http://decinema-decuir.tumblr.com/post/123115134176/avant-noir-volume-2-program-notes


https://www.ica.org.uk/whats-on/artists-film-club-avant-noir-volume-2-curated-greg-de-cuir-jr


Dear Adam:


How are you? Hope you enjoyed Oberhausen. Too bad we didn't get a chance to 
have coffee and catch up. A question for you. I'm really interested to see 
Andersen's "Juke". Do you know if he has an online preview available, and if 
so, how I could come to it? Not sure if I told you but I've been curating the 
multi-part series Avant-Noir for ICA London. Links with details are above.


Hope to be in touch. Have a great summer.


Best,


Greg

Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android

From:"Adam Hyman" <[email protected]>
Date:Sat, Jul 25, 2015 at 17:58
Subject:[Frameworks] Los Angeles Filmforum presents Reclamation Works: New and 
recent films by William E. Jones and Thom Andersen on Sunday July 26

Behind in postings, so sending this to the list, for those of you in Southern 
California tomorrow:

Sunday July 26, 2015, 7:30 pm 
Los Angeles Filmforum presents 
Reclamation Works: New and recent films by William E. Jones and Thom Andersen
At the Spielberg Theatre at the Egyptian, 6712 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles CA 
90028

William E. Jones and Thom Andersen in person! One U.S and five Los Angeles 
premieres! 
 
William E. Jones and Thom Andersen each return to Filmforum to present recent 
works that look deep into past films to find and revitalize their meanings.  
Whether social investigation, political commentary, or a now-forgotten 
filmmaker’s documentation of an era largely forgotten, these two artists again 
show why they are two of the finest cinema makers of today.  Five works by 
William E. Jones include one U.S. and four Los Angeles premieres, and Thom 
Andersen’s Juke is its local premiere.

For more event information: www.lafilmforum.org <http://www.lafilmforum.org> , 
or 323-377-7238            
 
Tickets: $10 general, $6 students/seniors; free for Filmforum members.  
Available by credit card in advance from Brown Paper Tickets at 
http://bpt.me/2005522 or at the door.
 
Screening:
Midcentury 
(William E. Jones, 2012, video, color, sound, 30:00) *U.S. premiere
            Midcentury is a compilation originally commissioned for the 53rd 
Venice Biennale (2009), reworked once for the 57th Oberhausen Film Festival 
(2011), then again for an exhibition at White Cube in London (2012). Its form 
mimics that of a network’s broadcast day, condensed to a half hour. Although 
Midcentury contains no first person narration, it can be considered an 
autobiography of sorts—the work of a hyperactive child who grew up in an 
industrial wasteland during the Cold War and watched far too much television.
 
Juke: Passages from the Films of Spencer Williams
(Thom Andersen, 2015, 29 min.) *Los Angeles premiere!
             “During the 1940s, Spencer Williams directed nine race films for 
Sack Entertainment in central Texas, and he acted in eight of these films. Six 
of these films exist today.
             “In Juke, I attempt to reclaim his work, to demonstrate its 
originality and beauty as well as its documentary value. Williams returns 
always to the same theme: the struggle between the sacred and the profane, the 
church and the juke joint, gospel and blues. He portrays both with equal 
conviction. The church always prevails, but he gives the devil his due. That’s 
what makes The Blood of Jesus a masterpiece: it takes a miracle to bring her 
back from the allure of the city and its night clubs. 
            “The drama in his other films is more banal, but I began to notice 
a remarkable documentary record of black life in the 1940s in these films. 
There are the nightclub scenes, of course, but there is also a precious 
recording of residential spaces, from the shack in The Blood of Jesus to the 
comfortable middle class home in Juke Joint.
           “I bring out these documentary qualities by looping shots of empty 
interiors and showing actions freed from the plot. I am not trying to make some 
new meaning from these films; I am striving to bring out the meanings that are 
there but obscured by the plot lines: the dignity of black life and the 
creation of a dynamic culture in the segregated society of 1940s Texas.  I 
regard my movie as a kin to Walker Evans’ photographs of sharecroppers’ homes 
in the 1930s and George Orwell’s essays on English working class interiors.
            “Juke was commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art to open its film 
series “A Road Three Hundred Years Long: Cinema and the Great Migration,” 
running in conjunction with a show on Jacob Lawrence’s “Great Migration” 
paintings.” --Thom Andersen

Shoot Don’t Shoot 
(William E. Jones, 2012, video, color, sound, 4:30) *Los Angeles premiere
            Shoot Don’t Shoot adapts a 1970s law enforcement instructional film 
that trains officers to decide by instinct whether or not to fire their guns. 
The suspect in this sequence fits the following description: “a black man 
wearing a pinkish shirt and yellow pants.”

