Published by Dissidenz 2008-07-02 at 11:30

Richard Avedon - Photographs 1946-2004

juillet 1, 2008 12:00 àseptembre 28, 2008 12:00

Richard Avedon
Photographs 1946 - 2004

From 07 01 2008 until 09 28 2008

AutorportaitOrganised by the Louisiana Museum in Humlebaek with the cooperation of the Richard Avedon Foundation, this exhibition surveys the whole of Richard Avedon’s career, starting with his first steps as a fashion photographer at the end of the Second World War.

Avedon continued to photograph the creations of the big Parisian couture houses up until 1984, working first for Harper’s Bazaar and then for Vogue. Finding fashion photography too static and stuffy, he transformed it by introducing movement and photographing his models in public spaces.
He also made many portraits of celebrities from the worlds of literature, art and show business, always taking care to shatter the icon in order to reveal the true personality behind the public image.

In the 1960s, Avedon also ventured into photojournalism, covering such hot subjects as Civil Rights campaigners in the American South (1963), the Ku Klux Klan, patients in a mental hospital and the Vietnam war — both in the country itself, where he photographed military officers and napalm victims, and back home, where, a pacifist himself, he covered the hippie protests against the war.

In 1974 Avedon exhibited a series of his father, then dying of cancer, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. During this decade he continued his fashion photography and reportage, and also produced a series of 73 portraits of America’s political elite for Rolling Stone.

The early 1980s saw Avedon produce a long series of 700 portraits of middle class and poor Americans from the 17 western states. As if to refute the myth of the American West, these portraits, all taken outdoors against a white ground, show closed, tense and introverted faces with an intense but subjacent emotional power. At the end of the decade, a commission from the French magazine Égoïste gave Avedon the chance to cover the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Jeu de Paume
1, place de la Concorde
75008 Paris
métro Concorde

information: 01 47 03 12 50

Hours:
Tuesday: 12:00 - 21:00
Wednesday - Friday: 12:00 - 19:00
Saturday and Sunday: 10:00 - 19:00
Closed Monday

Published by Dissidenz 2008-02-27 at 11:57

DVD and independant labels exhibition in Paris

mars 1, 2008 2:00 àmars 2, 2008 8:00

Journées du DVD

Cinémas hors circuits : DVD and independant labels exhibition
saturday march 1st : from 2pm to 10pm
sunday march 2nd : from 3pm to 8pm
Point Ephémère 200 quai de Valmy 75010 Paris

1st show dedicated to independant DVD label but also books and magazines, Cinémas hors circuits will welcome more than sixty labels on a week-end in Paris.

Discover and find rare films, classics… Meet those who release your favourite movies on DVD and defend the cinema you like… Listen to presentations, discussions, assist to screenings… Share your passion for cinema !

Entrance is free

The whole program is there (in French) : Cinemashorscircuits.com

Published by Dissidenz 2008-02-27 at 11:49

Cinéma du Réel - International Documentary Film Festival

mars 7, 2008 12:00 àmars 18, 2008 11:59

Cinéma du Réel

Since 1978, the Cinéma du Réel international documentary film festival has been an outstanding international meeting point, where the public and professionals discover the films of experienced authors as well as new talents, the history of documentary cinema as well as contemporary works. The festival programs some hundred films for its various sections, screened at the Centre Pompidou, the Centre Wallonie-Bruxelles, the MK2 Beaubourg film theatre, the Paris City Hall and several other theatres in the Ile-de- France area.

International Competition

28 French and international premieres, as well as encounters and discussions with the filmmakers.
See the films in competition

French Selection
28 French and international premieres, as well as encounters and discussions with the filmmakers.
See the selection

Retrospectives and Special Programmes

Americana
A selection of films where commitment and the driving forces of socio-political movements (against the Vietnam war, for Black empowerment or… for a different way of life) are translated into cinematographic vitality, narrative inventiveness, reinventions of documentary and fiction The programme includes tributes to Shirley Clarke and Jim McBride.

