Sun Apr 3
1.00pm
1.00pm
Cadence 2022 – Animated Poetry Workshop with Neely Goniodsky [Virtual + In-Person]
workshop
$13 General Admission
$10 Student/Child/Senior
$7 Member
Edward Owens (1949–2009) was a queer African-American filmmaker who was involved with the New American Cinema of the 1960s. He is best known for his experimental films Remembrance: A Portrait Study (1967) and Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts (1968–70). When he moved to New York City as a young man, Owens was hired by Jonas Mekas to work at the Film-makers’ Cinemateque. When Mekas saw Owens’ films, Owens was invited to join the FMC for distribution as a part of the New American Cinema movement.
In 2016, Film-Makers’ Cooperative Executive Director MM Serra collaborated with IndieCollect to preserve the four Owens films within the NACG collection through a 5k digital scanning process. The digital transfer was supervised by NACG’s digital media specialist Sheldon Henderson.
(1968–70, 16mm, color, 6 min, silent)
“A montage of still and moving images, mixing and alternating Black people and white people, fantasy and reality, a presidential suite and a mother’s kitchen: a sensitive, poetic evocation in the manner of the film-maker’s Remembrance. Brilliantly colored and nostalgic, it comprises a magical transformation of painterly collage and still photographic sensibility into filmic time and space.” – Charles Boultenhouse
(1967, 16mm, color, 6 min, sound)
“Remembrance: A Portrait Study is a filmic portrait of the artist’s mother, Mildered Owens, and her friends Irene Collins and Nettie Thomas, set to a score of ’50s and ’60s hit songs. Using Baroque lighting techniques, Owens captures the three women drinking and lounging one evening.” – Tate Museum
(1967, 16mm, color, 45 min, silent)
“Tomorrow’s Promise is a film about vacantness. Which physically does ‘begin,’ reversed, upside-down on the screen (but by what premise is it supported? , e.g. the film, so chimerical as life itself, follows its own way), suddenly another such position is taken (not in reverse), this time by a male figure and soon, in this same section, the girl of the reversed image reappears posed in a different way; a way obsessed by ‘mood.’ Then a technical play of in-the-camera-editing occurs, more intense, brighter than in the first, reversed section. There are several inter-cuts which serve, in this and each subsequent section unto the end, as relative links into the final section: which is actually the ‘story.’ The story the protagonist and her hero try to tell in their way is apophysis; except that ‘pictures,’ clear visions, take the place of words. My film could have been edited with precise tensions and a lucid straight narrative, but it was my aim to ‘re-create’ the protagonist of my personal life.” – Edward Owens