Microscope presents an in-person screening of films by Chicago-based artist
and filmmaker Jean Sousa. This will be the first physical screening at the
gallery of works by the artist — who previously appeared in an online only
event in November 2020 — and will include the projection of several of her
works in their original 16mm film format.

The approximately 70-minute program includes a new selection of eight short
films and videos made by Sousa since 1977 and culled from her expansive
body of work, which also extends to photography and performance art.
Sousa’s works, which she describes as revealing “a concern with the
physical properties of the medium, text as a formal device, the question of
female identity as it relates to common gender tropes, and the experimental
possibilities of narrative,” employ various techniques and processes such
as alterations in frame rate, inversion of color, animation, and the use of
modified cameras. Movement is central to her work, especially that of the
human body in space, as recorded by the camera and further deconstructed,
analyzed, and reorganized through cinema.

Three of the films on the program — “Film Score for Live Music (aka Pattern
Impulse)” (1979), “What Am I Doing Here” (1978), and “The Mermaid” (2020) —
will be accompanied by an improvised soundtrack by artists Rachael Guma and
Sarah Halpern, using percussive guitar, theremin, and effects. The live
accompaniment is a programming requirement for the first of the above
mentioned works, which is an abstract hand-painted film entirely conceived
to serve as a visual score to be performed live by musicians, with “each
graphic symbol representing a particular sound or instrument.” However,
Sousa welcomes and often prefers live sound accompaniment for many of her
works.

A Q&A with Sousa follows the screening.

Advance Tickets HERE
<https://www.ticketleap.events/tickets/microscopegallery/films-by-jean-sousa>

Become Member HERE
<https://fundraising.fracturedatlas.org/microscope-gallery>

*Jean Sousa* moved from the East Coast to Chicago in the mid-seventies to
pursue an MFA in Performance at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
She was interested in filmmaking and SAIC had a strong program in film with
Stan Brakhage and George Landow (Owen Land) on the faculty. Initially, her
intention was to integrate film into live performance, but gradually she
began to work solely in film and frequently performed for the camera. Her
sensibility combined structuralist form with personal content and a concern
for the physical properties of the medium, abstract narrative, and aspects
of feminism. Her influences were East Coast and performative, including
Yvonne Rainer, Steve Reich, and John Cage. Sousa’s films have been screened
nationally and internationally the Image Forum Cinematheque in Tokyo, the
Funnel in Toronto, the ICA in Boston, the Cinematheque in San Francisco,
the MCA in Chicago, and Microscope Gallery in New York, among other venues.
Her work has been included in numerous festivals, including the
International Festival of Avant-Garde Film in London, the Festival des
Cinémas Différents in Paris, the Ann Arbor Film Festival, and the Onion
City Film Festival in Chicago. She is the recipient of two Artist
Fellowships from the Illinois Arts Council and a Regional Artist Fellowship
from the National Endowment for the Arts. Sousa was a Visiting Artist at
the American Academy in Rome in 2014 and 2017. Sousa has taught at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the School of the Museum of Fine
Arts in Boston, and the MIT Summer Institute for Film, Photography, and
Video at Hampshire College. She also served as Trott Family Director of
Interpretive Exhibitions at the Art Institute of Chicago where she curated
interactive exhibitions for intergenerational visitors and oversaw a broad
range of multidisciplinary programs. As a museum educator, Sousa served as
Chair and panelist at numerous national and international conferences
including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, and the
National Gallery of Ireland.

*Rachael Guma* is a light and sound artist who works with liquid light
projection, Super 8 film, Theremin, turn-table manipulations, live Foley,
collage, and stop motion animation. She has collaborated with Optipus Film
Collective since 2009, and co-founded the liquid light projection group, A
Clockface Orange, with Genevieve H.K. She has performed at AXWFF, Anthology
Film Archives, Ambient Church, Echo Park Film Center, Das Haus der Kulturen
der Welt, Index Festival, The Kitchen, Long Island Children’s Museum,
Museum of the Moving Image (MOMI), Microscope Gallery, Mono No Aware,
Morbid Anatomy Museum, Museum of Art and Design (MAD), Northern Flickers,
Orphans Symposium, Participant Gallery, Paul Klee Museum, Planet Money
Live, RX Gallery, Roulette Intermedium, San Francisco Cinematheque,
Transient Visions, UnionDocs, Unseen Cinema, and the Whitney Museum of
American Art (in alphabetical order).

*Sarah Halpern* works with light, voice, performance, text, electric
guitar, paper, and installation. Her work has been presented at
institutions including Anthology Film Archives, Experimental Intermedia,
The Kitchen, The New York Film Festival (NYFF) Views of the Avant-Garde,
The Museum of Moving Image (MoMI), The Whitney Museum of American Art
(Dreamlands Expanded) and the Centre Pompidou among others. She is a a
founding member of the expanded cinema collective Optipus and a MacDowell
Colony Fellow.
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