Wed 16th 11pm 

|  on location

Tina Willgren SE The Polymoids 2 min 51s 2010
Heiko Daxl DE Lunapark 2 min 48s 2010
Francesca Fini    IT    Oasi Nel Deserto    5 min    2010 (pictured)
Ali Pekel TR/DE 7 Portrait (short) ca. 5 min 2010
Wesley Leon Aroozoo    Singapore    Peep    5 min    2010
Sergio Cruz UK    Exotica    5 min 2010

afterward media in motion

Ingeborg Fuelepp and Heiko Daxl, the driving forces behind media in motion, present highlights from their Pixxelpoint Festival

Arjan Brentjes The 21st Century 3 min 30s, 2010
Mihai Grecu  Centipede Sun 10 min 10s
Richard O’Sullivan Broken Windows 5 min 14s 2008
Boris Eldagsen  SPAM the Musical (Lonely Girls) 4 min 56s 2008
Boris Eldagsen SPAM the Musical (the Lottery)“ 5 min 30s 2010
François Vautier BLADE RUNNER revisited >3.6 gigapixels 4 min 13s 2009
François Vautier ants in my scanner 1 min 51s

afterward DJ Aligator (Ali Pekel)

Mon 14th 6pm

photo by Sheila Rock

Cine Opera | An Evening with Michael Nyman in cooperation with  Myriam Blundell Projects

“When I started there was no intention to make films or a book of photographs. It happened because I was there, had a camera and an eye and a curiosity, my own visual diaries of a distracted but persistent mind.” 

Michael Nyman, 2009

CINE OPERA is a series of video works shot by composer, artist and filmmaker Michael Nyman in various parts of the world during the past fifteen years. Drawn from his globe-trotting travels, introspective journeys and life-changing discoveries, the series is a collection of 50 cinematographic records documenting various capsules of every-day life, spontaneous events and chosen circumstances through first-hand observation. The work is an attempt to capture living cultures and forgotten traditions in a format which illustrates a diaristic study of modern-day life. Although, an obvious parallel can be made with the current reality TV phenomena in pop culture and in some cases to the polemic argument over pervasive CCTV surveillance in most countries, Nyman’s intentions go beyond the act of simple observation, and the obvious criticism of continuous scrutiny and voyeurism in contemporary societies. “Cine Opera” appropriates content from everyday life and delivers a quirky yet brutally truthful view of the world in which we live. The footage is blissfully accompanied by Nyman’s soundtrack which is deeply influenced from borrowed, local sounds and blended with the vast range of his musical repertoire. As a result, the mundane becomes peculiar, the unknown romantic, and the forgotten suddenly recalled. The series emerges as a thorough study of our uneasy times and attempts to reflect on the human condition in this nascent century.

still from Witness I

Myriam Blundell Projects

Michael Nyman

Mon 14th 8pm

still from Wistle While You Work

Cine Opera | An Evening with Michael Nyman in cooperation with  Myriam Blundell Projects

“When I started there was no intention to make films or a book of photographs. It happened because I was there, had a camera and an eye and a curiosity, my own visual diaries of a distracted but persistent mind.” 

Michael Nyman, 2009

CINE OPERA is a series of video works shot by composer, artist and filmmaker Michael Nyman in various parts of the world during the past fifteen years. Drawn from his globe-trotting travels, introspective journeys and life-changing discoveries, the series is a collection of 50 cinematographic records documenting various capsules of every-day life, spontaneous events and chosen circumstances through first-hand observation. The work is an attempt to capture living cultures and forgotten traditions in a format which illustrates a diaristic study of modern-day life. Although, an obvious parallel can be made with the current reality TV phenomena in pop culture and in some cases to the polemic argument over pervasive CCTV surveillance in most countries, Nyman’s intentions go beyond the act of simple observation, and the obvious criticism of continuous scrutiny and voyeurism in contemporary societies. “Cine Opera” appropriates content from everyday life and delivers a quirky yet brutally truthful view of the world in which we live. The footage is blissfully accompanied by Nyman’s soundtrack which is deeply influenced from borrowed, local sounds and blended with the vast range of his musical repertoire. As a result, the mundane becomes peculiar, the unknown romantic, and the forgotten suddenly recalled. The series emerges as a thorough study of our uneasy times and attempts to reflect on the human condition in this nascent century.

still from Witness I

Myriam Blundell Projects

Michael Nyman