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Menu screen for the PoetryFilm event at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

Menu screen for the PoetryFilm event at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

Ben Vautier’s “Trou Portatif” from the Sackner Archive of Visual and Concrete Poetry

Many thanks to Ruth and Marvin Sackner for the kind invitation to view their private collection in Miami.

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Postcard for the London PoetryFilm Night III, July 2005

Postcard for the London PoetryFilm Night III, July 2005

The event took place at the Genesis Cinema in London.

PoetryFilm Archive: “Proem” by Suzie Hanna – first screened at PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

 

PROEM

Directed by Suzie Hanna © Dec 2013

 

Animation by Suzie Hanna

Sound Design by Tom Simmons

Poem by Harold Hart Crane (1930)

Voice by Tennessee Williams (1960)

(Permission for use given by HarperCollins)

 

This short film illustrates and interprets Hart Crane’s ‘Proem To Brooklyn Bridge’ (1930) using a direct animated stencil technique reflecting graphic styles of the period, the evocative voice of Tennessee Williams (a great admirer of Hart Crane’s work) and original sound design. This is an interdisciplinary contribution to research into cultural representations of literature and literary figures through animation and sound design, underpinned by study of Hart Crane’s creative process and his use of metaphor.

This Poetry Animation is a representation of Hart Crane’s iconic ‘Proem’ from his epic work ‘The Bridge’. Suzie Hanna animated the film using hand cut stencils imitating some graphic aspects of contemporaneous 1920s New York artists who were in Hart Crane’s coterie, such as Joseph Stella and Marsden Hartley. She also referenced Vorticism to capture vertiginous aspects of the verse. The voice of Tennessee Williams, who was an ardent admirer of Crane, is taken from a 1960 recording. Tom Simmons has built this into a resonant dramatic soundscape which interprets the materiality of the bridge, the surrounding land and waterscape and the ‘prayerful’ qualities of the Proem. He embeds sonic references to Hart Crane’s ‘shamanic process’ in which the poet played records on his Victrola, including Ravel’s ‘Bolero’, loudly and repeatedly, whilst drinking heavily and typing phrases in manic bursts. The film is part of ongoing research into representation of poetic metaphor, between Sally Bayley, Tom Simmons and Suzie Hanna: their recent article ‘Thinking Metaphorically and Allegorically: A Conversation between the fields of Poetry, Animation and Sound’ was published in Autumn 2013 in the Journal of American Studies. A further installment has been commissioned for publication in Spring 2014.

 

Director’s biography and filmography

Professor Suzie Hanna teaches at Norwich University of the Arts. She is an animator working with mixed media across analogue and digital interfaces, who collaborates with other academics and artists, and whose research interests include animation, poetry, puppetry and sound design. She has made numerous short films all of which have been commissioned, selected for international festival screenings, TV broadcast or exhibited in curated shows. She contributes to journals, books and conferences, and has led several innovative projects including animated online international student collaborations and digital exhibitions of art and poetry on Europe’s largest public HiDef screen.

Recent animations include a book trailer ‘Spells’ for American poet Annie Finch, ‘Letter to the World’, commissioned by the Emily Dickinson International Society, animated theatrical scenery for a production of The Tinderbox, an animated Madonna figure for a 30 foot high projection commissioned by Norwich Cathedral, ‘The Girl who would be God’ commissioned for Sylvia Plath Conference at Oxford University and ‘Man-Moth Merz’ for screening at poet Elisabeth Bishop centenary celebrations in Nova Scotia.

www.suziehanna.com

The ‘Proem’ film is part of ongoing research into representation of poetic metaphor, between Sally Bayley, Tom Simmons and Suzie Hanna: their recent article ‘Thinking Metaphorically and Allegorically: A Conversation between the fields of Poetry, Animation and Sound’ was published in Autumn 2013 in the Journal of American Studies. A further instalment has been commissioned for publication in Spring 2014.

 

Poet’s biography

Harold Hart Crane was a Modernist American poet, most famous for his epic work ‘The Bridge’. He was born in 1899, and after his tragic early suicide in 1932 he became recognised as a legendary figure in American poetry. He indulged in frequent bouts of serious alcohol abuse and risked casual sex with sailors, but despite suffering from low self-esteem, he wrote optimistic poetry. He was a follower of Whitman’s American Romanticism, and was concerned with themes of redemption and damnation. He was in a coterie of active, and later influential, artists and writers in 1920s New York, and the archive of his considerable correspondence is held at Columbia University.

PoetryFilm Archive: film still from “Just Midnight” by Susanne Wiegner – screened at PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

The film won the Festival Prize “La parola immaginata” at Trevigliopoesia in Bergamo, Italy (2011).

http://www.susannewiegner.de

PoetryFilm Archive: film still from “Just Midnight” by Susanne Wiegner – screened at PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

The film won the Festival Prize “La parola immaginata” at Trevigliopoesia in Bergamo, Italy (2011).

http://www.susannewiegner.de

PoetryFilm Archive: film still from “Just Midnight” by Susanne Wiegner – screened at PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

The film won the Festival Prize “La parola immaginata” at Trevigliopoesia in Bergamo, Italy (2011).

http://www.susannewiegner.de

“The new is not a fashion, it is a value” – Roland Barthes

A wall in Birmingham.

