How the all-electric home emancipates women: a drama of how the women in the family manipulate their men to upgrade the laundry facilities. (The Prelinger Archives are a source of educational material, mainly ordered by theme, giving a vision of the dark side, the underbelly, perhaps naive of the American dream and the America that is often hidden behind the media curtain.)
UntitledMass Media
113 Archival description results for Mass Media
Observatory Archives 1999
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
The Dead Row Notebook. Mumia Abu Jamal
People's Video Network
United States of America.
United States of America.
It Happens to the Best of Us
United States of America.
Instituto Universal del Pensamiento Positivo/ Dr. Jose Domingo Rico
United States of America.
United States of America.
Solo per i tuoi Occhi
Noureddine Tilsaghani
United States of America.
Behold the Promise Land
United States of America.
Herbert's Hippopotamus
Paul Alexander Juutilainen
United States of America.
United States of America.
Breakthrough with Rod Parsley
United States of America.
Planet Street: - Slovenia
Loic Connanski, França 1996-98
United States of America.
United States of America.
United States of America.
vo Brazilian Portuguese.
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
La 12 Visual - Unidentified Frame Observatory - UFO
3rd MVI - Independent Vídeo Show
The third edition of the MVI independent video showcase strengthens the foundations of this project. Not necessarily in the sense of ensuring its permanence and continuity, but insofar as it fulfils most of our original aims, taking us well away from the role of a video festival or fair. The aspects we consider paramount are: to be able to pay a fee for all works screened, thus recognising the important role of the authors, which is unaccountably too often overlooked; to maintain our independent nature (we are very grateful to the sensible existence of a public cultural centre like the CCCB, which hosts totally independent projects); and to organise a completely open call for works, connecting filmmakers and artists from different origins and backgrounds, based on quality and the radical nature of the content as the sole criteria. We also wanted to leave the door open to working with different programmers, as long as both the works and the programmers share our commitment to independent video and to the need for (or existence of) an independent audiovisual discourse.
In the 3rd MVI, this approach has led us to focus on two key issues that often intersect: Identity and Mass Media. An idea of identity not only influenced by a conceptual relationship with others and with the media, but also by inner experience – that non-transferable aspect of our individual journey – in a shifting context in which the real expands to embrace the media and the lived experience of everyday technology.
Playing the role of free extensions that either emphasise or contradict the core content of the 3rd MVI, we have invited a series of independent programmers: Rick Prelinger, with The Rainbow Is Yours, an all-colour celebration of consumption that reveals the urgent need for a media archaeology; Arjon Dunnewind, from KableKunst Impakt cable television network; and Eugeni Bonet with Demontage bis, a micro-extension of the Demontage programme that was presented in several venues around Spain but surprisingly not in Barcelona. The contents and texture of the various works that make up this 3MVI programme also raise a paradox inherent to contemporary independent video: the so-called “risky copyright situation” arising from the fact that a considerable number of artists and filmmakers see all existing film and video material as a reality available to them as a source of material for their works. This brings them straight up against legislation that, as it stands today, would have made some of the century’s most significant works of art legally impossible, because it places individual creative projects on the same footing as the use of images by mega-corporations.
In this 3rd MVI we introduce two new programmes, Zona Abierta by Xaxi Hurtado and Floppy Forever by Miquel Jordá, both consisting of digital media works (interactives, QuickTimes, etc...) which will be made available on various computers. These sections are presented here as prototypes, and will be integrated into the rest of the programme in future MVIs, reflecting the increasingly hybrid nature of independent audiovisual production.
In addition, there will also be a continuous screening of the video Portrait by Muntadas. A work that has incidentally become emblematic of this MVI, given that it conjures up the identitity-role-media theme that runs through the programme.