In South-East Asia
From Kuala Lumpur to Manila, from Bangkok to Jakarta, documentary films lend images and sounds to long-buried stories, as witnessed by the works of filmmakers such as Garin Nugroho, Amir Muhammad, Raya Martin. The programme includes a tribute to Lav Diaz, the great Filipino poet of cinema, whose powerful films blend documentary and fiction into a lyrical experience.

Images / Prison: visions from inside
In several European countries, film—especially the documentary—has become a focus for workshops on filmmaking, projections and writing, organised within penal institutions. Here we attempt to understand what they mobilise within their makers and the spectators who watch them on the “outside”.

Figures of tourism : for a history of the “view”
It is well known that one part of the world makes a spectacle of the other part, and this does not date from the advent of digitalisation or miniaturisation of “picture-taking”. From the beginnings of cinema to the present day, what is being played out is a history of the “never seen” and the “already seen”. Modern tourism, with its desire for “authenticity” and “discovery, is the central theme of many films bearing the impossible dreams of the “first times”. Filmmakers take possession of tourist images, re-examine and re-compose them. The tourist as a character and tourist images as material for critical analysis guide a programme that mingles documentary and fiction, past and present, films and videos by plastic artists… to call into question the contemporary “view”.
In partnership with MNAM (Collections Cinéma et Nouveaux Medias), and in association with MK2 Beaubourg and ACRIF.

The Theatre of Reality
La Tentation du Paradis
by Vivianne Perelmuter and François Christophe, with Bruno Putzulu.
The staging of a semi-improvised piece of theatre; the play writes itself in the moment : a lost tourist, images of islands, the ghost of Christopher Columbus, tropical storms…

Special screenings and events Bernardo Bertolucci’s “La Via del petrolio”, Hartmut Bitomsky’s “Staub” etc

See the whole program on the Film Festival website

Published by Dissidenz 2008-02-19 at 4:31

Patti Smith at the Fondation Cartier, Paris

mars 28, 2008 11:00 àjuin 22, 2008 8:00

Land 250

The Fondation Cartier is hosting a major solo exhibition of the visual work of American artist and performer Patti Smith. Drawn from pieces created between 1967 and 2007, it strives to provide an insight into her lyrical, spiritual and poetic universe. Her expressive voice serves to magnify the installations created specifically for the exhibition: a synthesis of photographs, drawings and films.

While the name Patti Smith evokes an image of a founder of the New York punk-rock scene, she has explored the visual arts and poetry since the late 1960s. The exhibition at the Fondation Cartier embraces the various facets of her creative process. Patti Smith began to take photographs in 1967 for use in collages. In 1995, she returned to photography using a vintage Polaroid Land 250: “The immediacy of the process was a relief from the long involved process of drawing, recording, or writing a poem.” Many of Smith’s photographs embody significant personal meaning: Robert Mapplethorpe’s slippers, Virginia Woolf’s bed, Hermann Hesse’s typewriter and Arthur Rimbaud’s utensils. Others serve as a visual record of her well-traveled life. The exhibition also features a selection of the artist’s drawings, several of which are borrowed from prestigious institutions such as the MoMA and the Centre Pompidou or from private collections.

The powerful yet subtle drawings have been executed with a calligraphic sense of line entwined with poetry and text. They represent her solitary side. Her collaborative side is represented in films directed by Robert Frank, Robert Mapplethorpe and Jem Cohen and the audio performance of The Coral Sea with Kevin Shields. She will shoot a short film, specially commissioned for the exhibition. The exhibit also includes cherished belongings taken from her personal archives. Among them original manuscripts, a photograph taken by Constantin Brancusi and a stone from the river in which Virginia Woolf committed suicide.

Inspirations

The source of much of her inspiration has been key figures of French culture, including Arthur Rimbaud, Nicole Stéphane, Jean Genet, Antonin Artaud and René Daumal. Paris echoes throughout, from drawings executed in the Montparnasse district, where she lived during her first Parisian sojourn in 1969, to recent photographs taken in the garden of the Fondation Cartier, situated nearby.