PoetryFilm Archive: film still from “You Be Mother” by Sarah Pucill – screened at PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle in June 2014

Extreme Bookshopping

Extreme Bookshopping

A picture of a “health-and-safety” bookshop discovered in Preston in September 2013.

Turn Me On: Kinetic Art at Christie’s: Objeto Cinetico C-11

Turn Me On: Kinetic Art at Christie's

Objeto Cinetico C-11 (1966–2004), Abraham Palatnik.

This is a picture from the show which ran from February 24 – April 7, 2014.

Turn Me On: Kinetic Art at Christie’s

Turn Me On: Kinetic Art at Christie's

Turn Me On: European and Latin American Kinetic Art 1948-1979

24 FEBRUARY – 7 APRIL 2014 | LONDON

Christie’s is pleased to present Turn Me On, a private selling exhibition of Kinetic Art from Europe and Latin America. Focusing on motorised Kinetic works created from 1950 to the early 1970s, this exhibition presents works that reflect the new artistic tendencies and visual language explored in the postwar period. Today understood as part of the art historical lexicon, ‘ Kinetic Art’ was simultaneously explored across the globe by several groups concerned with creating art that incorporated motion. These artists redefined art’s traditional parameters by engaging with a wealth of new materials, processes and technology. It is the aim of this exhibition to assess this dialogue with a specific focus on the unique artistic collaborations and exchanges between Latin America and Europe. The resulting range of kinetic artwork is astounding and includes Pol Bury’s early works (which at first appear to be static but are in actuality brimming with movement) and Marina Apollonio’s Dinamica Circolare 9B, 1969 (which uses precise lines and colour variation to provide a flat two-dimensional object with the appearance of depth). These exhibited works achieve movement either spatially (through three-dimensional movement), non-spatially (using cinematic film, light, or color) or virtually (with optical illusion).

In charting Kinetic Art from its beginnings in post-war Europe to its role on the international stage, and in assessing for the first time the special dialogue between Latin American Kinetic Art and its European counterparts, we are pleased to re-engage in the dialogue initiated by the important international group of artists presented in this exhibition.

“The Spectacle” by Marcel Marien

Marcel Marien was a member of the Belgian surrealist group and a great friend of Rene Magritte. In 1937, aged 17, Marien brought his broken spectacles to his optician and asked for them to be made into a single spectacle. He called the result “L’introuvable” (The Unfindable). Over the years several opticians imitated it. This one was made by Wouter de Baat and presented to Marien. When he died in 1993, it was given to the English painter Patrick Hughes.

“IKB 192” by Yves Klein, 1962

International Klein Blue

Agenda for the “Vocal Dischords” symposium at the RCA, March 2014

7 March 2014 | 10am – 5pm

Writers, critics, artists and scientists have been invited to explore the moments and conditions when the voice appears to detach itself from the body, seemingly acquiring autonomy.

Speakers include Sophie Scott, professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at University College London, who will discuss her research into the processing of emotional information in the voice; Brian Dillon will offer reflections on Billie Whitelaw’s 1973 performance of Samuel Beckett’s Not I; artist Lawrence Abu Hamdan will reflect on his research into the ways in which forensic speech analysis is used by the state; artist and writer Joe Banks will talk about Rorschach Audio, Illusions of Sound & Electronic Voice Phenomena; philosopher Nina Power will introduce and comment on machinic voices employed in public space today. Musician and writer David Toop will end the day with a presentation/performance.

Shot From The Lip: March 4 – April 27, 2007

Shot From The Lip: the season of events ran from March 4 - April 27, 2007

Shot From The Lip – Brochure

The PoetryFilm event in March 2007 at Saatchi & Saatchi’s Gum Factory was part of the “Shot From the Lip” season of events.

Zata was on the “Shot From the Lip” Committee.

“The cult PoetryFilm Night is the only UK platform for the creative but very much un-mined field of PoetryFilm. The PoetryFilm movement led by Malgorzata Kitowski is forging new cinematic expressions: an innovative cinema of poetry, and a language of PoetryFilm.” – Genesis Cinema, July 2005

 

The quotation is taken from the Genesis Cinema’s marketing collateral leaflet for cinema listings Friday July 22 – Thursday July 28, 2005.

The London PoetryFilm Night III took place on July 25, 2005 at 7pm at the Genesis Cinema in London.

A3 poster for the PoetryFilm event at Tate Britain in October 2007

A3 poster for the PoetryFilm event at Tate Britain in October 2007

“PoetryFilm

Auditorium, 20:30 – 21:30

Introduction by Malgorzata Kitowski, director of PoetryFilm.

Watch a rare selection of experimental, avant-garde films about freedom and dream punctuated by live performance.”

The theme of the event was Freedom and Dream.

 

 

Poetry International Brochure

Poetry International Brochure

Click on the image to view the Southbank Centre’s Poetry International brochure.

