Hi Joel, I wonder if you make a distinction between a gallery actually curating the films and simply hosting/the series. Also if you distinguish between for profit and non profit galleries.
Chicago's Randolph Street Gallery <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randolph_Street_Gallery> hosted the Experimental Film Coalition's monthly (except for summer) screenings, curated by John and Beth Schofill with input from others, between January 1984 and June 1989. I deposited full sets of program notes and flyers with Anthology and Pacific Film Archive many years ago in case you (or anyone else) ever wants to learn more. Sixty-six programs! Eric On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 4:10 PM Joel Schlemowitz <j...@joelschlemowitz.com> wrote: > A question in connection with a writing project: > > I'm interested in the presence of experimental film in art galleries - > specifically, the hosting of experimental film screenings on a > regular basis. An example would be the Monday night screenings at > Microscope Gallery in New York. The Robert Beck Memorial Cinema was hosted > by Collective:Unconscious, and later by the art gallery Participant Inc. > > Are there other art galleries that host experimental film series > screenings, either currently or historical examples? Places that show fine > art by day and film by night. And ideally, examples of a longstanding > commitment to hosting a screening series, rather than a one-off event now > and then. > > Much appreciate your responses! > > Cheers, > Joel Schlemowitz > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > https://www.joelschlemowitz.com > -- > Frameworks mailing list > Frameworks@film-gallery.org > https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org >
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