Category Archives: Film screening

Pluck@RHA Presents: Women, Artists and The Institution

Aideen Barry, Still from Enshrined, performative film, 2015. Copyright the artist

Pluck Projects are delighted to announce Pluck@RHA, a three year collaboration with the Royal Hibernian Academy as it approaches its 200th anniversary. Beginning with a conversation on Women, Artists and The Institution, this programme will consider the institution as a site of challenge, examining its inclusions and exclusions, how they shape what is considered to be art, and the ways in which these definitions have changed in our recent history.

For September 2020, we will be running the programme Women, Artists and The Institution

Feminist activism in the Irish art world has been a significant force since the 1980s when women artists mounted a challenge to the institutions that they felt had excluded them. Collectives such as the Women Artists’ Action Group argued that artists were not being recognized because of their gender by the museums and galleries that helped define Irish art in the popular imagination. Nearly forty years later, Abigail O’Brien, the first female president in the RHA’s almost 200 year history, reflected the ambitions of women’s artistic activism by foregrounding gender balance in her inaugural address. This echo is illustrative of the ways in which major institutions have absorbed activist demand into their own ways of thinking about themselves, leading them to instigate changes shaped by the challenges mounted against the establishment. In this series of seminars and screenings, Pluck Projects consider the legacies of the women’s movement in the Irish art world, and discuss not only the history of feminist challenge, but also how it has interacted with the interests and ambitions of artistic institutions.

The programme is as follows:

4 Sept 2020 18.00: 

Pluck Projects in conversation with Aideen Barry (ARHA), Pauline Cummins and Eithne Jordan (RHA).

This discussion will consider feminist practice, women’s artistic activism and the institution from the perspective of three key contemporary practitioners.

This event is free but you must register via eventbrite:  https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/pluck-projects-rha-gallery-tickets-118460280889?aff=ebdssbonlinesearch

7th – 13th September

Online film screening: Pauline Cummins – Becoming Beloved (1995) and selection of recent works

14th – 20th September

Online film screening: Aideen Barry – Not to be Known or Named (2015) and Enshrined (2016)

24 September, 18:00:

Dr Fionna Barber and Dr Tina Kinsella will consider a longer history of feminism in Irish art practice and the institutional landscape.

Advertisement

Burn/Out

Triskel Arts Centre, Cork

13 June, 8.45pm – 11.00pm

As part of our new collaboration with the Cork Midsummer Festival, we are proud to present this free evening of artists’ films on the theme of environmental disquiet. Exploring the anxious line between the natural world and our interventions within it, Burn/Out addresses our current global preoccupation with climate and environmental degradation, a preoccupation that has immediate urgency and relevance in Cork in the context of the OPW’s proposed flood prevention measures. The curated programme will bring together canonical work documenting 1970s land art, performance and body art with contemporary animation and new work by Cork-based artists, each addressing the increasingly fraught relationship between the self and environment.

Tickets are free and can be booked here https://corkmidsummer.ticketsolve.com/shows/873603310

Wheelchair access and bathroom on site, Full access for visually impaired, guide dogs welcome.

Programme:

Spiral Jetty

Robert Smithson

1970, 35 min, colour, sound, 16 mm film on video

‘The film Spiral Jetty is a “portrait” of Smithson’s monumental earthwork of the same name at Rozel Point in the Great Salt Lake, Utah. Completed in April 1970, Spiral Jetty is an iconic earthwork and Smithson’s most renowned piece. At 1500 feet long and 15 feet wide, Smithson’s spiral of basalt rocks, mud, and salt crystals juts out from the shore and coils dramatically into luminous red water. The film documents the making of this earthwork, which has attained near-mythic status as it has disappeared and then re-emerged from the lake over the past decades. A voiceover by Smithson illuminates the ideas and processes that informed the evolution of the work, with allusions to prehistoric relics and radical notions of space, scale and landscape. Poetic and oddly hypnotic, the film includes stunning aerial footage of Smithson running along the length of the glowing spiral in what seems like an ecstatic ritual. The film Spiral Jetty, together with a series of photoworks taken during the construction of the earthwork, have become integral parts of the overall project’.

Camera: Robert Fiore, Nancy Holt, Robert Logan, Robert Smithson. Sound: Robert Fiore, Robert Logan. Editing: Barbara Jarris.

 

Untitled (Grass Breathing)

Ana Mendieta

1975, 3:08 min, colour, silent, Super8 mm film transferred to high definition digital media

            ‘I have been carrying out a dialogue between the landscape and the female body. Having been torn from my homeland (Cuba) during my adolescence, I am overwhelmed by the feeling of having been cast from the womb (Nature). My art is the way I re-establish the bonds that unite me to the Universe. It is a return to the maternal source.’

