. This 
project was proposed to me by Scott Hammen of Eyewash Books in Paris, who did 
much of the work on it, and consists of a collection of almost all my writing 
on the filmmaker Stan Brakhage, from 1966, when I was 18, to 2021. It is 455 
pages and includes 56 color images, scans of his films which I selected from 
the many that I have made over the course of two decades. The book includes an 
introduction by P. Adams Sitney, who, I am glad to note, offers some critiques 
and different perspectives, and will be available as print copies (expensive 
because of the cost of print on demand) and ebooks ($20) starting January 14, 
which is the ninetieth anniversary of Brakhage’s birth. There is also a 
recording of a Zoom session that begins with my introduction to Brakhage and to 
the book and continues with responses from several film professors at 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wm1-pG3Dagg 
This publication date will be marked by screenings of Brakhage films in New 
York on January 14 and 15, in programs I curated at the Museum of the Moving 
Image and Anthology Film Archives. Links to these programs are on the main page 
of my Web site, http://www.fredcamper.com/ The first program presents my idea 
of some of Brakhage’s most important, and mostly lesser-known, films, and the 
second, films of no less importance but only in 8mm and 35mm. 
The curators at both venues asked that I also show my own almost never screened 
films, and the same program of my five early 16mm films, made between ages 19 
and 21 and recently restored due to the excellent work of the Chicago Film 
Society, will be shown at both locations on January 14 and 16. I will offer 
comments at all four screenings. 
The book will make the most sense to those who know and are interested in 
Brakhage’s work. If you don’t know his films, they are in my view, and that of 
some others, one of the major achievements among all of twentieth century art. 
There is a Criterion DVD set, which I worked on. My introductory essay for that 
set, which is in the book but can also be read at no charge at  
https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/272-by-brakhage-the-act-of-seeing, is I 
think my best general introduction to Brakhage. Copies of his films, mostly of 
inferior or unwatchably bad quality, can also be found on YouTube. 
My fondest hope for this book as that it encourages more screenings of 
Brakhage’s work on film, and I am open to considering curating and appearing at 
such events. As for the book, I am hoping that it will be purchased in either 
or both formats by university libraries, so if you have connections to such a 
library and wish to recommend its purchase, please do so. 
Fred Camper
Chicago
 

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