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Experimental film

Experimental film or avant-garde cinema is a mode of filmmaking that rigorously re-evaluates cinematic conventions and explores non-narrative forms or alternatives to traditional narratives or methods of working.[1] Many experimental films, particularly early ones, relate to arts in other disciplines: painting, dance, literature and poetry,[2] or arise from research and development of new technical resources.[3]

Limite (1931) directed by Mário Peixoto, an early example of experimental feature filmmaking

While some experimental films have been distributed through mainstream channels or even made within commercial studios, the vast majority have been produced on very low budgets with a minimal crew or a single person and are either self-financed or supported through small grants.[4]

Experimental filmmakers generally begin as amateurs, and some use experimental films as a springboard into commercial film-making or transition into academic positions. The aim of experimental filmmaking may be to render the personal vision of an artist, or to promote interest in new technology rather than to entertain or to generate revenue, as is the case with commercial films.[5]

Definition edit

The term experimental film describes a range of filmmaking styles that frequently differ from, and are often opposed to, the practices of mainstream commercial and documentary filmmaking. Avant-garde is also used, for the films of the sort shot in the twenties in France, Germany or Russia, to describe this work, and "underground" was used in the sixties, though it has also had other connotations. Today the term "experimental cinema" prevails, because it's possible to make experimental films without the presence of any avant-garde movement in the cultural field.

While "experimental" covers a wide range of practice, an experimental film is often characterized by the absence of linear narrative, the use of various abstracting techniques—out-of-focus, painting or scratching on film, rapid editing—the use of asynchronous (non-diegetic) sound or even the absence of any sound track. The goal is often to place the viewer in a more active and more thoughtful relationship to the film. At least through the 1960s, and to some extent after, many experimental films took an oppositional stance toward mainstream culture.

Most experimental films are made on very low budgets, self-financed or financed through small grants, with a minimal crew or, often a crew of only one person, the filmmaker. Some critics have argued that much experimental film is no longer in fact "experimental" but has in fact become a mainstream film genre.[6] Many of its more typical features—such as a non-narrative, impressionistic, or poetic approaches to the film's construction—define what is generally understood to be "experimental".[7]

History of the European avant-garde edit

Beginnings edit

In the 1920s, two conditions made Europe ready for the emergence of experimental film. First, the cinema matured as a medium, and highbrow resistance to the mass entertainment began to wane. Second, avant-garde movements in the visual arts flourished. The Dadaists and Surrealists in particular took to cinema. René Clair's Entr'acte (1924) featuring Francis Picabia, Marcel Duchamp, and Man Ray, and with music by Erik Satie, took madcap comedy into nonsequitur.

Artists Hans Richter, Jean Cocteau, Marcel Duchamp, Germaine Dulac, and Viking Eggeling all contributed Dadaist/Surrealist shorts. Fernand Léger, Dudley Murphy, and Man Ray created the film Ballet Mécanique (1924), which has been described as Dadaist, Cubist, or Futurist.[citation needed] Duchamp created the abstract film Anémic Cinéma (1926).

Alberto Cavalcanti directed Rien que les heures (1926), Walter Ruttmann directed Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis (1927), and Dziga Vertov filmed Man With a Movie Camera (1929), experimental "city symphonies" of Paris, Berlin, and Kiev, respectively.

One famous experimental film is Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí's Un chien andalou (1929). Hans Richter's animated shorts, Oskar Fischinger's abstract films, and Len Lye's GPO films are examples of more abstract European avant-garde films. [8]

France edit

Working in France, another group of filmmakers also financed films through patronage and distributed them through cine-clubs, yet they were narrative films not tied to an avant-garde school. Film scholar David Bordwell has dubbed these French Impressionists and included Abel Gance, Jean Epstein, Marcel L'Herbier, and Dimitri Kirsanoff. These films combine narrative experimentation, rhythmic editing and camerawork, and an emphasis on character subjectivity. [9]

In 1952, the Lettrists avant-garde movement, in France, caused riots at the Cannes Film Festival, when Isidore Isou's Traité de bave et d'éternité (also known as Venom and Eternity) was screened. After their criticism of Charlie Chaplin at the 1952 press conference in Paris for Chaplin's Limelight, there was a split within the movement. The Ultra-Lettrists continued to cause disruptions when they announced the death of cinema and showed their new hypergraphical techniques; the most notorious example is Guy Debord's Howlings in favor of de Sade (Hurlements en Faveur de Sade) from 1952.

Soviet Union edit

Directed by Dziga Vertov, the first newsreel in the Kino-Pravda series shows the techniques developed in Soviet montage theory.

The Soviet filmmakers, too, found a counterpart to modernist painting and photography in their theories of montage. The films of Dziga Vertov, Sergei Eisenstein, Lev Kuleshov, Alexander Dovzhenko, and Vsevolod Pudovkin were instrumental in providing an alternative model from that offered by classical Hollywood. While not experimental films per se, they contributed to the film language of the avant-garde. [10]

Italy edit

Italy had a historically difficult relationship with its avant-garde scene, although, the birth of cinema coincided with the emerging of Italian Futurism.[11]

Potentially the new medium of cinema was a perfect match for the concerns of futurism, a renowned for promoting new aesthetics, motion, and modes of perception. Especially, given the futurist fascination with the sensation of speed and the dynamism of modern life. However, what is left of futurist cinema is mostly on paper, many films very lost, and other never got made. Amongst those literatures it is worth noting The Futurist Cinema (Marinetti et al., 1916), Technical Manifesto of Futurist Literature (1912), The Variety Theatre (1913), The Futurist Synthetic Theatre (1915), and The New Religion – Morality of Speed (1916).[12] Perhaps, the futurists were amongst the first avant-garde filmmakers group devoted to the potential of the image, praising motion and aiming towards an anti-narrative aesthetic.[13] As an example, Marinetti's quote:

"The cinema is an autonomous art. The cinema must therefore never copy the stage. The cinema, being essentially visual, must above all fulfil the evolution of painting, detach itself from reality, from photography, from the graceful and solemn..."[14]

As exemplified in the quote, the image is the real subject, not the story or the acting, an approach and attitude that remain true for the whole history of experimental filmmaking.