Ana Mendieta

During a 1974 visit to Mexico, Mendieta began to produce a series of works in which her own body is immersed or shrouded within the landscape. In Untitled (Grass Breathing), she is immersed in the grass-covered ground, from which she emerges. A mound in the middle of a recently re-sodded lawn suggests the presence of the artist underneath. Over the course of the film, Mendieta, underneath the sod, inhales and exhales, and the movement of her body causes the sod to rise and fall, at first slowly, then with increasing vigour, and then more slowly again until she comes to a position of rest.

Laura Wertheim Joseph, ‘Filmography’, in Covered in Time and History: The Films of Ana Mendieta, ed. Pamela Johnson (Minneapolis: Katherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota, 2015)

 

Burial Pyramid

Ana Mendieta

1974, 3.17 mins, colour, silent, Super8 mm film transferred to high definition digital media

Mendieta performed this work on the rocky hillside beside a stone stairway that leads to an ancient pyramidal tomb in Yágul, Mexico. Several of Mendieta’s fellow students from the fledgling Intermedia Group from the University of Iowa, led by Prof. Hans Breder, helped her to clear the ground of stones before the performance. After she lay down on the cleared terrain, these students buried her entire naked body, except for her face, under the stones. Over the course of the film, the camera remains fixed on Mendieta, submerged under the stones, as she inhales and exhales. As her breathing becomes more exerted, the stones begin to fall away to reveal her body beneath.

Laura Wertheim Joseph, ‘Filmography’, in Covered in Time and History: The Films of Ana Mendieta, ed. Pamela Johnson (Minneapolis: Katherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota, 2015)

 

Ocean Bird (Washup)

Ana Mendieta

1974, 4.09 mins, colour, silent, Super8 mm film transferred to high definition digital media

Over the course of this work, Hans Breder films Mendieta from different angles, her body covered in white feathers, as she floats on her back among gentle ocean waves. Like driftwood, the waves push her feather-covered body into the branches of a toppled tree and eventually onto the shore, where she lies in stillness, as the waves lap over her.

Laura Wertheim Joseph, ‘Filmography’, in Covered in Time and History: The Films of Ana Mendieta, ed. Pamela Johnson (Minneapolis: Katherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota, 2015)

 

Rothach

Vivienne Dick

1985, 8 mins, colour, sound,

Rothach (1985) was filmed on 16mm in the Donegal countryside and is composed of a rhythmic series of pans across a barren rural landscape that recalls the setting for Michael Snow’s monumental work La Region Centrale. Unlike Snow’s rocky landscape, however, Rothach is filled with evidence of activity. Scenes of a child playing the fiddle are interspersed with shots of farm machinery and turf-cutting on the bog. Many of these images are strikingly picturesque and reminiscent of iconic Irish colour postcards. But the serenity of the location is gradually undercut, both by the soundtrack, which changes from a melody into a series of shifting electronic pulses, and by the uncanny presence of the same child in different locations. It soon becomes apparent that this landscape is highly constructed.
Maeve Connolly, ‘From no Wave to national cinema: the cultural landscape of Vivienne Dick’s early Films (1978-1985)’, National Cinema and Beyond, (Dublin, Four Courts Press, 2004)

 

Augenblick

Vivienne Dick

2013, 13.38 mins, colour, stereo

Augenblick is a meditation on age, and the evolution from a mythological to a human and then to a technologically centered world. The film features three actresses, a trinity of female ages, and quotes literary and philosophical sources from Rousseau to Noah Harari. Moving from The Age of Enlightenment into a digital world, what becomes of out relationship to each other and to the earth?

 

Antler

Atoosa Pour Hosseini

2018, 15 Minutes, Super8mm, colour, sound

Produced by Experimental Film Society & Funded by the Arts Council of Ireland.

Antler won the special award of The Unforseen – International Experimental Film Festival 2018 in Belgrade, Serbia. Here is the jury’s response on the Antler’s award:

“A film of subtle poetics and expressive aesthetics achieved through the hypnotizing intertwining of archive and authorial footage, “Antler” erases the boundaries between fiction and documentary, introducing the viewer to a mysterious and, to a certain degree, fairy-tale-ish world of oneiric atmosphere. Formally seductive, and challenging to decipher, this “ecological fantasy” (for the lack of a more precise definition) transforms a botanical garden into a laboratory of evocative images and sounds, in a process that could be identified as alchemy.”