PoetryFilm: Sounds of Love is on Saturday 19 July at 7:45pm.

PoetryFilm Blackboard is on Friday 18, Saturday 19 and Sunday 20 July between 12pm and 2pm.

SIGNALS London (1964 – 1966) at England & Co Gallery

SIGNALS London (1964 - 1966) at England & Co Gallery

Signals – which grew directly out of ‘The Centre for Advanced Creative Study’ set up in London in 1964 – was ‘dedicated to the adventures of the modern spirit’. With its exhibitions and events, the opening of a gallery in London’s West End, together with the publication of the influential Signals Newsbulletin, Signals became a centre for experimental international artists, with links formed between the avant-gardes of Latin America, Europe and London.

England & Co are holding a small survey exhibition devoted to Signals – a key London outpost for many of the Latin American artists of the 1960s avant-garde – opening to coincide with the forthcoming exhibition starting in July at the Royal Academy in The Sackler Wing Galleries: Radical Geometry: Modern Art of South America from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection.

Private View: Thursday 26 June 6-8:30pm to coincide with the Fitzrovia Lates programme.

The show runs until July 26, 2014.

PoetryFilm Archive: “You Be Mother” by Sarah Pucill

Sarah Pucill’s films and photographs explore a sense of self, which is transformative and fluid. At the core of her practice is a concern with mortality and the materiality of the filmmaking process. The majority of her films take place within the confinements of domestic space, where the grounded reality of the house itself becomes a portal to a complex and multi layered psychical realm. In her explorations of the animate and inanimate, her work probes a journey between mirror and surface, in which questions of representation are negotiated via the feminine, the queer or the dead.

Poster for “Riflemaker Becomes Indica” featuring “Word Incest” in January 2007

Malgorzata Kitowski participated in a “Word Incest” performance together with fellow poets as part of the Riflemaker Becomes Indica show at the Riflemaker Gallery in January 2007.

“Word Incest” is a poetry/art performance concept devised by Malgorzata Kitowski.

Word Incest, Monday 29 January
Four poets read simultaneously in an evening of cut-ups and word incest. Malgorzata Kitowski, James Byrne, Suzanne Andrade, Paul Taylor. 

* * *

Indica, London’s first conceptual art space, the place where John Lennon and Yoko Ono met, and the hangout for the movers and shakers of mid-1960s London returns to the capital via Riflemaker, the former gun-shop in Soho, on 20 November 2006.

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“The Art of Love” book which accompanied the show at the OXO Gallery in February 2005

The Art of Love 2005

Londonart.co.uk invited visual artists, writers, poets and musicians to submit works on the theme of Love.

The poetry was selected by Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate at the time.

Zata’s poem Eye is featured in the book.

The event took place in the gallery@oxo and Bargehouse in the famous Oxo Tower Wharf.

The exhibition was open for a three week period, from the 10th to the 27th February 2005. During that time the exhibition received over 9000 visitors, and attracted national and international press coverage which included The Times, Time Out, The Guardian Guide and the BBC World Service. The exhibition also established sales with a number of private collectors and art dealers as well as generating private sales.

On the opening evening over 2500 visitors arrived. Jessica Michaels, Natalie Arnold and the Rubber Band performed songs live in the gallery. Poets Joan Michelson, Kirsten Harris and Jennifer Copley read out their poems to a packed-out audience. Rodin’s “The Kiss” sculpture was re-enacted.

Paul Wynter, Managing Director of Londonart.co.uk said, “What a wonderful reaction to love. The atmosphere of the opening night was perfect for the theme of Love. The response was simply phenomenal with the exhibition full to capacity with people enjoying the art, performances and poetry.”

Postcard from the PoetryFilm “Poets on Film” event at The Albany in May 2005

PoetryFilm partnered with Apples and Snakes, Battersea Arts Centre, and with Mark Gwynne Jones from the “PsychicBread” collective.

 

Postcard for the PoetryFilm event about Identity at the Artworkers’ Guild in October 2006

Postcard for the PoetryFilm event at the Artworkers' Guild in October 2006

The event was part of National Poetry Day 2006 and the theme of the event was Identity.

The full programme details are available here.

Postcard for the London PoetryFilm Night II event in February 2005

Postcard for the London PoetryFilm Night II event in February 2005.

The event took place at the Genesis Cinema in London.

The design is a treated film still from Zata Kitowski’s poetry film “Full Stop” filmed in North Greenwich.

“Malgorzata Kitowski’s regular London screenings have become something of a cult attraction to independent film-buffs and poetry-fans alike. The work stretches from art house to documentary, calling at all points in between.” – Battersea Arts Centre, May 2005

Copy from a postcard produced by Battersea Arts Centre and Apples and Snakes to promote the “Poets On Film” event at The Albany on Friday May 6, 2005.

 

The view from Laugharne

The view from Laugharne

Programme: PoetryFilm at Laugharne Castle, June 2014

Below are the details of the full PoetryFilm programme presented at Laugharne Castle on June 7 and June 8:

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