Anton Giulio Bragaglia is undoubtedly the most known filmmaker from the futurist movement.

Prewar and postwar American avant-garde: the birth of experimental cinema edit

The United States had some avant-garde films before World War II, such as Manhatta (1921), by Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand, and The Life and Death of 9413: a Hollywood Extra (1928), by Slavko Vorkapich and Robert Florey. However, much pre-war experimental film culture consisted of artists working, often in isolation, on film projects. In the early 1930s, Painter Emlen Etting (1905–1993) directed dance films that are considered experimental. Commercial artist (Saturday Evening Post) and illustrator Douglass Crockwell (1904–1968)[15] made animations with blobs of paint pressed between sheets of glass in his studio at Glens Falls, New York.[16]

In Rochester, New York, medical doctor and philanthropist James Sibley Watson and Melville Webber directed The Fall of the House of Usher (1928) and Lot in Sodom (1933). Harry Smith, Mary Ellen Bute, artist Joseph Cornell, and Christopher Young made several European-influenced experimental films. Smith and Bute were both influenced by Oskar Fischinger, as were many avant garde animators and filmmakers. In 1930, the magazine Experimental Cinema appeared.[17] The editors were Lewis Jacobs and David Platt. In October 2005, a large collection of films of that period were restored and re-released on DVD, titled Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant Garde Film 1894-1941.[18]

With Slavko Vorkapich, John Hoffman made two visual tone poems, Moods of the Sea (aka Fingal's Cave, 1941) and Forest Murmurs (1947). The former film is set to Felix Mendelssohn's Hebrides Overture and was restored in 2004 by film preservation expert David Shepard.

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) directed by Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) by Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid is an early American experimental film. It provided a model for self-financed 16 mm production and distribution, one that was soon picked up by Cinema 16 and other film societies. Just as importantly, it established an aesthetic model of what experimental cinema could do. Meshes had a dream-like feel that hearkened to Jean Cocteau and the Surrealists, but equally seemed personal, new and American. Early works by Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, Shirley Clarke, Gregory Markopoulos, Jonas Mekas, Willard Maas, Marie Menken, Curtis Harrington, Sidney Peterson, Lionel Rogosin, and Earle M. Pilgrim followed in a similar vein. Significantly, many of these filmmakers were the first students from the pioneering university film programs established in Los Angeles and New York. In 1946, Frank Stauffacher started the "Art in Cinema" series of experimental films at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, where Oskar Fischinger's films were featured in several special programs, influencing artists such as Jordan Belson and Harry Smith to make experimental animation.

They set up "alternative film programs" at Black Mountain College (now defunct) and the San Francisco Art Institute. Arthur Penn taught at Black Mountain College, which points out the popular misconception in both the art world and Hollywood that the avant-garde and the commercial never meet. Another challenge to that misconception is that late in life, after their Hollywood careers had ended, both Nicholas Ray and King Vidor made avant-garde films.

Film theorist P. Adams Sitney offers a concept of "visionary film", and he invented a few genre categories, including the mythopoetic film, the structural film, the trance film and the participatory film, in order to describe the historical morphology of experimental cinema in the American avant-garde from 1943 to the 2000s.[19]

The New American Cinema and Structural-Materialism edit

 
Poster for The Great Blondino, a 1960s counterculture film directed by Robert Nelson and William T. Wiley

The film society and self-financing model continued over the next two decades, but by the early 1960s, a different outlook became perceptible in the work of American avant-garde filmmakers. Filmmakers like Michael Snow, Hollis Frampton, Ken Jacobs, Paul Sharits, Tony Conrad, and Ernie Gehr, are considered by P. Adams Sitney to be key models for what he calls "structural film". Sitney says that the key elements of structural film are a fixed camera position, flicker effect, re-photography off screen, and loop printing. Artist Bruce Conner created early examples such as A Movie (1958) and Cosmic Ray (1962). As Sitney has pointed out, in the work of Stan Brakhage and other American experimentalists of early period, film is used to express the individual consciousness of the maker, a cinematic equivalent of the first person in literature. Brakhage's Dog Star Man (1961–64) exemplified a shift from personal confessional to abstraction, and also evidenced a rejection of American mass culture of the time. On the other hand, Kenneth Anger added a rock sound track to his Scorpio Rising (1963) in what is sometimes said to be an anticipation of music videos, and included some camp commentary on Hollywood mythology. Jack Smith and Andy Warhol incorporated camp elements into their work, and Sitney posited Warhol's connection to structural film.

Some avant-garde filmmakers moved further away from narrative. Whereas the New American Cinema was marked by an oblique take on narrative, one based on abstraction, camp and minimalism, Structural-Materialist filmmakers like Hollis Frampton and Michael Snow created a highly formalist cinema that foregrounded the medium itself: the frame, projection, and most importantly, time. It has been argued that by breaking film down into bare components, they sought to create an anti-illusionist cinema, although Frampton's late works owe a huge debt to the photography of Edward Weston, Paul Strand, and others, and in fact celebrate illusion. Further, while many filmmakers began making rather academic "structural films" following Film Culture's publication of an article by P. Adams Sitney in the late 1960s, many of the filmmakers named in the article objected to the term.

A critical review of the structuralists appeared in a 2000 edition of the art journal Art in America. It examined structural-formalism as a conservative philosophy of filmmaking.

