From West and East: Canyon Cinema Meets the Coop
A special program of films preserved and catalogued by both Canyon Cinema and 
the FMC
Co-curated by Dominic Angerame and Kornelia Boczkowska
Playing at the Film-Makers' Cooperative on Friday, June 7th, at 7pm!
TICKETS 
<https://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=36782933&msgid=562109&act=098F&c=258554&pid=5704737&destination=https%3A%2F%2Ffilmmakerscoop.ecwid.com%2FFrom-West-and-East-Canyon-Cinema-Meets-the-Coop-p656337236&cf=33662&v=248bcf3a0b7ebee158bf630e47ec31e7914486be8d7886fbaa27c4ce0b854bea>
 
<https://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=36782933&msgid=562109&act=098F&c=258554&pid=5704737&destination=https%3A%2F%2Ffilm-makerscoop.com%2Fscreenings%2Ffrom-west-and-east-canyon-cinema-meets-the-coop&cf=33662&v=14be6904371532d6d1ced82267bcd746d24f0343aa642a6555a63ebe9c6b449d>
Join us at the Film-Makers' Cooperative on FRIDAY, JUNE 7th, at 7pm, for a 
special program of films preserved and cataloged by both Canyon Cinema and the 
Coop!

Co-curated by Dominic Angerame and Kornelia Boczkowska, the program presents 
the legacy of some of the most widely celebrated (and also largely overlooked) 
filmmakers who lived and worked in the San Francisco Bay Area, including the 
critically acclaimed Decodings, the long forgotten Dufus, and the work of 
former Directors of Canyon Cinema, Dominic Angerame and Michael Wallin (1948- 
2016). Selected by Angerame (Angerame, Henderson, Peterson) and Boczkowska 
(Hindle, Jordan, Strand, Wallin), the films featured in this program have been 
preserved and cataloged by both Canyon Cinema, a bastion of artist-made and 
experimental film distribution in the Bay Area, and the Film-Makers’ 
Cooperative, New York’s legendary and world largest distributor of avant-garde 
films, celebrating and reviving the historical and cultural links between these 
two institutions.

Tracing the history of the Bay Area experimental film culture from surreal 
psychodramas of the 1940s (Peterson) and Beatnik-era film poems (Jordan) to 
personal (Angerame, Hindle, Strand), “talkin' blues” (Henderson) and found 
footage films (Wallin), the program demonstrates not only the pioneering free 
spirit of the local film community, but also a unique diversity of their 
filmmaking practices. Inspired by both European and New York experimental film 
scene, some of these films feature the misadventures of a detached eyeball, the 
first project of Peterson’s Workshop 20 (The Cage), Henderson’s blues-driven 
musings on Black and African-American identity (Dufus) and Wallin’s intimate 
search for queer identity at the height of AIDS hysteria (Decodings). Others 
take a more serious tone, featuring Jordan’s lyrical portrait of Beatniks’ 
prominent poet Michael McClure (Vision of a City), Hindle’s mystical journey 
through the Death Valley (Saint Flournoy Lobos-Logos), Strand’s haunting 
mediation on light on water (Kristallnacht) and Angerame’s experiments with 
live action and NASA footage (Aeon, Luminae). Be it narrative and abstract or 
realistic and absurdist, the films selected for this program represent the key 
trends in the Bay Area vibrant film scene with a special focus on the San 
Francisco Renaissance, the cinema of the Beat generation, lyrical abstraction, 
queer films and city symphonies, paying homage to the region’s exceptionally 
rich and distinctive history of moving image experimentation. – Kornelia 
Boczkowska

The Cage (1947) by Sidney Peterson (16mm, black and white, silent, 28 min)
"The adventures of a detached eyeball. Resources limited, content almost 
unlimited. Most celebrated shot: artist with head in birdcage." –Dominic 
Angerame

"[Peterson is] one of the originators of the American avant-garde cinema. The 
five films he made in San Francisco between 1947 and 1950 have become classics; 
they have influenced the cinematic education of many of the best filmmakers of 
subsequent generations." –P. Adams Sitney

"One of the greats, a pioneer of the American experimental film .... With his 
sharp, proto-Funk assemblages of wild sight-gags and free associations, he 
celebrated those aspects of the Rene Clair and Buñuel/Dali films that were 
indebted to the work of Chaplin, Keaton, and Laurel and Hardy." – Walker Art 
Center, Minneapolis, program notes

Visions of a City (1957, edited in 1978) by Lawrence Jordan (16mm, black and 
white, sound, 6.25 min)
"A lyrical portrait of San Francisco of the 1950s and Beatniks’ prominent poet 
Michael McClure, both emerging from and mediated through reflections of 
windows, car bumpers, mirrors, bottles and other reflective, shiny surfaces and 
objects made of glass and metal. Jordan’s early experiment in the city symphony 
genre different from many of his animated collage films, Visions of a City 
explores the (in)direct ways of seeing, the artistic atmosphere of the beat era 
and the San Francisco Renaissance, and a complex, multilayered and fleeting 
nature of human perception and cityscape." –Kornelia Boczkowska

