MondaysOctober 11, 2008THIS WEEKEND (October 11-13): Signs of Change Weekend of Screenings and DiscussionSigns of Change Weekend of Screenings and Discussion co-sponsored by 16beaver group 1. ABOUT _________________________________________________
The Signs of Change Weekend of Screenings and Discussion brings together films and videos from the past 40 years that raise questions about what it means to participate in both cultural production and political action. The goal of the weekend is to provide a forum for sustained discussion of political documentary, its history, its uses, its aesthetics and politics. Taking as its focus the relation between moving images and social movements, we hope this weekend will prompt participants to think about the form and function of documentary images used in conjunction with left-wing movement building. Unlike a festival, each session is organized with equal emphasis on the screening and the analysis. We have invited a number of media-makers, scholars, and activists to engage with the issues and questions that the various programs raise in an effort to facilitate a discussion that will build over the course of this three day event. In addition, we hope all that all who are interested in the social use and impact of film and video and we hope that all who can will join us for films, food and excellent conversation. (For a more detailed description, see below). Curated and organized by Dara Greenwald with Benj Gerdes and Paige Sarlin from 16beaver group. Admission to the Saturday screening of Narita The Peasants Struggle is $5. For full schedule and details: 2. WHERE SATURDAY, Oct 11th SUNDAY, October 12th 3. SCHEDULE OUTLINE SATURDAY, Oct 11th at Exit Art 4:00 Revolutionary Worker's Struggles on Film (Featuring: Finally Got the News) SUNDAY OCTOBER 12 at 16beaver 12-1:00 Coffee and Bagels MONDAY OCTOBER 13 at 16beaver 12-1:00 Coffee and Bagel Brunch 4. ABOUT EACH SESSION: A. Revolutionary Worker's Struggles on Film B. Peasants Struggles in Japan C. Movement Media: Radical Form/Radical Politics: D. Speaking Out Against War E. Artists & Action: Documents of Creative Resistance F. Dispatches from The Counter-Globalization Movement 5. ABOUT SATURDAY'S FILMS Finally Got the News McStrike-Paris, 4:05 min, 2005, Victor Muh, Precarity DVD -Magazine Made In collaboration with: P2Pfightsharing Crew www.fightsharing.net, Greenpepper Project, Amsterdam wwww.greenpeppermagazine.org, and Candida TV, Roma www.candidatv.tv Narita: Peasants of the Second Fortress / Sanrizuka: Dainitoride No Hitobito "In Japan, guerilla film activity reached high intensity during the war (Vietnam).The use made of Japan as a conduit for Vietnam war supplies generated strong anti-government feelings and many 'protest films.'...It now saw such powerful films as the Sanrizuka series- three feature length films. The heavy air traffic through Japan-swollen by the war-hap prompted a 1966 decision to build a new international airport for Tokyo.The area chosen, Sanrizuka, was occupied by farmers who were determined to block seizures of their lands. For four years, the film maker Shinsuke Ogawa documented their struggle, which reached its climax in the third film, The Peasants of the Second Fortress. Here we see resistance turning into a pitched battle with riot police as farm women chain themselves to impoverished stockades, and students join the struggle for anti-government, anti-war motives. Ogawa, patiently recording the growth of resistance...achieved an extraordinary social document, and one of the most potent of protest films." - Erik Barnouw, Documentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film, (Oxford University Press, 1974) Ogawa Productions was a Japanese filmmaking collective that was founded in the 1960’s, It was directed by Ogawa Shinsuke. After making films about the student movement, the collective moved to Sanrizuka to cover the struggle against the building of the Narita Airport. While there, they made eight films covering the struggle. Screening co-sponsored by Asian/Pacific/American Institute and Tisch Department of Photography & Imaging at NYU in conjunction with The Uses of 1968: Legacies of Art and Activism Symposium and 1968: Then and Now Exhibition. For full schedule and detailed film descriptions: 6. DETAILS FOR DINNER (BYOB) We will be providing coffee, tea, bagels, etc. during the day. In addition, we will make dinner on Sunday and Monday nights (Chili on Sunday, Pasta on Monday). Please BYOB for the dinners (and whatever you are willing to share). 7. EXTENDED DESCRIPTION This weekend coincides with the exhibition Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now at Exit Art and covers film and video works from the same time period. We plan to screen projects by artists and activists made with a number of intentions: tools for organizing, documents of political actions, commentaries, and critiques. These projects come from disparate moments and geographic locations, and reflect work from within or alongside many movements: from national liberation and labor struggles to identity politics, to movements for racial justice and global economic justice. The range of aesthetic strategies and distribution methods taken up by these works indicate a similarly broad set of approaches to reaching and interacting with audiences. In juxtaposing these films, putting them into dialogue with one another (and us into dialogue with each other), we hope to provoke in-depth discussion about the questions these materials raise for media-makers and activists. We would like to consider the consequences of these works in terms of the decisions and strategies centered on effect or utility within particular contexts, but also in terms of the operations of the media themselves, how they help us to reconsider our own practices as political. Finally, this space for viewing and discussing together is meant to bring together a diverse group of practitioners and thinkers. It is a time and place to consider models for media- and movement-making, perhaps to view history with an eye toward history-making, ultimately framing the very question of producing change, not as innovation but as a radical re-organization of the status quo. The concrete activity of this weekend is thinking about the various options and choices that politically engaged and committed media-producers have and the consequences of these choices. |