A Comprehensive Project

To reflect the multitude of fields explored by Patti Smith, the exhibition is intended to be a comprehensive project that expands beyond the exhibition space. The Fondation Cartier is giving free rein to Patti Smith to oversee the
programming for the Nomadic Nights as well as performing herself, offering solo and band performances as well as informal poetry readings. The Fondation Cartier’s bookshop will, for a time, become the artist’s personal library. Her choice of books, CDs, films and objects will enable visitors to further penetrate the rich universe
of this iconic artist.

BIOGRAPHY

Patti Smith was born in Chicago and grew up in New Jersey. A maverick teenager with a passion for Rimbaud, she moved to New York in 1967, where she met Robert Mapplethorpe. In 1969, the pair moved into the Chelsea Hotel and befriended such artists and writers as Sam Shepard, Brice Marden, Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs. Absorbing herself in performance and poetry, she was inspired to create a fusion of improvisation, politics and rock’n’roll. She released her first single “Hey Joe/Piss Factory” in 1974, and along with the group Television helped create a strong protopunk movement at the legendary CBGB. In 1975, her first album Horses, graced with the iconic portrait by Robert Mapplethorpe, received international recognition, including the Grand Prix du disque Charles Cros (1975).

In 1977, a serious accident forced her into a long convalescence, during which she immersed herself in poetry and published Babel. The following year, her drawings were shown for the first time in New York at the Robert Miller Gallery. She also released the album Easter, which featured the single “Because the Night,” co-written with Bruce Springsteen.

In 1979, she left New York City and career behind, and moved to Detroit, Michigan to marry musician Fred Sonic Smith from the group MC5. They had two children and recorded Dream of Life, which included the anthem “People Have the Power.” In 1995, after the untimely death of her husband, she returned with her children to New York City and resumed her public life. In 2005, Patti Smith was awarded the Insignes de Commandeur dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Republic. In 2007, she was inducted into the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame, the highest accolade awarded to contemporary musicians.

FONDATION CARTIER pour l’art contemporain
261, boulevard Raspail 75014 Paris
Tél. 01 42 18 56 50 / Fax 01 42 18 56 52
fondation.cartier.com
Open from tuesdays to sundays, from 11am to 8pm.
Late nights on tuesdays to 10pm.

Published by Dissidenz 2007-12-01 at 7:08

Berlin International Film Festival

février 7, 2008 12:00 àfévrier 18, 2008 12:00

Berlin Film Festival

The movies in competition :

Feuerherz (Heart of Fire) - Germany/Austria - by Luigi Falorni

Julia - France - by Erick Zonca

Lady Jane - France - by Robert Guédiguian

Caos calmo (Quiet Chaos) - Italy – International Premiere - by Antonello Grimaldi

Happy-Go-Lucky - UK - by Mike Leigh

Restless - Israel/Germany/Canada/France/Belgium - by Amos Kollek

Elegy - USA - by Isabel Coixet

Sparrow - Hong Kong, China - by Johnnie To

Kabei (Kabei – Our Mother) - Japan – International Premiere - by Yoji Yamada

Kirschblüten - Hanami - Germany - by Doris Dörrie

There Will Be Blood - USA - by Paul Thomas Anderson

Zuo You (In Love We Trust) - China - by Wang Xiaoshuai

Lake Tahoe - Mexico - by Fernando Eimbcke

Gardens of the Night - Great Britain/USA - by Damian Harris

Tropa de Elite (The Elite Squad) - Brazil - by José Padilha

In S.O.P. Standard Operating Procedure - USA - by Errol Morris

Published by Dissidenz 2007-11-25 at 6:30

International Cinema Meetings in Paris

novembre 27, 2007 7:00 àdécembre 4, 2007 7:00

Rencontres Internationales de Cinéma à Paris


From the 27th of november to the 4th of december 2007
Theaters Reflet Médicis and L’Arlequin in Paris

The Forum des images hors les murs hosts the 13th Internation Cinema Meetings in Paris, from the 27th of november to the 4th of december, in the theaters Reflet Médicis and l’Arlequin.