Bay of Pigs 
(William E. Jones, 2012, video, black and white, sound, 3:55) *Los Angeles 
premiere
            Bay of Pigs makes use of a “captured” film from the CIA Film 
Library, Girón, a production of El Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria 
Cinematographicos documenting the aerial bombardment of la Batalla de la Playa 
Girón, or as it is known in the United States, the Bay of Pigs Invasion. The 
soundtrack comes from a numbers station called “Atención” after the first word 
announcing the shortwave radio broadcast. All governments have denied the 
existence of numbers stations, as well as their purpose, espionage. An FBI 
arrest in 1998 of suspects involved in broadcasting coded messages from Florida 
to Cuba led to the only public acknowledgment of this phenomenon.

Actual TV Picture 
(William E. Jones, 2013, video, color, sound, 7:09) *Los Angeles premiere
            Actual T. V. Picture juxtaposes footage of a jungle in Viet Nam 
being bombed by an American war plane with a late-1960s television commercial 
showing recent advancements in miniature transistors. This technology made 
possible improvements in consumer goods like television sets, but its origin 
was in military weaponry, as the advertisement shows. The color of the original 
films has not been altered. Images of the former material are predominantly 
green; the latter, faded to red, as virtually all Eastmancolor film stock 
manufactured in the 1960s and 70s has or will. The soundtrack comes from 
shortwave radio broadcasts that the government of Viet Nam interrupted with 
harsh, discordant frequencies. They have been carefully edited in an elaborate 
mix that sounds a bit like techno music. The film was finished on the 40th 
anniversary of the Paris Peace Accords, the treaty that officially ended the 
United States’s direct military
 involvement in the Viet Nam War.

Model Workers 
(William E. Jones, 2014, high definition video, color, silent, 12:16) *Los 
Angeles premiere
            Model Workers presents a collection of paper money bearing images 
of workers. Intricately engraved details are arranged in chronological order; 
full views of the banknotes are in reverse chronological order, ending at the 
beginning: Mexico, 1914. The montage includes colonies and the independent 
countries they became, as well as former and present socialist states. Workers 
from Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe are represented. Only the world’s 
biggest capitalist powers—United States, Japan, United Kingdom, and the 
recently unified Eurozone—are missing. They do not acknowledge the source of 
their wealth on their currency.

William E. Jones is an artist and filmmaker born in Canton, Ohio. His works 
include Massillon (1991) and Finished (1997), The Fall of Communism as Seen in 
Gay Pornography (1998), Is It Really So Strange? (2004), and many other films 
and videos that have been shown internationally. In recent years he has turned 
to writing; his books include “Killed”: Rejected Images of the Farm Security 
Administration (2010), Halsted Plays Himself (2011), Imitation of Christ 
(2013), Flesh and the Cosmos (2014), and the forthcoming True Homosexual 
Experiences: Boyd McDonald and Straight to Hell. He lives in Los Angeles. 
http://www.williamejones.com/

Thom Andersen has lived in Los Angeles for most of his life. In the 1960s, he 
made short films, including Melting (1965), Olivia’s Place (1966), and ---  
------- (1967, with Malcolm Brodwick).  In 1974 he completed Eadweard 
Muybridge, Zoopraxographer, an hour-long documentary film about Muybridge’s 
photographic work. It was restored by the UCLA Film and Television Archive in 
2013.  In 1995, with Noël Burch, he completed Red Hollywood, a critical video 
essay about the film works created by the victims of the Hollywood Blacklist. 
Their work on the history of the Blacklist also produced a book, Les 
Communistes de Hollywood: Autre chose que des martyrs, published in 1994.
            In 2003 he completed Los Angeles Plays Itself, a three hour-long 
movie about the representation of Los Angeles in movies.  It was voted one of 
the 50 best documentaries ever made in a Sight&Sound critics’ poll.  In 2010, 
he completed Get Out of the Car, a short 16mm portrait of Los Angeles.  In 
2012, he directed Reconversão, an HD video about the work of Portuguese 
architect Eduard Souto Moura, the winner of Pritzker Prize in 2011. He has 
taught at the California Institute of the Arts since 1987.  He screened his 
latest feature film, The Thoughts That Once They Had, at Filmforum in April 
2015.
---------------
This program is supported by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors 
through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission; the Department of Cultural 
Affairs, City of Los Angeles; Bloomberg Philanthropies; and the Mike Kelley 
Foundation for the Arts. Additional support generously provided by American 
Cinematheque. We also depend on our members, ticket buyers, and individual 
donors.
 
Los Angeles Filmforum is the city's longest-running organization screening 
experimental and avant-garde film and video art, documentaries, and 
experimental animation.  2015 is our 40th year.

Coming Soon to Los Angeles Filmforum:
July 26 - Reclamation Works: New and recent films by William E. Jones and Thom 
Andersen
Aug 2 - The Royal Road, by Jenni Olson
Aug 15 - Mush to the Movies: ESKIMO (1933) (at the Velaslavasay Panorama) 

 
Memberships available, $70 single, $115 dual, or $50 single student
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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