Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona

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              120 Archival description results for Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona

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              2017 - The Unseen Workshop
              ES ES-OVNI TS-S001 · Series · 2017
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              2017 - The Unseen Workshop

              / TONI SERRA *) ABU ALI

              Toni Serra *) Abu Ali

              An activity in the framework of OVNI programme for 2017 at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona that proposes -with the help of videos and texts- to go in depth into the notion of the invisible. Given by Toni Serra (Abu Ali), the workshop goes from the political to the poetic, or from poetry to mysticism.

              From forced invisibility to permanent exhibition in the panopticon. The image as a veil. Tunnels of reality. The reality of the dream. Crossing the other side. On contemplation. The one and the multiple.

              You are asleep and your vision is a dream; all you are seeing is a mirage. (1)

              Capitalism’s gigantic audio-visual machine, like all its machines, is driven by an extractivist impulse: life as an infinite reservoir to be exploited. It makes sense to counter this instrumentalist drive with a method based on collaboration, immersion, and commitment that weaves together the creators of images and their environment, and does not turn them into mere agents at the service of that machine. However, there is a danger that this measure alone will be insufficient and reversible, unless it is accompanied by a radical critique of the notion of vision that has prevailed in the dominant global culture: if we do not consider vision’s capacity to extract but also to involve and project, if we do not deconstruct the visual language that implements the colonisation of time and of perception....

              We normally associate images with vision, but in the society of global capitalism the use of images as spectacle (2) has turned vision into a kind of blindness, creating an imaginary woven from a huge number of images that are renewed and also replicated unceasingly. A tissue that solidifies until it forms a dense veil of images that not only hinders vision and obstructs direct experience, but also tends to colonise our realities and dreams, while plundering deposits of fantasy (3) and personal or shared imaginaries. A dominant reality that threatens the fabric of other realities, that threatens to wipe out forms of knowledge, landscapes, people, ways of life, affects... As if a thousand libraries of Alexandria, still embedded in people’s daily lives, in their chores, their places, were already burning once again.

              Much has been said about the manipulative nature of media images, their capacity to deflect, distort, and distract the senses, creating a vision of reality that is completely biased on favour of the big economic powers. A huge, seemingly diverse, audio-visual production machine, in the hands of a few private, government, or hybrid corporations. But the real power of these images does not lie in denying, coercing, or manipulating (which always generate resistance and thus opposition), but in claiming to build, to constitute, to give space and make meaning. In other words, to create an imaginary and offer a place, an individual or creative role in that master film that will then be projected under the heading of “reality”. Of course it is no more real than a theme park or a shopping mall that simulates town squares, street musicians, and even action scenes...

              This spectacle-reality is forged in the constant, high centrifugation of labels: news, fiction, advertising, education, entertainment, training, and so on. Themes and concepts are mixed together, and so is the syntax of consumption, permutating them in time and space until they become indistinguishable or their differences become irrelevant, once they are consumed and absorbed as part of the same segment of experience.

              Audio-visual media have undergone radical change and hybridisation under the impetus of the new consumer, entertainment, and socialisation technologies. They have partly yielded the oligopoly of the means of audio-visual production, and are now complemented (and challenged) by the massive spread of devices for recording, editing, and disseminating images. They have hybridised with other media based on micro-segments of information and opinion..., creating a dense media ambience in which TV news, advertising, video games, film, advertorials, and social media are constantly in self-referential mode. Inspired by marketing strategies and informed by the personal information that is “voluntarily” provided on so-called social networks, critical voices also take on a spectacle-role. An implementation of a new version of the panopticon, given that any “social” element of these networks dissolves with the ownership, management, and use of the data they amass.

              Models are no longer simply projected onto passive viewers, like in the old Hollywood dream factory. Instead, what were formerly audiences are offered an “opportunity to participate”, a chance for interaction that gives them an active leading role in a pre-written script. Stories, feelings, private and shared dramas, aspirations, desires, dreams, fears, likes and dislikes, emotions and ideas, are the raw material that fuels the great accumulation machine, always geared towards obtaining and maintaining maximum profit in the form of financial or cognitive capital. In this context, as Pasolini saw, free participation and interaction paradoxically coexists with looting and plunder, with the exploitation of the enormous experiential and cultural reservoirs, the personal and collective realities of those who participate, whose reality either becomes productive or is cancelled. The “raw material” is used according to the financial logic of marketing and the politics of control. It is extracted, inserted into the timeline (4), filtered, and put back on screen in the form of the global imaginary.

              The dominant power presents itself in an outward-oriented imaginary, but this does not mean that it is only used on forms and surfaces. Rather, it provokes and forces the interior – anonymous, hidden, insignificant – to flow towards the surface, to be reduced to it, to show and advertise itself and ultimately become only that outwardness. Only thus can it be mapped in its entirety, its identities grouped and produced, experts assigned, and goods targeted to it.