This year, for focuses :
- Tribute to Todd Haynes
- Lech Kowalski
- Romanian Cinema
- International movie competition.

The Competition :

* Art of negative thinking (the), Bǻrd BREIEN, Norway
* Battle For Haditha, Nick BROOMFIELD, Great-Britain, Jordania
* Buddha collapsed out of shame, Hana MAKHMALBAF, Iran, France
* Capitaine Achab, Philippe RAMOS, France, Sweden
* Cochochi, Laura Amelia GUZMÁN, Israel CÁRDENAS, Mexico
* Homme qui marche (l’), Aurélia GEORGES, France
* Mère (la), Antoine CATTIN, Pavel KOSTOMAROV, Swizzerland, France, Russia
* Nos vies privées, Denis CÔTÉ, Canada
* Useless, Jia ZHANG-KE, China
* Visite de la fanfare (la), Eran KOLIRIN, Israël, France
* With the girl of black soil, Soo-il JEON, South Korea, France
* Wolfsbergen, Nanouk LEOPOLD, Neederlands, Belgium

More informations here.

Published by Dissidenz 2007-11-06 at 8:16

Destricted Xtended

novembre 8, 2007
7:00 à11:00

On the occasion of the DVD release of DESTRICTED, we are pleased to invite you to the Destricted Xtended Special Event in Paris at Maison Européenne de la Photographie (5-7, rue de Fourcy, Paris 4) on Thursday the 8th of November.

Reservation required in the limit of available seats. Free entrance as of 19:00.
Warning: the event is not for audience under 18.

Schedule of the evening:
As of 19:00 until 20:00 (admission until 19:30 only):
visit of the Larry Clark photo exhibit Tulsa, 1963-1971
20:00: Impaled by Larry Clark
20:45: Haruki Yukimura & Nana-Chan by Xavier Brillat
The screening will be followed by a cocktail party.

Destricted (er), v,
1. To unlimit restriction
2. To bring objectivity by putting out of restriction
3. To deconstruct within bounds, to unconfine
‘Destricted’ is the first short film collection of its kind, bringing together sex and art in a series of short films created by some of the world’s most visual and provocative artists and directors: Larry Clark, Matthew Barney, Richard Prince, Gaspar Noé, Marina Abramovic, Sam Taylor-Wood, Marco Brambilla.
Explicit, stimulating, challenging, provocative, strange or humorous, YOU decide!

Please note the film is not for audience under 18 and not recommended to sensitive viewers.

The 2-disc set includes the 7 films as well as exclusive special features: the making of Matthew Barney’s film, a deleted scene from Gaspar Noé’s film, an interview with Sam Taylor-Wood, the movie and video trailers, and a special hidden extra: ‘Haruki Yukimura & Nana-Chan’ by Xavier Brillat, followed by an interview with Xavier Brillat and Agnès Giard.
Optional English subtitles are available.
On DVD the 13th of November.

Reservation: Blaq Out at 01 42 77 88 20.

Published by Dissidenz 2007-10-03 at 11:07

Berlin Alexanderplatz at Grand Rex (Paris)

octobre 6, 2007 1:30 àoctobre 7, 2007 11:59

Berlin Alexanderplatz

On the occasion of the DVD release of Rainer W. Fassbinder’s imposing BERLIN ALEXANDERPLATZ, (re)discover the pilot and the 13 episodes of that saga at GRAND REX in Paris on October 6 and 7, 2007.

More details: www.berlinalexanderplatz.carlottafilms.com

The October 6 screening will be followed by a presentation with :

- Günter Lamprecht (Franz Biberkopf)
- Gottfried John (Reinhold)
- Harry Baer (Art department)
- Juliane Lorenz (Editor and President of the Fassbinder Foundation)
- Xavier Schwarzenberger (Cinematographer on the movie)
- Stephan Döblin (Son of Alfred Döblin, writer of the original novel)

The movie will also be screened at the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in New York. The more than 15-hour epic will be divided into 14 screening rooms—one for each episode of the film. This exhibition will be on view in the Third Floor Main Gallery from October 21, 2007 through January 7, 2008.

