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MARVELOUS MOVIE MONDAYS WELCOMES KARL LIND

EPFC | August 3rd, 2015

It’s that time again, cinefriends, when we welcome a new film/video artist to take us on a month-long cinematic journey on a theme of their choice in our weekly online-only screening series, MARVELOUS MOVIE MONDAYS!! We are excited to hand the August curatorial reins over to……

KARL LIND!!

Karl Lind is filmmaker and curator living in Portland, Oregon. He loves playing pinball and riding bikes.

WELCOME, KARL!!

And now, here’s Karl’s “A Brief Portrait of The Eternal Recurrence” for you to enjoy.

https://vimeo.com/98685124

THE RETURN TO THE RETURN TO REASON

EPFC | July 20th, 2015

MARVELOUS MOVIE MONDAYS!!
guest curator: Scott Fitzpatrick

Good evening friends of Echo Park Film Center and welcome back for another installment of Marvelous Movie Mondays. The theme for July has been “POST-FILM” – material films made entirely without the use of photochemical processes. Tonight we have a special treat, as this movie isn’t usually available online, but I have permission to share it with you for the rest of the month (i think!) .. “The Return to The Return to Reason,” by super-rad filmmaker Sabine Gruffat, is “a scratch film for the 21st century”. For this piece a digital laser engraver was used to meticulously etch every frame of Man Ray’s seminal 1923 film “Le Retour à la Raison (A Return to Reason)” – the first instance of the Rayogram – onto 35mm black leader, and the result is mesmerizing. I like this movie next to Libi Striegl’s piece I shared last week, because they both explore really cool, unexpected technological collisions. Hope you enjoy too !

https://vimeo.com/134036298

SOD by JODI

EPFC | March 2nd, 2015

MARVELOUS M❂VIE M✿NDAYS
guest curator: Andrew Rosinski

Hello Echo Park Film Center friends, my name is Andrew and I’ll be sharing work on the EPFC-FB page throughout March. MYST is the concept for March.

 MYST 
Identifying with the 1993 computer adventure game MYST, this program of contemporary moving image-based art mazes through aberrant places and mystifying spaces, highlighted by digital simulacra that employ new technology to render regressive aesthetics inspired by the nascency of the early virtual.

Today we feature SOD by JODI.

SOD
JODI, 2013, 5 mins, video, b/w, sound
A severe modification of the MS DOS game Wolfenstein 3D (1992) deconstructs it into a hyper-minimalist black-and-white maze of geometric forms and pixel patterns. (AR)

((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( http://jodi.org ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))

OPTICAL TOYS

EPFC | February 24th, 2015

MARVELOUS MOVIE MONDAYS!!
guest curator: Charlotte Taylor

It’s just another Marvelous Movie Monday… oh ohhh… Actually, it isn’t just another Monday, it’s the last Monday of February – a month of OPTICAL TOYS!

I couldn’t choose just one optical toy, so I’m leaving you with three – all built on pedal power! Because what’s better than optical bicycles?

Jodie Mack’s Bike-Cycle
A zoetrope geared to the pedals of experimental animation heroine Cecile Starr’s exercise bike. The documentation from this piece comes from Mono No Aware. I really wish I could have been there to experience it.
https://vimeo.com/album/2176973/video/55208584
(More optical toys by Jodie Mack: https://vimeo.com/album/2176973)

Peter Hudson’s Sisyphish 2002 and Deeper 2004
Bike powered, large scale, 3D stroboscopes. The magic of the stroboscope is that you don’t need walls and slats, or even mirrors — the strobe light functions like a shutter to create the motion. There are quite a few stroboscopes out there, but I love the simplicity of powering the entire mechanism, especially one this large, to just a bike. The documentation for both stroboscopes is from Burning Man.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljFqF-TCBok

Tim Wheatley’s Cyclotrope
These two experiments synchronize the spinning of a bicycle wheel with the shutter of a camera to create the animations you’re seeing on screen. Although probably not a true optical toy, since the animation depends on the camera, these are too cool not to share with you.
https://vimeo.com/21016797 & https://vimeo.com/33991842
(For more about the Cyclotrope Project by Tim Wheatley:http://thecyclotrope.blogspot.com/)
I’m so thankful and honored to have had the opportunity to curate this month’s movies. I hope you all have enjoyed them as much as I have enjoyed sharing them with you. If you’re interested in learning more about these and other optical toys, check out the Laura Hayes and John Howard Wileman Exhibit of Optical Toys at the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. (http://courses.ncssm.edu/gall…/collections/…/opticaltoys.htm)

I’d love to see what you’re making, too!

Yay for film!
heart emoticon charlotte

WE GOT TIME

EPFC | February 17th, 2015

MARVELOUS MOVIE MONDAYS with Guest Curator CHARLOTTE TAYLOR

Happy Monday, film friends!

This week’s optical toy comes in the form of a music video – “We Got Time” – song by Moray McLaren, video by David Wilson. Check it out here: https://vimeo.com/4184445

In the video, David uses hand painted records as praxinoscopes. There are some cuts (wipes), but all the animation is happening live or in camera. It’s pretty magical. If you’re interested in learning more about how he made it, there’s a great making of video here:https://vimeo.com/4378501.

Yay for film!!!