PoetryFilm in Cork (documentation)
Photographed in Cork in October 2015. Many thanks to the Festival team for the invitation.

Oct 20
Photographed in Cork in October 2015. Many thanks to the Festival team for the invitation.

Happy National Poetry Day 2015!
To mark the occasion of National Poetry Day today (8 October 2015), I will be presenting a PoetryFilm lecture and screening at Millfield in Somerset.

Oct 6
I will be presenting a curated PoetryFilm screening from The PoetryFilm Archive at the O Bheal Indie Cork International Film Festival on Sunday 11 October at 4pm in the Smurfit Theatre, Firkin Crane, Cork (Ireland).

I will be presenting a PoetryFilm screening at the Art Language Location art festival in Cambridge on Saturday 17 October at 1pm in the cinema.
*Art Language Location (ALL) is an art festival taking place from 15 October – 1 November 2015 in locations throughout Cambridge, featuring innovative and experimental contemporary artists from across the UK and beyond who use text in their work.

Many thanks to BBC Radio 3 for coming to PoetryFilm Equinox at The Groucho Club, and for interviewing me about the PoetryFilm project.


Below is documentation from the PoetryFilm Equinox event at The Groucho Club on Sunday 4 October 2015, featuring colourful sofa-armchairs.
Many thanks to BBC Radio 3 for covering the event.


A screening of short poetry films curated by British artist Zata Banks.
To mark the autumn equinox, Zata Banks will introduce a curated selection of film artworks, chosen for their alignment with poetry, with poetic structures, with poetic experiences, and with the visual, verbal and aural languages of poetry in various forms.
Sep 13

I am delighted to be on the International Jury for the CYCLOP International Videopoetry Festival in Kiev, Ukraine. Further details are below.
*The 5th CYCLOP International Videopoetry Festival will take place on 20 – 22 November 2015 in Ukraine (Kyiv). The festival programme features video poetry-related lectures, workshops, round tables, discussions, presentations of international contests and festivals, as well as a demonstration of the best examples of Ukrainian and world videopoetry, a competitive programme, an awards ceremony and other related projects.
“Nova is about new music, chronicling what’s radical and what’s conservative, who’s established and who’s in the avant-garde.”
I am delighted to hear that Full Stop was played on the RTE Lyric FM’s “Nova” radio programme.
Many thanks to Bernard at Nova.
Click here to listen to the programme. Full Stop is played about 37 minutes in. The full programme schedule is below.
From 1964 through around 1969, artist Stan VanDerBeek worked with computer scientist Ken Knowlton on a series of films:
PoemField No. 1 (1965)
PoemField No. 2 (1966) (this one, with a free jazz soundtrack by Paul Motian)
PoemField No. 3 (1967)
PoemField No. 4 (no date)
PoemField No. 5 (1967)
PoemField No. 6 (no date)
PoemField No. 7 (1971)
PoemField No. 8 (no date)
Collido-Oscope (1966) (VanDerBeek, Knowlton and Bosche)
Man and His World, 1967 (shown at Expo ’67)
Each film was constructed using Knowlton’s BEFLIX computer language, which was based on FORTRAN. The films were programmed on a IBM 7094 computer. The films were created in black and white, with colour added later by Brown and Olvey. This particular version is taken from a film with some colour decay.
VanDerBeek passed away in 1984. He is also part of the film Incredible Machine, made in 1968. VanDerBeek was part of a unique program at Bell Labs that allowed artists to work with computer scientists in order to explore and advance the technology in the fields of computer graphics and music. The program was given tacit approval by department head John Robinson Pierce, yet was not a formal arrangement within the Labs.
Footage Courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ

PoetryFilm Equinox
The Groucho Club
Sunday 4 October, 3pm and 6pm
As part of the BFI LOVE season, PoetryFilm will present PoetryFilm Paradox, a curated selection of short film artworks exploring the theme of Love.
Further details will be announced shortly.