The 1960–70s and today: Time arts in the conceptual art landscape edit

In the 1970s, Conceptual art pushed even further. Robert Smithson, a California-based artist, made several films about his earthworks and attached projects. Yoko Ono made conceptual films. The most notorious of these is Rape, which centers on a woman's life being invaded with cameras, as she attempts to flee. Around this time, a new generation was entering the field, many of whom were students of the early avant-gardists. Leslie Thornton, Peggy Ahwesh, and Su Friedrich expanded upon the work of the structuralists, incorporating a broader range of content while maintaining a self-reflexive form.

Andy Warhol, the man behind Pop Art and a variety of other oral and art forms, made over 60 films throughout the 1960s, most of them experimental. In more recent years, filmmakers such as Craig Baldwin and James O'Brien (Hyperfutura) have made use of stock footage married to live action narratives in a form of mash-up cinema that has strong socio-political undertones. Chris Marker's La Jetée (1962) consists almost entirely of still photographs accompanied by narration, while Jonás Cuarón's Year of the Nail (2007) uses unstaged photographs which the director took of his friends and family combined with voice acting to tell a fictional story. Other examples of films created in the 21st Century with this technique are Lars von Trier's Dogville and David Lynch's entire filmography.

Feminist avant-garde and other political offshoots edit

Laura Mulvey's writing and filmmaking launched a flourishing of feminist filmmaking based on the idea that conventional Hollywood narrative reinforced gender norms and a patriarchal gaze. Their response was to resist narrative in a way to show its fissures and inconsistencies. Chantal Akerman and Sally Potter are just two of the leading feminist filmmakers working in this mode in the 1970s. Video art emerged as a medium in this period, and feminists like Martha Rosler and Cecelia Condit took full advantage of it.

In the 1980s feminist, gay and other political experimental work continued, with filmmakers like Barbara Hammer, Su Friedrich, Tracey Moffatt, Sadie Benning and Isaac Julien among others finding experimental format conducive to their questions about identity politics.

The queercore movement gave rise to a number experimental queer filmmakers such as G.B. Jones (a founder of the movement) in the 1990s and later Scott Treleaven, among others.

Experimental film in universities edit

With very few exceptions, Curtis Harrington among them, the artists involved in these early movements remained outside the mainstream commercial cinema and entertainment industry. A few taught occasionally, and then, starting in 1966, many became professors at universities such as the State Universities of New York, Bard College, California Institute of the Arts, the Massachusetts College of Art, University of Colorado at Boulder, and the San Francisco Art Institute.

Many experimental-film practitioners do not in fact possess college degrees themselves, although their showings are prestigious. Some have questioned the status of the films made in the academy, but longtime film professors such as Stan Brakhage, Ken Jacobs, Ernie Gehr, and many others, continued to refine and expand their practice while teaching. The inclusion of experimental film in film courses and standard film histories, however, has made the work more widely known and more accessible.

Exhibition and distribution edit

 
Lithuanian artist Jonas Mekas, regarded as godfather of American avant-garde cinema

Beginning in 1946, Frank Stauffacher ran the "Art in Cinema" program of experimental and avant-garde films at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

From 1949 to 1975, the Festival international du cinéma expérimental de Knokke-le-Zoute—located in Knokke-Heist, Belgium—was the most prominent festival of experimental cinema in the world. It permits the discovery of American avant-garde in 1958 with Brakhage's films and many others European and American filmmakers.

From 1947 to 1963, the New York-based Cinema 16 functioned as the primary exhibitor and distributor of experimental film in the United States. Under the leadership of Amos Vogel and Marcia Vogel, Cinema 16 flourished as a nonprofit membership society committed to the exhibition of documentary, avant-garde, scientific, educational, and performance films to ever-increasing audiences.[20]

In 1962, Jonas Mekas and about 20 other film makers founded The Film-Makers' Cooperative in New York City. Soon similar artists cooperatives were formed in other places: Canyon Cinema in San Francisco, the London Film-Makers' Co-op, and Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Center.

Following the model of Cinema 16, experimental films have been exhibited mainly outside of commercial theaters in small film societies, microcinemas, museums, art galleries, archives and film festivals. [21]

Several other organizations, in both Europe and North America, helped develop experimental film. These included Anthology Film Archives in New York City, The Millennium Film Workshop, the British Film Institute in London, the National Film Board of Canada and the Collective for Living Cinema.

Some of the more popular film festivals, such as Ann Arbor Film Festival, the New York Film Festival's "Views from the Avant-Garde" Side Bar, the International Film Festival Rotterdam, and Media City Film Festival[22] prominently feature experimental works.

The New York Underground Film Festival, Chicago Underground Film Festival, the LA Freewaves Experimental Media Arts Festival, MIX NYC the New York Experimental Lesbian and Gay Film Festival, and Toronto's Images Festival also support this work and provide venues for films which would not otherwise be seen. There is some dispute about whether "underground" and "avant-garde" truly mean the same thing and if challenging non-traditional cinema and fine arts cinema are actually fundamentally related.[23]

Venues such as Anthology Film Archives, San Francisco Cinematheque, Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley, California, Tate Modern, London and the Centre Pompidou in Paris often include historically significant experimental films and contemporary works. Screening series no longer in New York that featured experimental work include the Robert Beck Memorial Cinema, Ocularis and the Collective for Living Cinema.