              The sleep of our era is not a good sleep that provides rest. It’s an anxious sleep that leaves you feeling even more worn out (...) There is a narcosis that begs for an even deeper narcosis . (5)

              This is the sleep that gives rise to “capitalist realism” (6), which mainly affects people living in the central parts of the global system, where capitalism tends to seem unfair but unavoidable, with no conceivable alternative. Mark Fisher, who coined the term, describes it as the impossibility of there being space for an alternate possibility within a capitalist framework.

              Capitalist realism cannot be confined to art or the quasi-propagandistic way in which advertising functions. It is more like a pervasive atmosphere, conditioning not only the production of culture but also the regulation of work and education, and acting as a kind of invisible barrier constraining thought and action. (7)

              Capitalist realism, implemented as a hegemonic ideology, consists of the conviction that there is no alternative to the paradigm of capitalist social organisation, and also of its own means of reproduction and dissemination to most of the population.

              As we have seen, the image industry and the media are essential for projecting this capitalist realism onto the social screen. Two of its media strategies are notable for their capacity to go viral.

              The first, presented as “information” and “objectivity”, consists of what we could call the creation and export of the visual concept of poverty. Through images (preferably taken from countries on the global periphery), news and mainstream documentaries present decontextualised, re-situated visual segments that illustrate the dominant idea of poverty for “central” audiences and export it as a global imaginary. At the same time

              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S011-SS006 · Subseries · 2006
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Autonomous Zones _ OVNI 2006

              Colonial dream - Autonomous zones Archive

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              Jean Pierre Gambarotta

              Unknown or unspecified country.

              United States of America.

              Mapas de Oriente Medio.

              Media Education Foundation

              Deir Yassin Remembered

              Gli Ultracorpi della Porta Accanto

              On Translation: Fear/Miedo

              United States of America.

              Caravana Europea contra la valla de la muerte

              Colectivo Frontera Sur ,

              El Batalett – Femmes de la Medina

              Africa, Destacados de 1947

              United States of America.

              Les Statues Meurent Aussi

              CONTRAPLANO - LAD (Laboratori d'Acció Documental)

              United Kingdom (Great Britain).

              Cuando la tierra tiembla

              United States of America.

              El Río de las Estrellas

              ARCHIVO DEL OLVIDO
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S015-SS007 · Subseries · 2012
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              Workshop Sala Mirador (4th floor)

              Roar - Revolution as a Co-Creative Process

              Float Like a Butterfly, Sting Like a Bee

              United States of America.

              The Mahabharata : Part Three : The War

              United Kingdom (Great Britain).

              Now I become Death, the Destroyer of the Worlds

              Unknown or unspecified country.

              La Commune (Paris 1871) Primera parte

              Hall Presentation and debate

              Roar - Revolution as a Co-Creative Process

              ARCHIVO DES_REALIDAD
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S014-SS001 · Subseries · 2011
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              LA MAT ¿ A dónde nos lleva el progreso ?

              Javier Collado Reigadas ,

              Mémoire d'un territoire

              United Arab Emirates.

              Maximilien Charlier ,

              Quentin Noirfalisse ,

              Bajo la capucha, un viaje al extremo de la tortura

              United Arab Emirates,

              United States of America.

              Brazza Ou L'Épopée Du Congo

              Broke Down in Motor City

              United States of America.

              Chroniques de la Violence Ordinaire

              Concrete TV Never Hard Enough

              United States of America.

              Consciousness and Beyond, The final teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj

              Consciousness, Creativity and the Brain. With David Lynch

              United States of America.

              Conversations With the Earth - Indigenous Voices on Climate Change

              CWE (Conversations with the Earth)

              United States of America.

              Cover Girl Culture: Awakening the Media Generation

              United States of America.

              Dach Ohne Haus (Roof without House)

              Wax Or the Discovery of Television Among the bees

              United States of America.

              David Versus Monsanto

              Archivo exodus
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S012-SS007 · Subseries · 2008
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              The Margins of the Empire _ OVNI 2008

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              731: Two Versions of Hell

              United States of America.

              Agdal, Voces del Atlas

              United Kingdom (Great Britain).

              United States of America.

              Balkan Rhapsodies (1-78)

              United States of America.

              Beirut: All Flights Cancelled

              Bilder Aus Dem Tagebuch Eines Wartenden

              Blood and oil: The Middle East in World War I (2006)

              United States of America.

              Ochenta años de mobbing

              United States of America.

              United States of America,

              vo Traditional Chinese,

              Die Entnazifizierung des MH (The Denazification of MH)

              United States of America,

              Divorce Iranian Style

              United Kingdom (Great Britain),

              Islamic Republic of Iran.

              United States of America.