*This autumn the BFI will rekindle the nation’s passion for film and television’s most enduring love stories with a major UK-wide season dedicated to LOVE, running from late October to the end of December 2015. A special Summer Love Weekend at the British Museum over the August Bank Holiday (27-29 August) will act as a curtain raiser for the main project.
BFI LOVE will encompass three key themes – The Power of Love, Fools for Love and Fatal Attractions incorporating the heartbreak and longing of epic love stories like Brief Encounter (1945) and My Beautiful Laundrette (1985), cherished and light-hearted romcom classics like When Harry Met Sally (1989) and the darkest tales of obsession, betrayal and danger including True Romance (1993). There will be rereleases of Brief Encounter (6 November), When Harry Met Sally (11 December) and True Romance (20 November) by Park Circus during the season. Alongside a major film and TV programme at BFI Southbank, the BFI will ensure that audiences all over the UK can find that loving feeling via UK-wide theatrical rereleases, DVDs, a collection on BFI Player and bespoke film screenings and experiences up and down the country, presented in partnership with the BFI Film Audience Network (BFI FAN).
Details of the full programme for BFI LOVE, including screenings, events, film and DVD releases, special guests and more, will be revealed on Tuesday 15 September at BFI Southbank.
*copy taken from the BFI website.
Thanks to the c.100 guests who attended PoetryFilm Parallax at The ICA on Sunday 16 August 2015.
Documentation of the event is below.
“Feast your eyes on a curated selection of short film artworks” – Film London


“Great afternoon @poetryfilmorg @ICALondon great curation wonderful films”
“Parallax- a magical & stimulating @poetryfilmorg event @ICALondon Loved #spiritofplace #breathing #eye #talkingskull #fasterthanbirds”
“PARALLAX @poetryfilmorg Great selection by Zata Banks of short films @ICALondon today Next one at @GrouchoClubSoho“

“‘Everything Makes Love with the Silence’ an exquisite fusion of film image and wonderful poetry. ‘It Started with a Murder’ and ‘The Lost Reels’ – two film poems that make art from extreme personal events. Thank you for organising. I’ll be back!”
“‘Spirit of Place’ – a wonderful beginning to an inspirational event. ‘Eye’ made me witness the most intricate movements of vision i had not previously seen.”
“PoetryFilm was absolutely amazing today. Was one of the best collections of films and artists impressions. Great work and long may it continue!”
“Inspiring way to spend a Sunday afternoon. Hail Zata!”
“Inspiring. Welcoming. Well curated. Thank you!”

“Special afternoon watching ‘Barattolo di Sale’ on a big screen at my favourite London film venue. A memory of a truly special afternoon. Thank you Zata Banks of PoetryFilm for this great occasion!”
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Parallax is the apparent displacement, or difference in the apparent position, of a visual object, when viewed along different lines of sight. In his book Transcritique, the Japanese philosopher Kojin Karatani uses the word ‘parallax’ to describe Kant’s shifting between contradictory perspectives. Kant’s “Antinomies of Reason” are contradictory propositions, which seem valid from their own perspectives, but which cannot be simultaneously true. Kant argues alternately from one perspective, then from the other, and Karatani describes Kant’s approach as establishing a parallax between philosophical positions. Karatani asserts that parallax does not equate with negativity, but it does not negate negativity either. The basis of parallax is the positivity of both positions.
Slavoj Žižek argues that in Karatani’s concept of the parallax view, the observed difference is not simply subjective, but that the viewer’s change in perspective reflects an ontological shift in the object itself; “the subject’s gaze is always-already inscribed into the perceived object itself, in the guise of its ‘blind spot’, that which is ‘in the object more than the object itself’, the point from which the object itself returns the gaze” (Žižek, The Parallax View, 2006). “Sure, the picture is in my eye, but me, I am also in the picture” (Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, 1979).
For the PoetryFilm Parallax screening at The ICA on 16 August 2015, Zata Banks will introduce a curated selection of short film artworks, chosen for their alignment with poetic structures and experiences, and with the visual, verbal and aural languages of poetry in various forms.
PoetryFilm is the influential research art project founded by British artist Zata Banks in 2002, to explore and exhibit experimental text / image / sound material. Since 2002, Zata Banks has presented over 70 PoetryFilm events at venues including Tate Britain, The ICA, CCCB Barcelona, O Miami, The Groucho Club, Cannes Film Festival, The Royal College of Art, FACT Liverpool, Mengi Reykjavik and Curzon Cinemas. Zata has judged poetry film prizes for the Southbank Centre in London, Zebra Festival in Berlin, and for the American journal Carbon Culture Review. PoetryFilm is supported by Arts Council England, and is a member of Film Hub London and part of the BFI Audience Network. The PoetryFilm Archive, which at present contains over 1,000 artworks, welcomes submissions all year round.
info@poetryfilm.org + www.poetryfilm.org
*Image: Eye by Guy Sherwin, courtesy of the artist
Please note the newsletter sent out by Film London this morning offering a free pair of tickets to PoetryFilm Parallax as a competition prize features THE WRONG DATE.
PoetryFilm Parallax is on Sunday 16 August at 4pm at The ICA Cinema.
Film London says: “We should have double checked this though so I do apologise.”
Please see below for details of how to enter the competition.