Dufus (1970) by Mike Henderson (16mm, black and white, sound, 8 min)
"Blues musician, painter, and filmmaker, the truly original artist Mike 
Henderson’s creative path found its luminous trajectory upon his relocation 
from Missouri to San Francisco in the mid-1960s, where he had come to study at 
the San Francisco Art Institute, one of the only desegregated schools available 
to him at the time. Quickly befriending remarkable artists and musicians such 
as Bruce Nauman, Robert Nelson, Jay DeFeo, William T. Wiley, and even Jerry 
Garcia, Henderson established himself as a multi-disciplinary artist and 
educator with a one-of-a-kind vision drawing on his complex notions of 
identity, society, and the elusive mystery of art itself. Henderson movies are 
the first films in the world to bring the authentic 'talkin blues' tradition 
into film. Self-taught as a filmmaker,Henderson’s films approach the unique 
qualities of the medium in an unexpected way.In Dufus a motley cast of 
characters offer their thoughts on what’s most important in life. Preserved by 
the Academy Film Archives in 2011." -Dominic Angerame

Saint Flournoy Lobos-Logos and the Eastern Europe Fetus Taxing Japan Brides in 
West Coast Places Sucking Alabama Air (1970) by Will Hindle (16mm, color, 
sound, 12 min)
Will Hindle’s mystical journey through the Death Valley filmed shortly prior to 
the Manson Family’s infamous murder spree. Known for his masterful use of 
editing, Hindle, one of the most prominent figures of the San Francisco 
experimental scene of the 1960s, creates a highly sensuous, psychedelic and 
uncanny portrait of a lone male wanderer almost exemplary of the Bay Area’s 
Aquarian Age aesthetics through its focus on meditation, spirituality, 
consciousness, the altered state of mind and the then rising New Age movement. 
– Kornelia Boczkowska

Krystallnacht (1979) by Chick Strand (16mm, black and white, sound, 8 min)
"A deeply lyrical and sensuous film whose black-and-white intricacy borders on 
abstraction while rocking in a watery cradle of love and death. Dedicated to 
the memory of Anne Frank and the tenacity of the human spirit." –Chick Strand

Decodings (1988) by Michael Wallin (16mm, black and white, sound, 16 min)
Michael Wallin’s most well-known, critically acclaimed and highly personal film 
drawing on found footage from the 1940s and 1950s. Widely celebrated as a queer 
classic, Decodings deconstructs the process of meaning making in industrial, 
instructional and ephemeral film, both lyrically and ironically reflecting on 
loss, desire, collective memory and one’s intimate search for queer identity at 
the height of AIDS hysteria." –Kornelia Boczkowska

Luminae (2022) by Dominic Angerame (digital, black and white, sound, 11.38 min)
F"or years I had been shooting with an iris attached to my lens creating a 
circle. The sun seemed to be a natural progression of the circle, especially 
its revolutions. The film is an accession into the heavens. Leaving the 
grittiness of the streets of construction and destruction behind this film was 
magically created from the soul of my spirit. The music was also magic that it 
glides the imagery into its many manifestations. This film is definitely the 
result of the magic of cinema capturing a spirit of space that would make 
George Melies cry in wonder." –Dominic Angerame

Aeon (2024) by Dominic Angerame (Digital, black and white, sound, 11.5 min)
"In Aeon, Dominic Angerame draws parallels between the earthly and the 
heavenly, linking the San Francisco cityscape and city dwellers to outer space. 
Filmed during the Covid-19 lockdown, Aeoncelebrates Angerame’s reunion with 
friends and responds to the new ways of interacting with the world on different 
levels. Using a meta-narrative and self-referential approach to storytelling, 
Angerame brings the (holy) spirit to life, filling the spaces he captures with 
energy, which is otherwise unattainable and invisible the naked eye, but 
significantly transforms our lives. Aeon is one of Angerame’s major and most 
mature works to date, which demonstrates the potential of experimental 
filmmaking in superimposing images that are seemingly disparate, yet uncannily 
familiar." –Kornelia Boczkowska

***

BIOs
Dominic Angerame, MFA, San Francisco Art Institute, BFA, School of the Art 
Institute of Chicago. Former Executive Director, Canyon Cinema (1980-2012). 
Part time Professor Cinema Studies and 16mm Film Production at numerous 
colleges and universities in San Francisco and the University of Nevada/Reno. 
Compiled a filmography of more than 45 experimental films. Programmer of Avant 
Garde films from the United States at the Latinoamericano Cine Del Nuevo 
Internancianole Cine in Havana, Cuba from 2006-2019. Professor at the Escuela 
Interncional de Cine y Televis in Cuba.

Kornelia Boczkowska, PhD (AMU, Poznan), is a scholar, curator and educator with 
a special interest in American avant-garde cinema. She has received several 
research grants and is the author of two books and over forty other 
publications on independent, experimental and documentary film. Her most recent 
papers have appeared in Feminist Media Studies, New Review of Film and 
Television Studies, Mobilities, Studies in Documentary Film and other 
peer-reviewed journals. In 2022, she received the scholarship from the Polish 
Minister of Education and Science for outstanding young researchers.
 
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