Published by Dissidenz 2007-06-13 at 7:03

Special screening of A LITTLE FAMILY CONVERSATION

juin 18, 2007
8:00

On the occasion of the DVD release of the documentary feature A Little Family Conversation by Helene Lapiower, a very special screening is taking place ON MONDAY the 18th of JUNE at 20:00 in Paris at Musée d’Art et d’Histoire du Judaïsme (71, rue du Temple, Paris 3, métro Rambuteau or Hôtel de Ville).

“When I began filming my family, I wanted to preserve images of my own world, which seemed to be slipping from grasp. A particular Jewish world on the brink of extinction like many such worlds. I also wanted to create a link between two worlds: me, the actress in Paris, in mine, and my family, working-class Polish Jewish immigrants, in theirs. The typical immigrant dilemma: you’re suffocated if you stay within the family; you’re an exile in the outside world. I filmed my family of Jewish tailors over a seven-year period; all their offspring have married blacks, Belgians and Arabs. Today I realize exactly what sort of film I’ve made. The burning question happened all by itself: At what point has my generation, and me along with it, been deeply affected by the weight of “history?” Did these great values of openness which had been passed down to us – and which are even drawn from the history of Jewish persecution – carry within them a contradiction which lead to the breakdown of Jewish identity? My film centers around this breakdown, full of rips and tears, and what is left of our identity. What will become of it all? Should something be left of it? And what exactly is “it all?””
Helene Lapiower

The screening will be followed by a debate with producer François Margolin and Alain Lapiower, Helene Lapiower’s brother.
Free entrance

A Little Family Conversation is available on DVD now with an exclusive tribute to Helene Lapiower (with François Margolin, Claire Denis, Yolande Zauberman, Andre Wilms and Adrien Walter) and the award-winning short film “Elle et Lui” by François Margolin with Helene Lapiower.
The DVD is NTSC and fully French/English bilingual (with optional English subtitles).

More details and reservation:
Blaq Out at 01 42 77 88 20

Published by Dissidenz 2007-06-13 at 7:01

Meet with director Alain Guiraudie

juin 19, 2007
7:00 à8:00

TUESDAY the 19th of JUNE AT 19:15 at Blaq Out la boutique, meet with French director Alain Guiraudie on the occasion of the DVD release of his cult short films Du soleil pour les gueux (2001) and That Old Dream That Moves (2001) (Shellac) with English subtitles available.

Du soleil pour les gueux (literally: Sun For The Beggars) features the bizarre cinematic world of experimental director Alain Giraudie: a coming-of-age comedy which skips breezily between a range of genres and styles, in a universe where the boundaries between dreams, nightmares and reality are hard to distinguish.
Every story has already been told, and it’s only through tone that I can bring out something new“, says Guiraudie. “What I don’t understand is why people don’t mix genres more after a hundred years of cinema. (…)  I am also reacting against a certain kind of French cinema -rban, set indoors, bourgeois. I need to make films that take place outside and are by nature ‘populist’… My characters have difficulty paying their bills and finding work.”
His 50-minute featurette, That Old Dream That Moves (New York Film Festival, 2001), was set among the skeleton crew of a closing factory, and even as its sober social realism turned unexpectedly hot and heavy, the hard facts of underemployment stayed front and center.
Characterized by a complete absence of foreshadowing, Guiraudie’s films are premised on the unexpected harmony between discordant elements. His quaint neo-surrealism effectively reconnects a debased language to its political imperative. “Surrealism is by definition engaged in social reality,” says Guiraudie. “Dreams are fed by reality, and in turn shine a new light on reality. Cinema must not content itself with copying life. It’s necessary to sublimate the daily grind and to bridge the gap between reality and utopia. We have to try, in any event.”

The presentation will be followed by a drink.
Blaq Out la boutique: 52 rue Charlot - 75003 Paris - tel. 01 42 77 88 18