              Erase una Vez una Radio Libre

              Gonzalo Marcuzzi Iglesias

              Eut-elle ète Criminelle...

              Fragmentos de una Fábrica en Desmontaje

              Roberto García Rodríguez ,

              Archivo resistencias
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S010-SS007 · Subseries · 2005
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              Mane Tajawwul (Forbidden to Wander)

              United States of America,

              Impero (In God We Trust)

              Baghdad in no Particular Order

              United States of America.

              Moukabir Sawte (Noize Redistribution)

              The Infernal Noise Brigade

              United States of America.

              1991 Next Hundred Years

              United States of America,

              Meen Erhabe (Who is the Terrorist?)

              Jacqueline Reem Salloum

              United States of America,

              American Campaign to Suppress Islam

              Hibz Ut-Tahrir, Khilafah

              United Kingdom (Great Britain).

              Venezuela Bolivariana: Pueblo y Lucha de la IV Guerra Mundial

              United Kingdom (Great Britain).

              United States of America.

              Pakistanis en Barcelona (Captura el Raval)

              Moises Paredes Amad ,

              Muhammad Sulemam Tahir ,

              El Encierro en la Iglesia del Pi

              Intermittenti dello spettacolo

              Around Darkness
              ES ES-OVNI DIF-S008 · Series · 2019
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Workshop with Scott Barley

              OVNI archives invites the Filmmaker with a double activity: a two day workshop and a film screening of his award-winning full-length motion picture Sleep Has Her House (2017).

              Scott Barley is a British filmmaker and artist. His work has been associated with the Remodernist and Slow Cinema movements. Since 2015, Barley has almost exclusively shot his films on an iPhone. His films are primarily concerned with the anthropocene, nature, darkness, cosmology, phenomenology and mysticism.

              In this workshop, Barley introduce us to his work and goes through his fundamental influences. The filmmaker reflects on his particular way of working as we enter into the night and darkness as the basis of vision.

              Free Workshop with pre-registration

              https://scottbarleyfilm.com

              https://scottbarleyfilm.com

              https://www.cccb.org/ca/activitats/fitxa/ovni-2019-al-voltant-de-la-foscor/232010

              https://www.cccb.org/ca/activitats/fitxa/ovni-2019-al-voltant-de-la-foscor/232010

              Borders
              ES ES-OVNI DIF-S010-SS001 · Subseries
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              The exchange of knowledge and experiences, which contemplates transformation, is increasingly more necessary and urgent. In order to deeply transform the notions that have shaped the globalized world; making a radical revision of the notions of time, work, culture, and the persistence of a single model with its totalitarian drift.

              COMMUNITIES
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S007 · Series · 2000
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Observatory Archives 2000

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              Observatory Archives 2000

              OVNI 2000 brings toughener a series of works which we hope may serve as a plural and multifaceted reflection on the notion of COMMUNITY, understood not as ideal, a closed and defined paradigm, but as a reality: spaces for social, anthropological, cultural and emotional relationships where we already find ourselves, irrespective of the acceptance, participation or conflict we develop within tem.

              COMMUNITY as a key reality, often hijacked, transformed by media, caricatured by states, by markets and ideologies. The “community” in this way is separated from the necessities of day to day chores and realities. Singularities, unique people are kept from forming communities unless the declare conformity to ab identity, or pertain to a group. Instead masses od individuals are constructed, eliminating, however, whats is always alive underneath, what remains of a people, indescribable, without a nam, without boundaries, whose lack of definition gives it its force and its grace. (1)

              (1) Contra el hombre Agustin Garcia Calvo. Fundació Anselmo Lorenzo. Madrid, 1996 . La Comunidad que viene. Giorgio Agamben. Pre-Textos. Valencia 1996 .

              Thematical screenings

              Hall and Auditorium.Simultaneous Screenings

              Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona

              Montalegre 5. 08001 Barcelona

              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S017 · Series · 2015
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Concerning Violence / Le Grand Jihad / Le Jour a Vaincu la Nuit

              / CONTEXT 1994 - 2020

              Observatory Archives 2015

              March 7th 2015 19:00h

              OVNI opens up public access to the Intranet of the Observatory Archives, founded in 1993. To launch this new phase, we will screen a programme of videos that establish the two poles of this project, which span from social critique at one end, to personal exploration at the other. Concerning Violence by Göran Hugo Olsson with texts by Frantz Fanon, Le Grand Jihad by Vincent Moon , a ritual around memory, and Le Jour a Vaincu la nuit, by Jean-Gabriel Périot, another around dreams.

              OVNI Archives Intranet.

              OVNI opens up public access to the Intranet of the Observatory Archives, founded in 1993, at the CCCB. The collective behind OVNI considers that audiovisual creation (video art, documentary, and media archaeology) is more than just a creative, innovative, and aesthetic discourse... it is the most contemporary and non-elitist reflection on today’s culture and society.