October 2015
November 2015
December 2015
Jun 19
PoetryFilm Penzance
Saturday 11 July 2015, 5pm
Redwing Gallery
Penzance Literary Festival
Cornwall, UK
A screening of poetry films curated and presented by Zata Banks.

PoetryFilm is the influential research art project founded by British artist Zata Banks in 2002, celebrating poetry films and other experimental text/image/sound material.
Below are the films (taken from The PoetryFilm Archive) shown at the PoetryFilm screening event at the “sound acts” festival in Athens, Greece, in April 2015.
PoetryFilm Reykjavik
Thursday 16 July 2015, 9pm
Mengi
creative + experimental + music + art
Iceland
A screening of poetry films and live performances curated and presented by Zata Banks.


May 15
The poem film Full Stop by Zata Banks has been selected for the Cannes Film Festival, 13-24 May 2015.

Five years a haven for moving-image artists and their work in the Scottish Borders, the Alchemy Film & Moving Image Festival this year mounted installations and performances everywhere from a textile mill to a storage warehouse and a converted business centre.
In the Scottish Borders, amongst the rolling countryside of the valley of the Teviot, equidistant from Edinburgh and Newcastle upon Tyne, the town of Hawick (pronounced Hoick) plays host to the annual Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival, now in its fifth year. Originally a collaboration between Alchemy Film & Arts, Heart of Hawick and Creative Arts Business Network (CABN), the festival brings local and international experimental film and artists’ movies together in the town’s main cinema hub as well as at an assortment of venues and spaces beyond.
16-19 April 2015, Hawick, UK. Article by 27 April 2015
The PoetryFilm “Transmutations” audience
The PoetryFilm “Transmutations” Q&A with Richard Bailey, Zata Banks, Sean Martin and Richard Ashrowan
PoetryFilm Parallax
The ICA Cinema, London
Sunday 16 August 2015
Submissions are now being considered for PoetryFilm Parallax.
I enjoyed judging the Apples & Snakes poetry film competition entries last week. Congratulations to the winners:
Best Film: Ars Moriendi by Chris Stewart
Best First Film: There Is Something of You in Me by Lauren Vevers
Looking forward to the Alchemy Film & Moving Image Festival 2015, featuring the Transmutations poetry film programme co-curated by PoetryFilm and Alchemy.

I was delighted to give a paper called “The PoetryFilm Archive 2002-2015” at the AHRC’s Pararchive conference at The University of Leeds last week. It was a very interesting two days, including a fascinating discussion about heutagogy – many thanks to the Pararchive team for the invitation. Some tweets from the day are below, and a photograph of the main lecture theatre (featuring wifi-enabled chairs) is above.
I am delighted to have been invited to judge the Carbon Culture Review‘s poetry film competition, deadline extended to April 2016.
Carbon Culture is the new American literary journal celebrating the intersection of technology + literature + art.

Press release from CCR:
“We want to integrate film and literary culture. Carbon Culture will award a $1,000 prize for the best poetry film using the complete text of John Gosslee’s poem “Portrait of an Inner Life.” Zata Banks, director of PoetryFilm, will pick the grand prize winner and finalists. The winning entry will receive $1,000. The top five entries will receive high-profile placements across a number of networks, and a one page ad alongside honorable mentions in our newsstand, print, and device editions. All entries are considered for sponsored entry to our list of film festivals and poetry film festivals.”
Deadline for submissions is April 2016.
Prize Announcements will be made in July 2016.