Hi,

I'm new to the list and to Baltimore, but thought the following screenings
(Feb 5 and 11) might be of interest.

Additionally, I am wondering if anyone in the Baltimore area has an optical
printer I might use to print three rolls of film.

thanks!

Jonna


----- Original Message -----
From:
"Teka Selman" <[email protected]>

To:
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Cc:

Sent:
Tue, 28 Jan 2014 14:35:24 +0000
Subject:
FW: Visibility Machines: Harun Farocki and Trevor Paglen presented by the
Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture at UMBC and the Center for
Advanced Media at Johns Hopkins University


 From: Art&Education <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, January 27, 2014 at 8:00 PM
To: Teka Selman <[email protected]>
Subject: Visibility Machines: Harun Farocki and Trevor Paglen presented by
the Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture at UMBC and the Center for
Advanced Media at Johns Hopkins University

  January 27, 2014 [image: Art and
Education]<http://interspire.e-flux.com/link.php?M=28655&N=7867&L=27&F=H>
 [image: 
jan27_maryland_img.jpg]<http://interspire.e-flux.com/link.php?M=28655&N=7867&L=15188&F=H>
 Left: James Benning, *Ten Skies *(still), 2004. 16mm film. Courtesy of the
artist. Right: Stuart Cooper, *Overlord* (still), 1975. 35mm film. Courtesy
of Janus Films.
 University of Maryland Baltimore County *Visibility Machines: Harun
Farocki and Trevor Paglen*

February 5, 2014, 6pm

*Shriver Hall, Johns Hopkins University*3400 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218

February 11, 2014, 6pm
*AV Center, *
*Milton S Eisenhower Library*JHU Homewood Campus
3400 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218

For more information, please contact:

*Center for Art Design and Visual Culture *T +1 410 455 3188

www.umbc.edu/cadvc<http://interspire.e-flux.com/link.php?M=28655&N=7867&L=15187&F=H>
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*Film Program in association with Visibility Machines: Harun Farocki and
Trevor Paglen presented by the Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture at
UMBC and **the *
*Center for Advanced Media at Johns Hopkins University*

<http://interspire.e-flux.com/link.php?M=28655&N=7867&L=15187&F=H>The
Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture at the University of Maryland
Baltimore County presents a two-night film program curated by Sonja Simonyi
in conjunction with the exhibition

*Visibility Machines: Harun Farocki and Trevor Paglen.*Organized in
collaboration with the Center for Advanced Media Studies at Johns Hopkins
University, the program focuses on diverging cinematic representations of
the military industrial complex. Expanding on the themes from the
exhibition, Harun Farocki and Trevor Paglen were invited to each select a
film that deeply influenced their thinking about war-making and
image-making, a selection which will be paired with the artist's own works
on film and video.


*February 5*

*Harun Farocki selects:**Overlord *(Stuart Cooper, 1975, United Kingdom,
b&w, 95 minutes, 35mm)
*Inextuinguishable Fire *(Harun Farocki, 1969, b&w, 21 mins, digital
transfer of 16mm)

The 1975 film *Overlord*, chosen by Harun Farocki, places warfare in a
fictional framework, evoking questions on the different ways in which
archival footage can be incorporated into new filmic material to provide a
thoughtful reconstruction of war. While Farocki does not approach the theme
of war in a narrative context, issues relating to the visual representation
of military strikes, and the formal strategies employed to construct such
images, provide useful links to Farocki's filmmaking as well. Meticulously
researched, and using carefully selected footage from the film archives of
the Imperial War Museum in Great Britain, *Overlord* follows a young
soldier's experiences of the Allied Forces' D-Day invasion of Normandy
during the Second World War. The striking aesthetic quality of the film was
achieved by matching the archival material with live-action scenes shot
with period lenses on old film stock. *Overlord* will be preceded by Harun
Farocki's seminal essay-film *Inextinguishable Fire*, which powerfully
dissects the connections between napalm bombings during the Vietnam War and
diverging corporate and industrial interests that lie at the basis of the
chemical's destructive use by the US Army. As the filmmaker suggests, links
between production, labor, and the ultimate implementation of a given
product in warfare have been successfully separated and obfuscated in
contemporary capitalist society.


*February 11*

*Trevor Paglen selects:**Ten Skies *(James Benning, 2004, United States,
color, 109 minutes, 16mm)
*Drone Vision *(Trevor Paglen, 2010, United States, b&w, 5 minutes, video)

Trevor Paglen's selection, James Benning's *Ten Skies*, shows the skies and
the continuous shifts in cloud formations above and around Val Verde, a
small town in California. A formally rigorous work, it documents the
effects of the physical transformation of the landscape below, brought
about by natural processes as well as marks of human intrusion into the
setting, such as wildfires and industrial pollution. This poetic
experimental film, displaying a series of static shots, provides evocative
links with Paglen's work, for whom the sky frequently becomes an abstracted
sphere in which one can probe, and potentially detect traces of military
activity. Importantly, despite the seemingly unassuming subject matter of *Ten
Skies*, Benning has repeatedly highlighted its political significance as an
"anti-war artwork ... about the antithesis of war, the kind of beauty we're
destroying." The screening will follow Trevor Paglen's video *Drone Vision*,
which shows images recorded by a momentarily aimless drone that were
intercepted by the artist. The visual data reveals the machine eerily
mimicking the wandering motions of human vision.



*Visibility Machines: Harun Farocki and Trevor Paglen*This exhibition,
curated by Niels Van Tomme, explores the unique roles Harun Farocki and
Trevor Paglen play as meticulous observers of the global military
industrial complex. Investigating forms of military surveillance,
espionage, war-making, and weaponry, *Visibility Machines* highlights how
the artists each examine the deceptive and clandestine ways in which
military projects have deeply transformed, and politicized, our
relationship to images and the realities they seem to represent.

On view at the Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture from October 24,
2013 through February 22, 2014. For more information, visit
www.umbc.edu/cadvc/exhibitions/VisibilityMachines.

<http://interspire.e-flux.com/link.php?M=28655&N=7867&L=15186&F=H>Admission
to the film program and exhibition is free. Supported by the Andy Warhol
Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation,
the Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen, the Goethe-Institut Washington, DC,
the Baltimore County Commission on Art and Sciences, and the Maryland State
Arts Council.

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-- 
Jonna McKone
www.jonnamckone.com
@jonnamckone
240.988.8268.
<http://jonnamckone.com>
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