International Short Film Festival
53rd edition. The event explores the boundaries between cinema and artists' film and video work. The programme include three works created especially for the festival by Morgan Fisher, Pierre Bismuth and Steve Reinke.
53rd edition
In its 2007 edition, the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen is continuing
to explore the boundaries between cinema and artists’ film and video work. The
festival is pleased to invite artists, curators, film and art critics and the
audience to Kinomuseum, an exhibition that takes the form of a series of cinema
programmes exploring the relationship between cinema and the museum.
Within the Kinomuseum programme, Oberhausen will premiere three works created
especially for the festival: Morgan Fisher’s Screening Room (1968/2007), accompanied
by an artists’ talk, Pierre Bismuth’s Following the Right Hand of Humphrey Bogart
and Ingrid Bergmann in Casablanca, and Steve Reinke’s new video One Night at
André’s. It also includes works by Marina Abramovic, The American Museum of
Natural History, Bernadette Corporation, Gregg Bordowitz, Pablo Bronstein, David
Dempewolf, Georges Franju, Megan Fraser, Hermine Freed, Dan Graham, Emma Hart,
Judith Hopf, Joan Jonas, William E. Jones, Amar Kanwar, David Lamelas, The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Sherry Milner with Ernie Larsen, Deimantas Narkevicius,
Seth Price, Alain Resnais, Michael Robinson, David Thorne and Julia Meltzer, Sarah
Vanagt, Emily Wardill, Lawrence Weiner, Emma Wolukau-Wanambwa and Ina Wudtke amongst
many others.
Curated by Ian White (Adjunct Film Curator, Whitechapel Gallery, London), Kinomuseum
proposes an alternative to the conservative separation between the museum and the
auditorium, imagining a new kind of museum rising from the foundations of an
artists’ cinema. A museum that is transitory and poses the auditorium as a vital
site of exchange and experience. A museum that enables the exhibition of works where
meaning is contingent upon the principles and operating systems of the cinema.
Kinomuseum consists of a ten-part series of programmes. Five programmes of work will
examine artists’ representations of the museum and its associated structures and
ideas. Five guest curators have been invited, through selecting one film programme
each, to construct a unique imaginary museum in the cinema itself: Achim
Borchardt-Hume (curator, Tate, London; proposes “Zeichentrick,” a museum on the line
between film and painting), AA Bronson (artist, New York; proposes “Sex Work: The
museum as brothel, art house as porn house”), Mary Kelly (artist, Los Angeles;
proposes “Fallout”, a museum of disaster), Mark Leckey (artist, London; personally
presents a specially conceived collection) and Emily Pethick (director, Casco
Projects, Utrecht; proposes a “Hall of Mirrors”).
Kinomuseum is accompanied by two discussions: on May 7, Chrissie Iles (Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York), Alexander Horwath (Austrian Film Museum, Vienna),
Marysia Lewandowska (artist, London), Philippe-Alain Michaud (Centre Pompidou,
Paris) and Vanessa Joan Mueller (Kunstverein fuer die Rheinlande und Westfalen,
Duesseldorf) will discuss the question “Does the museum fail?“. On May 6, Matt
Hanson (writer and filmmaker, Brighton), Oskar Negt (writer and sociologist,
Hannover), Jonathan Rosenbaum (film critic, Chicago) and Gertjan Zuilhof
(International Film Festival Rotterdam) will talk about “Privatisation of film
experience”, moderated by Olaf Moeller (writer and film critic, Cologne).
In addition to Kinomuseum, Oberhausen will present four profiles of artists and
filmmakers Guy Ben-Ner (Israel), Marjoleine Boonstra (Netherlands), Kanai Katsu
(Japan) and Ken Kobland (USA), a series of screenings of the leading experimental
film distributors across the globe and, of course, the traditional four competition
sections.
Lichtburg Filmpalast
Elsaesser Str. 26 - Oberhausen