Monday 8 February 2010

Help one of last years students creat a piece of work for his Illustration course at Central St. Martins. Please see below: http://tragicglamour.co.uk/

One last thing... I have a new site for my latest project at CSM ( http://tragicglamour.co.uk/ ) if you could promote it to any staff/students I need people to email me their little disappointments to gallery@tragicglamour.co.uk so I can create a visual response and upload it to the site, its all explained on the website. Thank you David Lynn

Thursday 4 February 2010


We will be having an exhibition at Kirkby Library from the 15th March to 6th June 2010 and we are inviting you to submit work for this.
Mindful that you will need your best work for your portfolio, you might consider submitting prints or photographs.

Sue

Wednesday 3 February 2010

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5wHMgTPF-s

Contextual Studies 4/2/10

JAN SVANKMAJER

'Shock and incomprehension are probably the first reactions to the films of Jan Svankmajer. The imagery is violent, witty and disturbing in its transformations and juxtapositions of objects, materials and beings. The humour is black and the editing rhythm's sharp and remorseless. Moreover, for Westerners, the films don't fit readily into any tradition, genre or filmic category:to describe Svankmajer simply as an animator would be misleading. His use of puppets and trick photography signals roots and references and an aesthetic that, at first, are deeply perplexing. The work induces a kind of critical and cultural trauma, and reveals a technical brilliance and soaring of imagination rare in cinema today.'

Michael O'Pray

(Monthly Film Bulletin no.630, July 1986)


Today's session will feature the Czech Surrealist filmaker Jan Svankmajer and the German animator Lotte Reiniger. Both taking the art of collage to extreme lengths.
Svankmajer is a prolific filmmaker who has made a steady stream of films from 1964 up until the present day. He is often named as being a big influence on today's subversive filmmakers Tim Burton, Terry Gilliam, The brother Quay, and Shane Acker. (amongst others) One of the films I am going to show today 'Dimensions of Dialogue' (1980) was selected by Terry Gilliam as one of the '10 best animated films of all time.'

Svankmajer's films are often characterised by their exaggerated sounds, fast motion sequences, and stop-motion animation. His references weave through poetry and literature, and his obsessions are evident: effigies, disembowelment, bodily ruptures, cannibalism, disgorgement, surrealist lists and a macabre wit. Not too distant from Max Ernst's collages of fiendish and delectable nightmares, and reminiscent of the American surrealist Joseph Cornell's 'boxes'.

In 1972 Svankmajer was banned by the communist authorities from making films and many of his later films were also suppressed. As a result he didn't really come to prominence in the West until the 1980's.

LOTTE REINIGER
(1899-1981)
Altogether Reiniger has made nearly 60 films.
From the first, Reiniger was attracted to timeless fairy-tale stories for her animations. Cinderella and The Sleeping Beauty were among her earliest subjects. She made the specific animation technique of silhouette animation, her own. Taking the ancient art of shadow-plays, as perfected predominantly in China and Indonesia, and adapting it superbly for cinema.
The avant-garde artist and filmmaker Hans Richter was a life long friend and wrote of her that 'she belonged to the avant-garde as far as independent production and courage were concerned' even though the spirit of her work perhaps harked back to an early innocent age.
Her work seems particularly relevant today with the explosion of artists using card cut out techniques in their work, and significantly with the new exhibition of Afro Modern which has just opened at Tate Liverpool. Expressly influencing 'cut out' artists Kara Walker and Ellen Gallagher.
At the end of the Contextual studies session you are invited to post a comment about the fims shown.