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Anniversary
Tour Show:
TIE, The International Experimental Cinema
Exposition, marks more than 500 films screened since its inception
in Telluride, Colorado. TIE's traveling showcase remains true to
its dedication: celluloid works in their true format, from the latest
contemporary works to archival films from the rich history of experimental
cinema. The tour is a collection of highlights from the past six
years of TIE’s expositions and festivals. The varying programs
exhibit at a limited number of venues in North America and abroad.
TIE Director, Christopher May, appears in-person.
8PM Saturday, August 20, 2005
Shreveport, Mini-Cine Edition
ArtSpace
710 Texas Street
Shreveport, LA
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What
the Water Said, Nos. 1-3 {David
Gatten, 16 min., 16mm, USA, 1997-98}
"This
film is the result of a series of camera-less collaborations between
the filmmaker, the Atlantic Ocean and its underwater inhabitants.
For three days in January and three days in October of 1997, and
again, for a day, in August of 1998, lengths of unexposed, undeveloped
film were soaked in a crab trap on a South Carolina beach. Both
the sound and image in What the Water Said are the result
of the ensuing oceanic inscriptions written directly into the emulsion
of the film as it was buffeted by the salt water, sand and rocks;
as it was chewed and eaten by the crabs, fish and underwater creatures."

Blutrausch
(Bloodlust)
{Thorsten
Fleisch, 4 min., 16mm, Sound,
Germany,
2000}
This film is an attempt to constitute
a human / machine dialogue. It shows the filmmaker's blood as seen
/ heard by the eyes / ears of the machine which is a film projector
with optical sound. He affixed his blood onto clear film leader
by cutting into the flesh and then pressing the film leader onto
the wound. Additionally he had blood taken with a syringe and afterwards
dripped it on the film leader. Fresh and clotted blood was used
for a maximum of variety.
Meridian
Days {Trevor
Fife, 12 min., 16mm, USA, 2003}
Meridian Days is a navigational
term that refers to the phenomenon of temporally losing or gaining
a day when you cross the international dateline. This hauntingly
poetic and beautifully crafted travelogue stems from audio and visual
material collected on a 3-week luxury ship cruise taken with the
filmmaker’s 82-year-old Grandmother. The result is a visually
stunning and engaging mix of humor and disparity.

Den
of Tigers {Jonathan
Schwartz,
18 min., 16mm, India / USA, 2002}
This gorgeous film was made from
during travel to West Bengal, India on an invitation to record sound
for a film. While there, Schwartz collected images/sounds for this,
his own project - a reflection of the maker’s experience,
feelings, and most of all, the participation of walking, looking,
and listening.
The piece touches outside the traditional arenas of genre and boundaries.
It speaks with many voices - the associational values of experimental
cinema, the patience of objective documentary, emotional levels
of narrative, and intellectual/research oriented foundations of
an essay. The culmination of visual construction and sound layering
moves beyond hearing and seeing. Jonathan builds the work, with
elements of tradition, into his own- a unique and new voice. It
sings with observational, textural, lyrical, and metaphorical songs.
It is in the construction where innovation enters -the interplay
of movement-color-composition-meaning-mood swimming within the layering
compositions of sound inspires emotion, association, and intellect.
The process is rooted in coupling the experimental cinema artist
approach with that of an independent journalist. Jonathan's work
is not journalism in any sense - yet the approach of creating his
work requires intuitive response in the field.
My Life as a Bee {Robert
Schaller, 4min., 16mm, USA, 2002}
An imagining of a bee’s eye view of a spring day in Golden
Gate Park. A primitive, home-made camera reveals a world of vibrant,
frenetic color, racing between flowers and losing itself in the
revelry of survival and sunshine.

Loretta {Jeanne Liotta, 4 min., 16mm,
USA, 2003}
"I
love that which dazzles me and then accentuates the darkness within
me."
-Rene Char
A
photogram opera of corporeal dissolution, this abstract film is
a series of a million flashlit moments. As the heroine ,Loretta
insists upon herself, and the evidence is an absolute aria, dissolving
into the infinite. Living in time as high drama. Yellow conceived
of as light materialized; a pure value emitting a particular frequency
of energy, A dialectical manifestiation of phenomena in flux, like
any other movie.
("A
photogram , also known as a rayogram (after Man Ray) is a cameraless
process whereby a photograph is made by placing objects directly
on the sensititized paper/film and directing a light source on it
to expose it. Loretta was made this way, placing a 35mm negative
on top of raw 16mm stock and exposing it with a flashlight, section
by section, even frame by frame sometimes.")

Metaphysical
Education {Thad
Povey, 4 min., 16mm, Sound,
USA,
2003}
The molding of young flesh and the
beating of desperate wings. Instead
of using tape splices 16mm wide, this film was edited by turning
the splicer sideways to reveal the sprockets and the soundtrack.
The long cuts run diagonally across the screen and, as the filmstrip
slides by, the highest jumper shows the way to the herd. Music by
Ramona The Pest.

Film
(Dzama) {Deco
Dawson, 23 min., 16mm, Canada, 2001}
An attempt to rekindle the lost form
of surrealist cinema made popular in the 1920s by Dali / Bunuel
and Man Ray. Marcel Dzama is a young Winnipeg-based Visual Artist
who works on small page size drawings, and warercolor storyboards.
The film is a beautiful and inventive fictional biography of Marcel
Dzama’s work and creative process. His real life father Maurice
plays the role of the artist.
Program curated by TIE Director, Christopher
May.
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