THE RAINBOW IS YOURS. A all-colour celebration of consumption from the Prelinger Archives
No matter how disconcerting we find the “fabulous fifties”, the fact is that its objects, designs, and aesthetics are still with us today. I think that the period we call the “fifties” actually begins with the post-war economic boom of the late forties and ends with the 1964 New York World’s Fair, the last national celebration of commodities and desire. In the fifties, the pressure to consume was stimulated by means of intensive design projects. Fantasy and adventure seemed to be directly linked to advertising and consumer products, and a colourful, appealing media horizon managed to distract attention from issues such as race and class discrimination, the deterioration of cities, and threats of the nuclear age. This all-colour programme celebrates the sheer theatricality of American design – the marriage of style, futurism, convenience, and fantasy. These unashamedly Populuxe films aim to create desire without need, flirting with reality and gender roles in the manner of the Hollywood musicals they emulate. When American nuclear families seemed to do nothing but produce more and more children, advertising films became more artistic, sometimes featuring almost Bohemian couples who carried out their work lightly, if at all, and were always very well-dressed. In fact, mass consumer products have never had such an aura of mystery as they did then. This very complex period has left behind many items that continue to fill marketplaces today. But some authentic consumer and design materials from the period have not been sufficiently accessible until now. As part of their ads and marketing campaigns, big American companies made thousands of films each year. Some, targeted at mass consumption, were shown on TV and screened in schools, car dealerships, and club and association meetings. Others were screened to the workers, sales staff, and managers of the companies themselves. These were some of the most entertaining films of the fifties, and they remind us of the bygone mentality of their contemporaries. I hope that what now makes them entertaining – the fantasy, unreality and celebration of blind consumerism that they professed – will appease our nostalgia and, in a sense, keep us away from impossible dreams of time travel. Rick Prelinger is the owner of the Prelinger Archives, a collection of 33,000 educational, industrial, and marketing films in New York. His series of 12 CD-Roms, Our Secret Century , will be published by The Voyager Company in early October and will be available to the public at 3MVI.
D E MONTAGE encore . A program by Eugeni Bonet.
DEMONTAGE generally involves assembly (or re-assembly, collage, editing, appropriation, recycling...) and also entails deviation, deconstruction, dismantlement, dispossession, and other ways of taking apart pre-existing audiovisual material made by others, against the grain of its original meaning, use, and purpose. This programme is like a small extension of a selection that I put together in 1993. DEMONTAGE: Film, Video/Appropriation, Recycling was produced by IVAM in Valencia but also presented in Madrid, Donostia, A Coruña, and the World Wide Video Festival in The Hague. When I was invited to bring this “encore” to 3MVI, I decided to update the previous programme by adding some new works, while maintaining others that I consider “seminal”. I have also broken down the programme into two parts, which refer to two of the sources or streams of audiovisual materials that are most commonly subjected to dismantling and reassembly. The programme is a selection of feedback and abductions based on the variety (or, depending on how you look at it, the uniformity) of content, products and genres generated from films and TV. A selection that is expanded by other kinds of “demontage” in other sections of this 3MVI.
KABELKUNST. A program by Arjon Dunnewind.
Digital Zen, hymns of angst, to hell with Elvis, Le chien andalou 65 years later, The Spelling Quiz with Man Ray, communist driving lessons, and young mothers wishing they were something else. KabelKunst has seen and shown all of this. KabelKunst is a monthly programme dedicated to video art and experimental film, broadcast on Utrecht’s cable TV. It works closely with IMPAKT Festival. From October 1993 to June 1995, KableKunst was part of the regular programming on the local television network. From No
Statement by Subcomandante Marcos in the Lacandona jungle, the role of neo-liberalism and the mass media. Such statements constitute a landmark document in that they were important to confirm the ability of coordination between media and independent platforms of resistance.
UntitledEl Barri Xinès (work in progress) and other City films
Mass Media Archaeology: A Selection from the Prelinger Archives
Calling all Active Agents
Low Tech : Strange Weather
Each and Every One of You
Jennifer Reeder - Sadie Benning
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
The Unidentified Video Observatory composed in the time by Nuria Canal, Joan Leandre and Toni Serra curated from 1996 until 1998 sixteen monthly and thematic video sessions in the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, MACBA. The OVNI video programs at MACBA, were the very first of its kind in the museum and as an essential part of this initiative the Observatory curated and proposed as well the acquisition of a selection of video titles to start the early video library of the Museum.
