CINEMA PARENTHÈSE #4 presents Emily Richardson (uk) in person (Films+Talks) – Cinema Galeries

CINEMA PARENTHÈSE #4 presents Emily Richardson (uk) in person (Films+Talks)

    « Emily Richardson’s films explore sites, landscapes, and particular environments in transition to reveal the way that activity, movement and light – often as memory and absence – is inscribed in place. The consistent use of the time-lapse technique, deconstruct spatial and temporal relations, and works as a passage – from the past to the future – to discover how the impact of time transforms and develops different sites, urban spaces, and architectures, including empty East End streets, forests, North Sea oil fields, post-war tower blocks and Cold War military facilities. »

     

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    CINEMA PARENTHÈSE #4 presents Emily Richardson (uk) in person (Films+Talks)

    INTRODUCTION
    By Cinema Parenthèse and Emily Richardson

    COBRA MIST
    2008 | 16 mm anamorphic | color | sound | 6’53
    Cobra Mist explores the relationship between the landscape of Orford Ness and the traces of its military history, particularly the experiments in radar and the extraordinary architecture of the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment. Much of what took place there is still under the official secrets act so will only be revealed over time. The buildings have been left to the elements to deteriorate, creating a tension between the time it will take for their secrets to come out and for the buildings to disappear. The place has a sinister atmosphere, which the architecture itself begins to reveal or hint at. The film records the physical traces of its often secretive past using the photographic nature of 16mm film and time lapse to construct an impossible experience of the landscape and expose its history to the camera.

    REDSHIFT
    2001 | 16 mm | color | sound | 3’53
    In astronomical terminology redshift is a term used in calculating the distance of stars from the earth, hence determining their age. Redshift attempts to show the huge geometry of the night sky and give an altered perspective of the landscape, using long exposures, fixed camera positions, long shots and timelapse animation techniques to reveal aspects of the night that are invisible to the naked eye.
    The film has a gentle intensity to it, and is composed of changes of light across the sea, sky and mountains. It shows movement where there is apparent stillness, whether in the formation of weather patterns, movement of stars, the illumination of a building by passing car headlights or boats darting back and forth across the sea’s horizon.

    NOCTURNE
    2002 | 16 mm | color | sound | 4’59
    Nocturne is shot entirely at night in deserted streets around the east end of London and Docklands. The images reveal the presence of the past, or the presence of the dead, hinting at it’s concealed history. « Nocturne » is composed of long static viewpoints on 16mm film, using long exposures and time-lapse techniques together give the film an intensity of colour and a sense of fleeting or historical time. The drab, deserted streets are transformed as they appear in hyper-real colour, devoid of traffic and human activity. The film has a neurotic, electric quality as the only signs of life are lights turning on and off in buildings, the occasional ghost image of passing cars and the pulse of overhead trains. On these forgotten streets the sounds of night puncture the silence with more frantic, desperate outbursts and the silence becomes an active element.

    ASPECT
    2004 | 16 mm | color | sound | 8’46
    Aspect is filmed in a forest over the period of a year. Using photographic techniques, such as time-lapse and long exposures on single film frames, the forest year is condensed into a few minutes. Light, colour and shadow travel across its surface and the film shifts between seeing the trees as trees and seeing the movement of light and shadow abstracting the real environment. Fragments of unconscious forest sounds, ants in their anthill, the wind across the forest floor, the crack of a twig are reconfigured into an audio piece by Benedict Drew, that articulates the film (and the forest) in an illusive and ambiguous way.

    BLOCK
    2005 | 16 mm | color | sound | 12’43
    Day through night « Block » is a portrait of a 1960’s London tower block, its interior and exterior spaces explored and revealed, patterns of activity building a rhythm and viewing experience not dissimilar from the daily observations of the security guard sat watching the flickering screens with their fixed viewpoints and missing pieces of action. Eschewing “documentary” interviews with residents for a night-and-day time-lapse tableau of the building’s formidable architecture, it is a powerfully modulated and intensely rhythmic piece.

    PETROLIA
    2005 | 16 mm to file | color | sound | 20’59
    Day through night « Block » is a portrait of a 1960’s London tower block, its interior and exterior spaces explored and revealed, patterns of activity building a rhythm and viewing experience not dissimilar from the daily observations of the security guard sat watching the flickering screens with their fixed viewpoints and missing pieces of action. Eschewing “documentary” interviews with residents for a night-and-day time-lapse tableau of the building’s formidable architecture, it is a powerfully modulated and intensely rhythmic piece.

    SPENDER HOUSE
    2018 | hd | color | sound | 15’00
    The Spender House in Essex was designed in 1968 by Richard and Su Rogers (Team 4) for photographer and artist Humphrey Spender. It was a prototype and precursor to the iconic house, Parkside, designed for Rogers’ parents the following year, making it the first example of hi-tech domestic architecture in the UK. Spender died in 2005 but his spirit is still very present in the house and studio. The film explores the unique architectural qualities of the house and studio and provides a glimpse of its former inhabitants life and work as a painter, textile designer and photographer of British life in the 1930s for Mass Observation. Spender House is a temporal exploration of place, an exploded portrait of architecture and inhabitant aided by the use of archival sound recording of interviews made with Spender for the British Library. Connections are made between the place and the person, the place and the archive. There are many rich narratives contained here. To represent the architecture, its interior, the studio and its contents, its position in the landscape and its inhabitants demonstrates the significance of the place.

    CONVERSATION
    with Emily Richardson

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    ORIGINAL LANGUAGE
    Sounds

    SUBTITLES
    /

    PLACE
    Room 3
    Galerie de la Reine 26

    1000 Bruxelles

    PRIZES
    6 €/ 4€ (Cash Only)

    SCHEDULE
    > 21.09 / 19:00

    FACEBOOK EVENT
    > FB Event

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