Programme Section:
Short Competition ... (11/15)
https://online.watchandknow.cz/collecti ... on-afo-56/
No0
SOLASTALGIA (Eline Kersten, 2020) 19m ... watched during JIDFF2020
We are attached to the place where we spend a greater part of our lives as it is attached to us. We can perceive its changes over time and see the marks that people leave. The feeling we have for such a place is called solastalgia. A long drone shot with a thematic voice-over serves as a perfect means to convey such marks and feelings.
ickykino tweeovalis wrote: ↑Sat Oct 24, 2020 10:06 pm
25/10
SOLASTALGIA (Eline Kersten, 2020)
Nostalgia refers to the feeling one has of a place they left behind. Solastalgia, on the other hand, refers to the homesickness one has when they are still at home.
ickykino tweeovalis wrote: ↑Wed Oct 28, 2020 7:40 pm
When i watched the film i was thinking that the place could be truly worthy of a visit (once the industry will be gone and nature will start taking the area back). Devastation is sometimes so enchanting. Sometimes, the devastation is very close to land art.
Landmark staircase complete
A viewing platform now soars 40 meters above the limestone quarry in Maastricht (NL). And a new staircase down the quarry face that focuses on restoring a culturally significant long-distance foothpath from Maastricht (NL) to Liège (B).
No12
LUMINOUS VARIATIONS IN THE CITY SKIES (Giuseppe Spina, 2019) 7m
The Bologna night sky gives viewers the opportunity to observe a dance of celestial bodies. Giuseppe Spina’s silent film tours records of stellar phenomena observed in Bologna from the perspective of historical telescopes.
Guido Horn d'Arturo...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guido_Horn_d%27Arturo
No13
HYSTERICAL GIRL (Kate Novack, 2020) 13m
Sigmund Freud's sole case study of a female patient is re-examined from a modern feminist perspective.
There is only one major study of Sigmund Freud dedicated to a female patient, yet it resonates with society to this day. Dora, diagnosis: hysteria. What is her version of the story on which the medical record is based, and what is actually meant by hysteria?
No17
LICHEN (Lisa Jackson, 2019)
No18
A DEMONSTRATION (Sasha Litvintseva, Beny Wagner, 2020)
“A Demonstration” is a monster film with no monsters. Inspired by the existence of taxonomies of monsters at the heart of Early Modern European science, the film explores and reinterprets a way of seeing the natural world that is almost impossible to imagine from today’s vantage point. Early Modern naturalists were guided by a logic in which scientific truths were discovered through visual analogy. The word ‘monster’ comes from the latin ‘monstrare’, meaning to show, to reveal, to demonstrate. “A Demonstration” picks up on these themes in a poetic exploration of the boundaries of sight and the metamorphosis of form.
A Demonstration is a poetic exploration of the boundaries of sight and the metamorphosis of form. The history of Western science offers a story of how these boundaries have been negotiated, and the film’s point of departure is a uniquely ambiguous chapter in this history. Late Renaissance attempts to classify the natural world introduced taxonomies of monsters alongside more prosaic taxonomies of animals, plants and minerals. The fantastical collaging of human and nonhuman forms, understood as monstrous deviations from the norm, captivated the minds of Renaissance naturalists, who took these to be just as real as the chickens they catalogued elsewhere. One of the many ways one can read the taxonomies of monsters is through a reconfiguration of the boundaries of sight. The word ‘monster’ comes from the latin ‘monstrare’, meaning to demonstrate, reveal or show. The monsters that proliferate in the early foundations of Western science reveal a fundamental ambiguity in the quest for knowledge of the natural world. They demonstrate a tense negotiation of what was considered to be real, what would be perceived as ‘normal’, the distinction between human and nonhuman and the very meaning of life. While the terms have changed dramatically, many of these questions inform our always fragmented understanding of the world today.
No19
THE CLOUD HOUSE (Elias Heuninck, 2019)
Year 1894. An incident at the Ben Nevis observatory led to the creation of the first particle detector. A hypnotizing reconstruction interprets pure statistical data into a visual form.
Experiments at the Large Hadron Collider produce no images, as the research is based on statistical data. However, as its innermost sensor is actually similar to the construction of a camera, Heuninck tried interpreting the data as images. On his soundtrack he reconstructs an incident at an observatory from 1894.
No20
RECODING ART (Bruno Moreschi, Gabriel Pereira, 2019)
Glitches, errors, ideologies and unexpected readings by AIs working in a museum of contemporary art.
Can machines extend our understanding of what is (and perhaps what is not) art? An ambient stroll through a gallery accompanied by Lisa, computerized guide, grants an opportunity to see artificial objects not only through the eyes of artificial intelligence, but also through the optics of so-called Mechanical Turks, a work force somewhere between humans and machines.
No21
NIGHT FAIR (Cynthia Naggar, Gueze, 2020)
Asleep or awake? An experimental journey through REM and non-REM brain activity sleep phases.
Unique alliance of art and science, the experimental film Night Fair focuses on brain activity through the different cycles of a night's sleep. Through voice mail, media artist Cynthia Naggar and sound designer Gueze collected the dreams of citizens. These are ingeniously combined with graphic and sound representations generated by algorithms from anonymous medical data.
https://youtu.be/DH9AtdshoMQ
No22
THE GREAT CALCULUS – INFINITE LIMITS (Elisabetta Zucchi, 2020)
No23
UNDER CONTROL (Ville Koskinen, 2021)
Insects are tormenting the botanical garden. The gardeners need to use harsher and harsher methods to control the situation. The more they try to rid themselves of these intruders, the worse the problem becomes.
The botanical garden as a little world of its own. Although artificially grown under the watchful eye of the bipeds, it leads its own rich life. What happens if an intruder gets in? Where is the line between human aid and absolute dictatorship?
No24
LIFESPAN (Juliette Martineau, 2020)
We all age, but is it truly inevitable? Findings in a wide range of scientific disciplines bring new perspectives to human longevity.