The OVNI sessions at MACBA were mostly but not only focused in the area of media identity and mass media criticism and they were a fine distillation of the programs OVNI was periodically organizing at the neighbor institution the CCCB Barcelona Contemporary Culture Center. The sessions introduced thanks to the work of the authors, early key concepts that were describing as much the analog media times as the future huge shock wave of the digital age to come.
The programs of these sessions were often dealing with the notion of media archeology which was and still is is one of the conceptual pillars of the Unidentified Video Observatory. That is, to look back to “ephemeral” archival footage such as educational or propaganda films, to be able to better understand the present through it. Media archeology, media digest, media interpretations and media transgressions through the deconstructive use of appropriated mass media footage were among the main structural arguments of the project since its foundation.
One of the main Unidentified Video Observatory goals specially in the decade of the 90s was to promote the huge communicative potentiality of video through its heterodox spectrum of possibilities. And so, in these sessions there was a wide range of authors and perspectives related to the generous and open use of the medium. Works such as the video diaries of George Kuchar and the modular and serial projects of Steve Reinke were already pointing to some sort of early “analog video blogging”, anticipating future uses and understandings of the video. Visionary initiatives like the Prelingers Archives founded by Rick Prelinger in New York and completely dedicated to the recovery and preservation of ephemeral media. Corporate mass media hacking projects like Spin in which the author Brian Springer gained access to internal and private broadcast television feeds or the first glimpses of culture jamming by Donald Goodes and Anne Marie Léger were included in this sessions. Following the tradition of scratch video based in the use of found footage, some authors such as Dara Birnbaum, Klaus von Bruch, Nam June Paik, Mathïas Muller, Craig Baldwin, Rafael Montáñez Ortiz, Herbert Distel, Peter Guyer and others were mainly having a strong "digestive" attitude towards media, recycling or deconstruction and so redirecting meanings from the media flow. In this mood the precursor and essential work of Bruce Conner was shown for the first time in Barcelona in the last program of the MACBA sessions.
The balance of this video program sessions was found in one hand in the authors whose main concern was to use media and video as a contemporary tool of human insight and positioning, for instance the love-hate relation “identity vs media” in which the works of Peggy Ahwesh, Sadie Benning and Jennifer Reeder could be included, all of them often oscillating between gender identity and the mass media inertia, between the camera as an artifact and the human being in front and behind it. In the other hand balance was found in what apparently seems to be the antipodes of the mostly media related conceptual approach in the MACBA sessions, through classic names such as Bill Viola and Gary Hill, already known names in Europe such as Francisco Ruiz Infante, foreign authors living in Barcelona and centering their work in the realities of the transformation of the city such as Adam Cohen and a special double program dedicated to the writer William Burroughs.
The MACBA sessions were an essential step for the maturity and consolidation of the Unidentified Video Observatory it was an effort to find the essence of the project future continuity. They were developed with the help of Gloria Picazzo and Anna Guarro, both of them part of the MACBA staff. Some content of the sessions would have been impossible without the inspiration found in the work of Eugeni Bonet, Andy Davies and Rick Prelinger.
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
1st MVI - Independent Vídeo Show
Fusina 9, 08003 Barcelona.
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
La 12 Visual / 2nd MVI - Second Independent Video Show
Vídeo art. Independent documentary.
Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
Montalegre 5. 08001 Barcelona
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
Whisky Tango Indian Uniform Quebec Whisky
United States of America.
He Was Captured Alive
Estudio en Velos (Fragmento )
Madame Grusinskaya no Necesita el Coche
Observatory Archives 2002
The Observatory Archives
/ CONTEXT 1994 - 2020
United States of America.
Sutherland Productions for Harding College
United States of America.
Round and Round (Widgets)
Jam Handy Organization for General Motors
United States of America.
United States of America.
United Kingdom (Great Britain).
United States of America.
This is What Democracy Looks Like
Independent Media Center ,
United States of America.
The Horribly Stupid Stunt Which has Resulted...
United States of America.
United States of America.
United States of America.
United States of America.
Psychoanalysis: Part One
United States of America.
Semi-private sub-Hegelian Panty Fantasy (with sound)
United States of America.
TV performance: desire, memory, economy.