All these associations and movements have permitted the birth and development of national experimental films and schools like "body cinema" ("Écoles du corps" or "Cinéma corporel") and "post-structural" movements in France, and "structural/materialism" in England for example.[24]

Influences on mainstream commercial media edit

Though experimental film is known to a relatively small number of practitioners, academics and connoisseurs, it has influenced and continues to influence cinematography, visual effects and editing.[25]

The genre of music video can be seen as a commercialization of many techniques of experimental film. Title design and television advertising have also been influenced by experimental film.[26][27][28][29]

Many experimental filmmakers have also made feature films, and vice versa.[30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Maria Pramaggiore and Tom Wallis, Film: A Critical Introduction, Laurence King Publishing, London, 2005, pg. 247
  2. ^ Laura Marcus, The Tenth Muse: Writing about Cinema in the Modernist Period, Oxford University Press, New York 2007
  3. ^ * Gene Youngblood, Expanded Cinema (Dutton, 1970) available as pdf at Ubuweb
  4. ^ "Top 10 Experimental Films - Toptenz.net". 19 January 2011.
  5. ^ MoMA-Experimentation in Film-The Avant-Garde
  6. ^ GreenCine | Experimental/Avant-Garde 2005-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Experimental Film - married, show, name, cinema, scene, book, story, documentary".
  8. ^ BFI Screenonline:20s-30s Avant-Garde
  9. ^ Turvey, Malcolm (2011). The Filming of Modern Life. The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262525114. JSTOR j.ctt5hhcg7.
  10. ^ A (Very Brief) History of Experimental Cinema-No Film School
  11. ^ "Necsus | Futurist Cinema / Cubism and Futurism". necsus-ejms.org. 27 May 2020. Retrieved 2022-10-16.
  12. ^ English translations of the above are available, for example, in Futurists Manifestos edited by U. Apollonio (2009) or Marinetti’s Selected Writings (1977)
  13. ^ Aiken, E. ‘The Cinema and Italian Futurist painting’, Art Journal, Vol. 41, No. 4 (Futurism), 1981: 353-357.
  14. ^ Marinetti, Balla, et al., The Futurist Cinema, in Marinetti: Selected Writings, ed. Flint, p. 131. Original quotation: "II cinematografo e un'arte a se. Il cinematografo non deve dunque mai copiare il palcoscenico. II cinematografo, essendo essenzialmente visivo, deve compiere anzitutto l'evoluzione della pittura: distaccarsi dalla realta, dalla fotografia, dal grazioso e dal solenne."
  15. ^ "Douglass Crockwell, Alphabet of Illustrators, Chris Mullen Collection".
  16. ^ "Hollywood Quarterly".
  17. ^ "Experimental Cinema". Internet Archive. June 1930. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-03-05.
  19. ^ Sitney, P. Adams (1974). Visionary Film - The American Avant-Garde 1943-2000 (3rd ed.). New York, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 479. ISBN 0-19-514885-1.
  20. ^ Amos Vogel, Founder of the New York Film Festival and Cinema 16, Dies at 91|IndieWire
  21. ^ The Avant-Garde Archive Online-Film Quarterly
  22. ^ "Media City Film Festival". Media City Film Festival. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
  23. ^ Naming, and Defining, Avant-Garde or Experimental Film-Fred Camper
  24. ^ Dominique Noguez, « Qu’est-ce que le cinéma expérimental ? », Éloge du cinéma expérimental, Paris, Centre Georges-Pompidou, 1979, p. 15.
  25. ^ Aesthetica Magazine - Artists' Films Take on Mainstream Cinema
  26. ^ Avant-garde influences the mainstream-Variety
  27. ^ "MTV Aesthetics" at the Movies: Interrogating a Film Criticism Fallacy
  28. ^ Motion Graphic Design: Applied History and Aesthetics-Jon Krasner-Google Books
  29. ^ TV by Design: Modern Art and the Rise of Network Television-Lynn Spigel-Google Books
  30. ^ Aesthetica Magazine - Artists' Films Take on Mainstream Cinema

References edit

  • A. L. Rees, A History of Experimental Film and Video (British Film Institute, 1999).
  • Malcolm Le Grice, Abstract Film and Beyond (MIT Press, 1977).
  • Scott MacDonald, A Critical Cinema, Volumes 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988, 1992, 1998, 2005, and 2006).
  • Scott MacDonald, Avant-Garde Film: Motion Studies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).
  • Holly Rogers, Sounding the Gallery: Video and the Rise of Art-Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).
  • Holly Rogers and Jeremy Barham, the Music and Sound of Experimental Film (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).
  • James Peterson, Dreams of Chaos, Visions of Order: Understanding the American Avant-Garde Cinema (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1994).
  • Jack Sargeant, Naked Lens: Beat Cinema (Creation, 1997).
  • P. Adams Sitney, Visionary Film: The American Avant-Garde (New York: Oxford University Press, 1974).
  • Michael O'Pray, Avant-Garde Film: Forms, Themes and Passions (London: Wallflower Press, 2003).
  • David Curtis (ed.), A Directory of British Film and Video Artists (Arts Council, 1999).
  • David Curtis, Experimental Cinema – A Fifty Year Evolution (London. Studio Vista. 1971)
  • Wheeler Winston Dixon, The Exploding Eye: A Re-Visionary History of 1960s American Experimental Cinema (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1997)
  • Wheeler Winston Dixon and Gwendolyn Audrey Foster (eds.) Experimental Cinema – The Film Reader (London: Routledge, 2002)
  • Stan Brakhage, Film at Wit's End - Essays on American Independent Filmmakers (Edinburgh: Polygon. 1989)
  • Stan Brakhage, Essential Brakhage - Selected Writings on Filmmaking (New York: McPherson. 2001)
  • Parker Tyler, Underground Film: A Critical History (New York: Grove Press, 1969)
  • Jeffrey Skoller Shadows, Specters, Shards: Making History in Avant-Garde Film (Minneapolis: Minnesota UP, 2005)
  • Jackie Hatfield, Experimental Film and Video (John Libbey Publishing, 2006; distributed in North America by Indiana University Press)
  • Gene Youngblood, Expanded Cinema (Dutton, 1970) available as pdf at Ubuweb
  • Dominique Noguez, Éloge du cinéma expérimental (Paris Expérimental, 2010, 384 p. ISBN 978-2-912539-41-0, in French)
  • Al Rees, David Curtis, Duncan White, Stephen Ball, Editors,Expanded Cinema: Art, Performance and Film, (Tate Publishing, 2011)
  • Chris Meigh-Andrews, A History of Video Art(Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014)
  • Rachel Simpson, Avant-Garde Video Art: How Experimental Filmmakers Create Immersive Experiences That Transcend Generic Cinema (2018)

