Hello Albert,
I enjoyed a few minutes of the film you posted, even with my non-existent 
Spanish.

It raises a question I’ve puzzled over. We used to be bemused by the fact that, 
since film projection is intermittent and interrupted by a shutter, blocking 
light to the screen, we were perhaps sitting in darkness during half of a 
screening, watching the persistent images in our minds. It’s hard to research 
how video technology works comparatively, but I find some suggestions that 
there is no similar dark interval in video projection (if there is it’s 
fleeting — the blanking interval etc.) so I wonder how the video technology 
affects our physiology.

Can anyone share info or a source for info or thoughts on info about this? 

Thanks,
Robert

Robert Withers
withe...@earthlink.net
202 West 80 St #5W NYNY 10024


From: Albert Alcoz <albertal...@gmail.com <mailto:albertal...@gmail.com>>
Subject: [Frameworks] "All the Dark Screens"
Date: March 30, 2019 at 4:15:03 AM EDT
To: Experimental Film Discussion List <frameworks@jonasmekasfilms.com 
<mailto:frameworks@jonasmekasfilms.com>>


Hello,

I'm writing this email to share a video essay titled "All the Dark Screens" 
created by the curator Alexandra Laudo and me under the project Soy Cámara by 
the CCCB:
http://www.cccb.org/en/multimedia/videos/all-the-dark-screens/231229 
<http://www.cccb.org/en/multimedia/videos/all-the-dark-screens/231229>

It is a 25 minute video –with an Spanish voice over– where some esthetic and 
ideological issues are exemplified through experimental films and artist's 
videos:

In a society dominated by the power of screens and images, audiovisual darkness 
can be a strategy of resistance. We tend to associate screens with light, but 
darkness has been consubstantial with audiovisual creation since the dawn of 
the cinema. “All the Dark Screens" presents a fragmentary genealogy of the use 
and presence of opacity and the absence of image in cinematographic and video 
creation, and reflects on the poetic and political power of these forms of 
audiovisual iconoclasm, and on their relation with our ways of seeing and not 
seeing.

The points of departure are the video/action by Scott Stark switching off 
public TV monitors ("A Better World (for Rick P)" <https://vimeo.com/11156435> 
) and the idea questioned here by Yoel Miranda on October of 2007 ("how much of 
what we see is black?" <http://www.hi-beam.net/fw/fw36/0610.html>).

Since it is an informative and pedagogical video, with dozens of short clips by 
independent filmmakers credited at the end, would be great if you to share it 
through social networks.

All the best,
Albert Alcoz
-- 
http://visionaryfilm.net/ <http://www.visionaryfilm.net/>
http://albertalcoz.com/ <http://www.albertalcoz.com/>
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