


| Imagine |
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CASZUIDAS Urban Screen Festival Compiled by Courtisane for the first edition of CASZUIDAS Urban Screen Festival, Imagine is a selection of works and artists previously shown by Courtisane. Digital reveries and riddles, the video works in this programme seek to actively engage the « mental » participation of urban spectators, to throw them back upon themselves, opening up the limits of their sight to the freedom of their imagination. They imagine a new sensory language in which meaning is played with, but never denied. Between abstraction and playful transformation, distilling, reinterpreting popular media culture, these works leave way for the countless images generated by each spectator. Parallel worlds for the imagination of the spectator to wander around.
Stephen Gray, Beep prepared, 2002, 5’ (UK)
Stephen Gray is a British visual artist. His body of work highlights the growing gulf between the direct and decisive nature of our media conventions and our traumatic, ridiculous and unruly everyday existence. He lives and works in Bristol.
Joseph Ernst, Hip-Hop Movie, 2008, 4’ (UK)
Joseph Ernst (UK, 1974) studied Architecture at the University of Edinburgh, Sci Arc in Los Angeles, and The Bartlett in London. Since 2000 he has worked as an art director at various advertising agencies in
Amsterdam, Shanghai, and London producing work for clients such as Nike, Levis, Electronic Arts, Audi, and Coca Cola. Joseph has been directing since 2007. He currently lives and works in London.
Max Hattler, Collision, 2005, 02'30" (DE/UK)
Max Hattler (DE, 1976) graduated from the Royal College of Art with an MA in Animation in 2005 and went on to teach at Goldsmiths College, London and Volda University College, Norway. His films have been broadcast on television and screened at over one hundred film festivals around the world. Max also directs music videos. He lives and works in London and Berlin. Award for Best Experimental Film, Halloween Short Film Festival, London, 2006 Honourable Mention, Darklight Festival, Dublin, 2006 Special Mention, San Gio Festival, Italy, 2006.
David O’Reilly, RGB XYZ, 2005-2008, 13' (IE)
David O'Reilly (IE, 1985) is an animation artist based in Berlin. His unorthodox approach to animation is essentially straight-forward in intention: “I want every idea to justify existing in animation–to be ideas that would be useless in any other medium,” he explains. “Essentially I want to capture elements of life which could never be recorded by camera. If film is ideal for capturing a sense of reality, then animation offers the chance to embrace ideas of perception, which is an entirely different proposition.”
Simon Faithfull, 13, 2004, 5'25" (UK)
Simon Faithfull (UK, 1966) is lecturer at the Slade School of Art and lives in Berlin and London. His drawings, videos and installations have been in numerous national and international solo and group exhibitions.
Dave Griffiths, Rogue State, 2003, 02’20” (UK)
Dave Griffiths is a British artist working with film, video, animation and sound. His film works dwell on the physical and fictive borders of media spaces and forms. He combines a rigorous attention to barely perceptible matter in moving images with an aesthetic study of their dramatic potential. Along with political and historical asides, the work is filtered through the languages and strategies of cinema and media art to attempt an ironic critique of our social bond with visual technologies. Michael Robinson, All Through the Night, 2007, 6’ (US)
Since the year 2000, Michael Robinson has created a body of film, video and photography work exploring the poetics of loss and the dangers of mediated experience. His work has screened in both solo and group shows at a variety of festivals, cinematheques and galleries including the International Film Festival Rotterdam, The New York Film Festival, The Times BFI London Film Festival, Media City, Anthology Film Archives, Viennale, Cinematexas, The Wexner Center for the Arts, ICA London, Impakt, The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Chicago Filmmakers, PDX, and the San Francisco, Oberhausen, and Hong Kong International Film Festivals. Michael currently teaches filmmaking at Binghamton University.
Mary Helena Clark, And the Sun Flowers, 2008, 5' (US)
Mary Helena Clark is a Baltimore-based filmmaker. Her short films have been shown at numerous international festivals including Rotterdam and Views of the Avant-Garde (New York).
Rebecca Baron & Doug Goodwin, Lossless #5, 2008, 3' (US)
The films of Rebecca Baron (US, 1972) have screened widely in international film festivals and media venues including Documenta 12, Rotterdam, Viennale, Oberhausen, Cinémathèque Française, Anthology Film Archive and the Whitney Museum of American Art's 2000 Biennial. Baron teaches documentary and experimental film at the California Institute of the Arts. Douglas Goodwin is an artist and writer. His work investigates the mechanisms by which language and technology mediate the area between perception and reality. His work has shown in Los Angeles, Frankfurt, Boston, Seattle, San Francisco, and Denver.
Martijn Hendriks, The Birds without the birds (excerpt), 2007-ongoing, 3’ (NL) Martijn Hendriks's (NL, 1973) videos, sculptures and installations are often the results of seemingly unproductive acts like displacements, theft, jokes, withholding things, disruptions, obstructions, overdoing things, and attempts at clearly impossible tasks. The work he shows rarely documents those actions directly. Rather, it is what is left over from them or produced by those acts. His work has been exhibited internationally in galleries, centres for contemporary art and museums of modern art, and in 2008 he received the international Kraft Prize for New Media for his ongoing work The Birds without the birds. He lives and works in Amsterdam.
Nicolas Provost, Papillon D'Amour, 2003, 03’30” (BE)
The work of Nicolas Provost (BE, 1969) is a reflection on the grammar of cinema and the relation between visual art and the cinematic experience. His short films have been awarded at prestigious festivals worldwide and he's now busy with his first long feature film. He lives and works in Brussels.
Stewart Smith, Jed's Other Poem, 2005, 3’ (US) Stewart Smith is an artist-programmer in New York City. He earned his MFA from Yale University in 2008 and operates Stewdio, a consultancy that approaches art and software through the lens of graphic design. Stewart has also taught introductory Web design at Yale and occasionally advises organizations exploring new interactive technologies and visualization techniques. |