External links edit

  • 20 Essential Films For An Introduction To Avant-Garde Cinema on Taste of Cinema

experimental, film, song, they, might, giants, experimental, film, song, avant, garde, cinema, mode, filmmaking, that, rigorously, evaluates, cinematic, conventions, explores, narrative, forms, alternatives, traditional, narratives, methods, working, many, exp. For the song by They Might Be Giants see Experimental Film song Experimental film or avant garde cinema is a mode of filmmaking that rigorously re evaluates cinematic conventions and explores non narrative forms or alternatives to traditional narratives or methods of working 1 Many experimental films particularly early ones relate to arts in other disciplines painting dance literature and poetry 2 or arise from research and development of new technical resources 3 source source source source source source track Limite 1931 directed by Mario Peixoto an early example of experimental feature filmmakingWhile some experimental films have been distributed through mainstream channels or even made within commercial studios the vast majority have been produced on very low budgets with a minimal crew or a single person and are either self financed or supported through small grants 4 Experimental filmmakers generally begin as amateurs and some use experimental films as a springboard into commercial film making or transition into academic positions The aim of experimental filmmaking may be to render the personal vision of an artist or to promote interest in new technology rather than to entertain or to generate revenue as is the case with commercial films 5 Contents 1 Definition 2 History of the European avant garde 2 1 Beginnings 2 2 France 2 3 Soviet Union 2 4 Italy 3 Prewar and postwar American avant garde the birth of experimental cinema 3 1 The New American Cinema and Structural Materialism 3 2 The 1960 70s and today Time arts in the conceptual art landscape 3 3 Feminist avant garde and other political offshoots 3 4 Experimental film in universities 4 Exhibition and distribution 5 Influences on mainstream commercial media 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksDefinition editThe term experimental film describes a range of filmmaking styles that frequently differ from and are often opposed to the practices of mainstream commercial and documentary filmmaking Avant garde is also used for the films of the sort shot in the twenties in France Germany or Russia to describe this work and underground was used in the sixties though it has also had other connotations Today the term experimental cinema prevails because it s possible to make experimental films without the presence of any avant garde movement in the cultural field While experimental covers a wide range of practice an experimental film is often characterized by the absence of linear narrative the use of various abstracting techniques out of focus painting or scratching on film rapid editing the use of asynchronous non diegetic sound or even the absence of any sound track The goal is often to place the viewer in a more active and more thoughtful relationship to the film At least through the 1960s and to some extent after many experimental films took an oppositional stance toward mainstream culture Most experimental films are made on very low budgets self financed or financed through small grants with a minimal crew or often a crew of only one person the filmmaker Some critics have argued that much experimental film is no longer in fact experimental but has in fact become a mainstream film genre 6 Many of its more typical features such as a non narrative impressionistic or poetic approaches to the film s construction define what is generally understood to be experimental 7 History of the European avant garde editBeginnings edit In the 1920s two conditions made Europe ready for the emergence of experimental film First the cinema matured as a medium and highbrow resistance to the mass entertainment began to wane Second avant garde movements in the visual arts flourished The Dadaists and Surrealists in particular took to cinema Rene Clair s Entr acte 1924 featuring Francis Picabia Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray and with music by Erik Satie took madcap comedy into nonsequitur Artists Hans Richter Jean Cocteau Marcel Duchamp Germaine Dulac and Viking Eggeling all contributed Dadaist Surrealist shorts Fernand Leger Dudley Murphy and Man Ray created the film Ballet Mecanique 1924 which has been described as Dadaist Cubist or Futurist citation needed Duchamp created the abstract film Anemic Cinema 1926 Alberto Cavalcanti directed Rien que les heures 1926 Walter Ruttmann directed Berlin Symphony of a Metropolis 1927 and Dziga Vertov filmed Man With a Movie Camera 1929 experimental city symphonies of Paris Berlin and Kiev respectively One famous experimental film is Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali s Un chien andalou 1929 Hans Richter s animated shorts Oskar Fischinger s abstract films and Len Lye s GPO films are examples of more abstract European avant garde films 8 France edit Working in France another group of filmmakers also financed films through patronage and distributed them through cine clubs yet they were narrative films not tied to an avant garde school Film scholar David Bordwell has dubbed these French Impressionists and included Abel Gance Jean Epstein Marcel L Herbier and Dimitri Kirsanoff These films combine narrative experimentation rhythmic editing and camerawork and an emphasis on character subjectivity 9 In 1952 the Lettrists avant garde movement in France caused riots at the Cannes Film Festival when Isidore Isou s Traite de bave et d eternite also known as Venom and Eternity was screened After their criticism of Charlie Chaplin at the 1952 press conference in Paris for Chaplin s Limelight there was a split within the movement The Ultra Lettrists continued to cause disruptions when they announced the death of cinema and showed their new hypergraphical techniques the most notorious example is Guy Debord s Howlings in favor of de Sade Hurlements en Faveur de Sade from 1952 Soviet Union edit source source source source source Directed by Dziga Vertov the first newsreel in the Kino Pravda series shows the techniques developed in Soviet montage theory The Soviet filmmakers too found a counterpart to modernist painting and photography in their theories of montage The films of Dziga Vertov Sergei Eisenstein Lev Kuleshov Alexander Dovzhenko and Vsevolod Pudovkin were instrumental in providing an alternative model from that offered by classical Hollywood While not experimental films per se they contributed to the film language of the avant garde 10 Italy edit Italy had a historically difficult relationship