              It is a collective visual thinking that reflects social, personal, poetic and political realities... flowing smoothly from reality to fiction. And its specificity makes it both a device for the construction of imaginaries and a tool for deconstruction.

              In The Society of the Spectacle, Guy Debord wrote that when reality is captured and turned into mere images, these images become reality: a mechanism that consolidates the unreal core of our reality. It seem to us then, as a counterpoint, that reality itself is at stake in the creation and dissemination of images. This is why it is necessary to develop an independent audiovisual discourse: independent of commissioning dynamics, independent in regard to the choice of subject matter and the approach, and above all independent of the prefabricated norms and grammars of the audiovisual industry and its consumption and production criteria. This entails a differential defence of the perception of reality. The mechanisms of cloning and the monoform (Peter Watkins) are countered by a rhizome of unique approaches, overlapping coincidences and disparities that do not exclude contradiction, but instead value it as the presence of reality in the images.

              Fortunately, the same market logic that flooded the landscape with banal images and with devices for recording, editing, and spreading images has also enabled the democratisation of access to the means of production and has broken the audiovisual oligopoly, downplaying the importance of the big mainstream channels.

              However, we need to take advantage of this window of possibility, which may remain open for a shorter time than we imagine. He have to go beyond the fog of compulsive images that flood the networks, and pierce the veil of media images, the master copy of the film that aims to reduce reality to the order of representation, and individuals to a handful of stereotypes.

              This process of audiovisual dissidence and resistance has been, and remains, fundamental. The mirror of representation has shattered into thousands of fragments: pieces that are deep cuts in reality and at the same time reflections of it.

              We suddenly enter a complex rhizome (Deleuze_Guattari) of stories that reflect plural reality. A discourse in which the principal values are heterogeneity, contradiction, and subjectivity. An antidote to the cloning and repetition of the corporate mass media. In this rhizome made up of disparate visions, the vision that the mass media presents as objective reality is deconstructed, and revealed as the subjective imaginary of the dominant discourse.

              We could say that there is a conflict of imaginaries. On one side, the omnipresent, formidable machine for the production and dissemination of prefabricated messages, creating a range of versions based on the same basic pattern as any other consumer product: to maximise profits and ensure its own continuity. On the other side, a kind of artisan patchwork of personal or collective experiences, a patchwork that has been torn in places and is full of life.

              Fragment of the article-interview on OVNI by the magazine:

              Intertartive [a platform for contemporary art and thought]. Herman Bashiron

               http://interartive.org/2011/04/ovni/

              “In an age where show business – too often mistaken for the world of culture - has become a model for real life, where fiction and reality melt into the one solution, and where physical and mental solidity dissolve into a continuous flow of images and appearances, here, in this intricate and complex mutation of reality, the work of OVNI offers an antidote to the poisons of contemporary information and communication. For over twenty years, it has been a “Temporary Autonomous Zone” – as Hakim Bey, collaborator of one of the editions of OVNI, would say –, presenting an intense programme of video art, independent documentary and mass media archaeology at the CCCB in Barcelona and beyond. The in-depth research carried out by OVNI clearly shows how independent audiovisual productions are gaining increasing visibility and international recognition and, at the same time, they are devices that are highly critical of contemporary culture and society."

              The Intranet Archives.

              The launch of this Intranet of the OVNI Archives at the CCCB makes approximately 2000 audiovisual works – the entire holdings of the Archives – available to the public. A collection of works that we will continue to build on with new acquisition, as in the case of the works screened at the launch, which will be incorporated into the archive.

              The Observatory Archives: A tool.

              Over the last few years, various developments have forced us to review our project, leading us to closely examine the real characteristics and functionalities of other parallel projects: how they work and how they are used.

              It is necessary to think critically about what archives are, and about the value of an archive. This is the case now more than ever, against the backdrop of the compulsive creation of numerous Archives over the past ten years, most of which are based on accumulative criteria: either the accumulation of existing dominant values (a "who's who" of a particular audiovisual scene) or simply a quantitative accumulation. In contrast, the OVNI Archives are the result of specific reflection on a continuum of themes that have been crucial in recent decades; a reflection that has been woven into the works themselves, in a kind of meta search. We could say that they are archives with a thesis; they have gone against the flow of dominant thinking and fads.

              At the same time, there is only limited value in archives that can be consulted but are isolated and fossilised. Archives become valuable when they can be read, when they can create meanings, suggest transversal readings and intersections. Being accessible to the public is one condition that allows this, but it does not guarantee or facilitate it. It is the knowledge generated by the Archives, and above all, the knowledge that has been generated through them, that makes it possible to make the most out of them: as a base from which to organise workshops, debates, specific programmes... This is the project that we are working on; the launch of this Intranet is only the first step.