Thursday, May 1, 2008

Chantal Akerman At MIT


Above: Stephen Hepworth, Curator, George Bolster, Artist, Bill Arning , Curator, Me. I-phone photo by Shelbourne Thurber

I came up to Boston to attend the opening of a show devoted to Filmaker Chantal Akerman, at the MIT List Visual Arts Center. Akerman has been making films since the 60's and , starting in 1993, has been reimagining her films as installation pieces and they are incredible!

Heres the press release for the Film D'est....check it out.

FROM THE EAST retraces a journey from the end of summer to deepest winter, from East Germany, across Poland and the Baltics, to Moscow. It is a voyage Chantal Akerman wanted to make shortly after the collapse of the Soviet bloc "before it was too late," reconstructing her impressions in the manner of a documentary on the border of fiction.

By filming "everything that touched me," Akerman sifts through and fixes upon sounds and images as she follows the thread of this subjective crossing. Without dialogue or commentary, FROM THE EAST is a cinematographic elegy.



"Her camera shows flat landscapes and ribbons of city streets, modulated by the change of seasons, by the succession of day and night. The East is a space of muffled sounds, traversed by the footsteps of passers-by, sporadically pieced by music, laughter and strange interjections. It is an epidermal space: the camera slides over appearances ('like a caress', says Akerman)... The East, no longer monolithically impersonal, is shown as both familiar and completely strange. This is a haunting and, quite literally, extraordinary film."—Francette Pacteau, San Francisco Film Festival

"Taking her relentless cameras from East Germany to Russia, Akerman delivers an impressionistic report from the new front. Displaying her distinctive visual style, influenced by structuralism and minimalism, her journal unfolds as a procession of postcards ...Akerman captures the essence, if not the historical particulars, of a region on the move."—Emanuel Levy, Variety

"A subdued, atmospheric epic of contemporary Eastern Europe."—Frances Richard, Artforum

"One of Akerman's best films."—Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader

"If this isn't a masterpiece, tear the word from your dictionary."—Stuart Klawans, The Nation

Akerman spoke before the opening and was fascinating.

At the post opening dinner I sat next to Jerry Friedman, the guy who won the Nobel prize for proving the existence of quarks. He liked my art and told me that I was "mostly made up of empty space", I think he meant that in a good way.....

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