with its avant garde scene although the birth of cinema coincided with the emerging of Italian Futurism 11 Potentially the new medium of cinema was a perfect match for the concerns of futurism a renowned for promoting new aesthetics motion and modes of perception Especially given the futurist fascination with the sensation of speed and the dynamism of modern life However what is left of futurist cinema is mostly on paper many films very lost and other never got made Amongst those literatures it is worth noting The Futurist Cinema Marinetti et al 1916 Technical Manifesto of Futurist Literature 1912 The Variety Theatre 1913 The Futurist Synthetic Theatre 1915 and The New Religion Morality of Speed 1916 12 Perhaps the futurists were amongst the first avant garde filmmakers group devoted to the potential of the image praising motion and aiming towards an anti narrative aesthetic 13 As an example Marinetti s quote The cinema is an autonomous art The cinema must therefore never copy the stage The cinema being essentially visual must above all fulfil the evolution of painting detach itself from reality from photography from the graceful and solemn 14 As exemplified in the quote the image is the real subject not the story or the acting an approach and attitude that remain true for the whole history of experimental filmmaking Anton Giulio Bragaglia is undoubtedly the most known filmmaker from the futurist movement Prewar and postwar American avant garde the birth of experimental cinema editThe United States had some avant garde films before World War II such as Manhatta 1921 by Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand and The Life and Death of 9413 a Hollywood Extra 1928 by Slavko Vorkapich and Robert Florey However much pre war experimental film culture consisted of artists working often in isolation on film projects In the early 1930s Painter Emlen Etting 1905 1993 directed dance films that are considered experimental Commercial artist Saturday Evening Post and illustrator Douglass Crockwell 1904 1968 15 made animations with blobs of paint pressed between sheets of glass in his studio at Glens Falls New York 16 In Rochester New York medical doctor and philanthropist James Sibley Watson and Melville Webber directed The Fall of the House of Usher 1928 and Lot in Sodom 1933 Harry Smith Mary Ellen Bute artist Joseph Cornell and Christopher Young made several European influenced experimental films Smith and Bute were both influenced by Oskar Fischinger as were many avant garde animators and filmmakers In 1930 the magazine Experimental Cinema appeared 17 The editors were Lewis Jacobs and David Platt In October 2005 a large collection of films of that period were restored and re released on DVD titled Unseen Cinema Early American Avant Garde Film 1894 1941 18 With Slavko Vorkapich John Hoffman made two visual tone poems Moods of the Sea aka Fingal s Cave 1941 and Forest Murmurs 1947 The former film is set to Felix Mendelssohn s Hebrides Overture and was restored in 2004 by film preservation expert David Shepard source source source source source source Meshes of the Afternoon 1943 directed by Maya Deren and Alexander HammidMeshes of the Afternoon 1943 by Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid is an early American experimental film It provided a model for self financed 16 mm production and distribution one that was soon picked up by Cinema 16 and other film societies Just as importantly it established an aesthetic model of what experimental cinema could do Meshes had a dream like feel that hearkened to Jean Cocteau and the Surrealists but equally seemed personal new and American Early works by Kenneth Anger Stan Brakhage Shirley Clarke Gregory Markopoulos Jonas Mekas Willard Maas Marie Menken Curtis Harrington Sidney Peterson Lionel Rogosin and Earle M Pilgrim followed in a similar vein Significantly many of these filmmakers were the first students from the pioneering university film programs established in Los Angeles and New York In 1946 Frank Stauffacher started the Art in Cinema series of experimental films at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art where Oskar Fischinger s films were featured in several special programs influencing artists such as Jordan Belson and Harry Smith to make experimental animation They set up alternative film programs at Black Mountain College now defunct and the San Francisco Art Institute Arthur Penn taught at Black Mountain College which points out the popular misconception in both the art world and Hollywood that the avant garde and the commercial never meet Another challenge to that misconception is that late in life after their Hollywood careers had ended both Nicholas Ray and King Vidor made avant garde films Film theorist P Adams Sitney offers a concept of visionary film and he invented a few genre categories including the mythopoetic film the structural film the trance film and the participatory film in order to describe the historical morphology of experimental cinema in the American avant garde from 1943 to the 2000s 19 The New American Cinema and Structural Materialism edit Main article Structural film nbsp Poster for The Great Blondino a 1960s counterculture film directed by Robert Nelson and William T WileyThe film society and self financing model continued over the next two decades but by the early 1960s a different outlook became perceptible in the work of American avant garde filmmakers Filmmakers like Michael Snow Hollis Frampton Ken Jacobs Paul Sharits Tony Conrad and Ernie Gehr are considered by P Adams Sitney to be key models for what he calls structural film Sitney says that the key elements of structural film are a fixed camera position flicker effect re photography off screen and loop printing Artist Bruce Conner created early examples such as A Movie 1958 and Cosmic Ray 1962 As Sitney has pointed out in the work of Stan Brakhage and other American experimentalists of early period film is used to express the individual consciousness of the maker a cinematic equivalent of the first person in literature Brakhage s Dog Star Man 1961 64 exemplified a shift from personal confessional to abstraction and also evidenced a rejection of American mass culture of the time On the other hand Kenneth Anger added a rock sound track to his Scorpio Rising 1963 in what is sometimes said to be an anticipation of music videos and included some camp commentary on Hollywood mythology Jack Smith and Andy Warhol incorporated camp elements into their work and Sitney posited Warhol s connection to structural film Some avant garde filmmakers moved further away from narrative Whereas the New American Cinema was marked by an oblique take on narrative one based on abstraction camp and minimalism Structural Materialist filmmakers like Hollis Frampton and Michael Snow created a highly formalist cinema that foregrounded the medium itself the frame projection and most importantly time It has been argued that by breaking film down into bare components they sought to create an anti illusionist cinema although Frampton s late works owe a huge debt to the photography of Edward Weston Paul Strand and others and in fact celebrate illusion Further while many filmmakers began making rather academic structural films following Film Culture s publication of an article by P Adams Sitney in the late 1960s many of the filmmakers named in the article objected to the term A critical review of the structuralists appeared in a 2000 edition of the art journal Art in America It examined structural formalism as a conservative philosophy of filmmaking The 1960 70s and today Time arts in the conceptual art landscape edit In the 1970s Conceptual art pushed even further Robert Smithson a California based artist made several films about his earthworks and attached projects Yoko Ono made conceptual films The most notorious of these is Rape which centers on a woman s life being invaded with cameras as she attempts to flee Around this time a new generation was entering the field many of whom were students of the early avant gardists Leslie Thornton Peggy Ahwesh and Su Friedrich expanded upon the work of the structuralists incorporating a broader range of content while maintaining a self reflexive form Andy Warhol the man behind Pop Art and a variety of other oral and art forms made over 60 films throughout the 1960s most of them experimental In more recent years filmmakers such as Craig Baldwin and James O Brien Hyperfutura have made use of stock footage married to live action narratives in a form of mash up cinema that has strong socio political undertones Chris Marker s La Jetee 1962 consists almost entirely of still photographs accompanied by narration while Jonas Cuaron s Year of the Nail 2007 uses unstaged photographs which the director took of his friends and family combined with voice acting to tell a fictional story Other examples of films created in the 21st Century with this technique are Lars von Trier s Dogville and David Lynch s entire filmography Feminist avant garde and other political offshoots edit Laura Mulvey s writing and filmmaking launched a flourishing of feminist filmmaking based on the idea that conventional Hollywood narrative reinforced gender norms and a patriarchal gaze Their response was to resist narrative in a way to show its fissures and inconsistencies Chantal Akerman and Sally Potter are just two of the leading feminist filmmakers working in this mode in the 1970s Video art emerged as a medium in this period and feminists like Martha Rosler and Cecelia Condit took full advantage of it In the 1980s feminist gay and other political experimental work continued with filmmakers like Barbara Hammer Su Friedrich Tracey Moffatt Sadie Benning and Isaac Julien among others finding experimental format conducive to their questions about identity politics The queercore movement gave rise to a number experimental queer filmmakers such as G B Jones a founder of the movement in the 1990s and later Scott Treleaven among others Experimental film in universities edit With very few exceptions Curtis Harrington among them the artists involved in these early movements remained outside the mainstream commercial cinema and entertainment industry A few taught occasionally and then starting in 1966 many became professors at universities such as the State Universities of New York Bard College California Institute of the Arts the Massachusetts College of Art University of Colorado at Boulder and the San Francisco Art Institute Many experimental film practitioners do not in fact possess college degrees themselves although their showings are prestigious Some have questioned the status of the films made in the academy but longtime film professors such as Stan Brakhage Ken Jacobs Ernie Gehr and many others continued to refine and expand their practice while teaching The inclusion of experimental film in film courses and standard film histories however has made the work more widely known and more accessible Exhibition and distribution edit nbsp Lithuanian artist Jonas Mekas regarded as godfather of American avant garde cinemaBeginning in 1946 Frank Stauffacher ran the Art in Cinema program of experimental and avant garde films at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art From 1949 to 1975 the Festival international du cinema experimental de Knokke le Zoute located in Knokke Heist Belgium was the most prominent festival of experimental cinema in the world It permits the discovery of American avant garde in 1958 with Brakhage s films and many others European and American filmmakers From 1947 to 1963 the New York based Cinema 16 functioned as the primary exhibitor and distributor of experimental film in the United States Under the leadership of Amos Vogel and Marcia Vogel Cinema 16 flourished as a nonprofit membership society committed to the exhibition of documentary avant garde scientific educational and performance films to ever increasing audiences 20 In 1962 Jonas Mekas and about 20 other film makers founded The Film Makers Cooperative in New York City Soon similar artists cooperatives were formed in other places Canyon Cinema in San Francisco the London Film Makers Co op and Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Center Following the model of Cinema 16 experimental films have been exhibited mainly outside of commercial theaters in small film societies microcinemas museums art galleries archives and film festivals 21 Several other organizations in both Europe and North America helped develop experimental film These included Anthology Film Archives in New York City The Millennium Film Workshop the British Film Institute in London the National Film Board of Canada and the Collective for Living Cinema Some of the more popular film festivals such as Ann Arbor Film Festival the New York Film Festival s Views from the Avant Garde Side Bar the International Film Festival Rotterdam and Media City Film Festival 22 prominently feature experimental works The New York Underground Film Festival Chicago Underground Film Festival the LA Freewaves Experimental Media Arts Festival MIX NYC the New York Experimental Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and Toronto s Images Festival also support this work and provide venues for films which would not otherwise be seen There is some dispute about whether underground and avant garde truly mean the same thing and if challenging non traditional cinema and fine arts cinema are actually fundamentally related 23 Venues such as Anthology Film Archives San Francisco Cinematheque Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley California Tate Modern London and the Centre Pompidou in Paris often include historically significant experimental films and contemporary works Screening series no longer in New York that featured experimental work include the Robert Beck Memorial Cinema Ocularis and the Collective for Living Cinema All these associations and movements have permitted the birth and development of national experimental films and schools like body cinema Ecoles du corps or Cinema corporel and post structural movements in France and structural materialism in England for example 24 Influences on mainstream commercial media editThough experimental film is known to a relatively small number of practitioners academics and connoisseurs it has influenced and continues to influence cinematography visual effects and editing 25 The genre of music video can be seen as a commercialization of many techniques of experimental film Title design and television advertising have also been influenced by experimental film 26 27 28 29 Many experimental filmmakers have also made feature films and vice versa 30 See also edit nbsp Film portalAbstract animation Abstract art Art film Cinema pur Extreme cinema List of film formats Lists of avant garde films Filmbank Microcinema Modernist film Postmodernist film New media art Non narrative film Performance art Remodernist film Slow cinema Still image filmNotes edit Maria Pramaggiore and Tom Wallis Film A Critical Introduction Laurence King Publishing London 2005 pg 247 Laura Marcus The Tenth Muse Writing about Cinema in the Modernist Period Oxford University Press New York 2007 Gene Youngblood Expanded Cinema Dutton 1970 available as pdf at Ubuweb Top 10 Experimental Films Toptenz net 19 January 2011 MoMA Experimentation in Film The Avant Garde GreenCine Experimental Avant Garde Archived 2005 12 10 at the Wayback Machine Experimental Film married show name cinema scene book story documentary BFI Screenonline 20s 30s Avant Garde Turvey Malcolm 2011 The Filming of Modern Life The MIT Press ISBN 9780262525114 JSTOR j ctt5hhcg7 A Very Brief History of Experimental Cinema No Film School Necsus Futurist Cinema Cubism and Futurism necsus ejms org 27 May 2020 Retrieved 2022 10 16 English translations of the above are available for example in Futurists Manifestos edited by U Apollonio 2009 or Marinetti s Selected Writings 1977 Aiken E The Cinema and Italian Futurist painting Art Journal Vol 41 No 4 Futurism 1981 353 357 Marinetti Balla et al The Futurist Cinema in Marinetti Selected Writings ed Flint p 131 Original quotation II cinematografo e un arte a se Il cinematografo non deve dunque mai copiare il palcoscenico II cinematografo essendo essenzialmente visivo deve compiere anzitutto l evoluzione della pittura distaccarsi dalla realta dalla fotografia dal grazioso e dal solenne Douglass Crockwell Alphabet of Illustrators Chris Mullen Collection Hollywood Quarterly Experimental Cinema Internet Archive June 1930 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Interview with Bruce Posner the curator Archived from the original on 2010 03 05 Sitney P Adams 1974 Visionary Film The American Avant Garde 1943 2000 3rd ed New York New York Oxford University Press p 479 ISBN 0 19 514885 1 Amos Vogel Founder of the New York Film Festival and Cinema 16 Dies at 91 IndieWire The Avant Garde Archive Online Film Quarterly Media City Film Festival Media City Film Festival Retrieved 2021 03 08 Naming and Defining Avant Garde or Experimental Film Fred Camper Dominique Noguez Qu est ce que le cinema experimental Eloge du cinema experimental Paris Centre Georges Pompidou 1979 p 15 Aesthetica Magazine Artists Films Take on Mainstream Cinema Avant garde influences the mainstream Variety MTV Aesthetics at the Movies Interrogating a Film Criticism Fallacy Motion Graphic Design Applied History and Aesthetics Jon Krasner Google Books TV by Design Modern Art and the Rise of Network Television Lynn Spigel Google Books Aesthetica Magazine Artists Films Take on Mainstream CinemaReferences editA L Rees A History of Experimental Film and Video British Film Institute 1999 Malcolm Le Grice Abstract Film and Beyond MIT Press 1977 Scott MacDonald A Critical Cinema Volumes 1 2 3 4 and 5 Berkeley University of California Press 1988 1992 1998 2005 and 2006 Scott MacDonald Avant Garde Film Motion Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993 Holly Rogers Sounding the Gallery Video and the Rise of Art Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2013 Holly Rogers and Jeremy Barham the Music and Sound of Experimental Film Oxford Oxford University Press 2017 James Peterson Dreams of Chaos Visions of Order Understanding the American Avant Garde Cinema Detroit Wayne State University Press 1994 Jack Sargeant Naked Lens Beat Cinema Creation 1997 P Adams Sitney Visionary Film The American Avant Garde New York Oxford University Press 1974 Michael O Pray Avant Garde Film Forms Themes and Passions London Wallflower Press 2003 David Curtis ed A Directory of British Film and Video Artists Arts Council 1999 David Curtis Experimental Cinema A Fifty Year Evolution London Studio Vista 1971 Wheeler Winston Dixon The Exploding Eye A Re Visionary History of 1960s American Experimental Cinema Albany NY State University of New York Press 1997 Wheeler Winston Dixon and Gwendolyn Audrey Foster eds Experimental Cinema The Film Reader London Routledge 2002 Stan Brakhage Film at Wit s End Essays on American Independent Filmmakers Edinburgh Polygon 1989 Stan Brakhage Essential Brakhage Selected Writings on Filmmaking New York McPherson 2001 Parker Tyler Underground Film A Critical History New York Grove Press 1969 Jeffrey Skoller Shadows Specters Shards Making History in Avant Garde Film Minneapolis Minnesota UP 2005 Jackie Hatfield Experimental Film and Video John Libbey Publishing 2006 distributed in North America by Indiana University Press Gene Youngblood Expanded Cinema Dutton 1970 available as pdf at Ubuweb Dominique Noguez Eloge du cinema experimental Paris Experimental 2010 384 p ISBN 978 2 912539 41 0 in French Paris Experimental Al Rees David Curtis Duncan White Stephen Ball Editors Expanded Cinema Art Performance and Film Tate Publishing 2011 Chris Meigh Andrews A History of Video Art Bloomsbury Publishing 2014 Rachel Simpson Avant Garde Video Art How Experimental Filmmakers Create Immersive Experiences That Transcend Generic Cinema 2018 External links edit20 Essential Films For An Introduction To Avant Garde Cinema on Taste of Cinema Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Experimental film amp oldid 1183019516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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