Bren O’Callaghan A Runaway at the Media Circus!

27Apr/10

moves10

From Liverpool to Manchester and across the UK on screens, on site and online, moves celebrated its 6th successful year by reaching out to more audiences than ever. With nearly 500 submissions from over 40 countries from around the globe, this boutique festival’s impact is greater than ever, encouraging even more talent from across the region, UK and around the world to discover and exchange new methods of telling stories centered around movement on screen through films, installations, forums and live events.

Hot Circuit: Christina Corfield

This year’s theme Framing Motion explored how practitioners choose to frame movement through their choice of setting and context to define the boundaries for screen-based works. These could be real worlds or imaginary, abstract, impossible or augmented environments defined by a specific visual intent. In looking at methods of capturing a sense of pulse and energy, the curatorial outlook also addressed definitions of stillness: the  pause-and-relinquish through which motion occurs.

When We Meet Again: Clara Garcia Fraile & Sam Pearson

For the first time a series of installed works studded the halls, rooms and courtyards of Liverpool’s creative hub the Bluecoat, from Charlotte Gould and Paul Sermon's tasty AR buffet Urban Picnic, to the one-on-no-one intimacy of video goggle installation When We Meet Again (Clara Fraile & Sam Pearson). Christine Corfield’s Hot Circuit told the 10-screen tale of a 2D teenage pregnancy while viewers automatically flinched and stepped back from the violent crack of a rope pulled with gunshot force through an urban assault course, curling and lashing like an angry electric bolt (Space Drawing No.5, Sai Hua Kuan).

The Colour of Pomegrantes (Sayat Nova): Sergei Parajanov, 1968

Nowhere was the festival theme more apparent that within the rare, feature-length screening of Armenian auteur Sergei Paradjanov’s The Colour of Pomegranates. A useful and highly accessible introduction by Daniel Bird, co-lecturer in Russian and Eastern European Film at Sheffield University equipped us for what lay ahead by encapsulating the life and career of this persecuted visionary, warning us not to expect a story, sense or understanding. Instead we were asked to allow the images to wash over us, like listening to music or the view from a train.

The Colour of Pomegrantes (Sayat Nova): Sergei Parajanov, 1968

The colour-drenched stream of static tableaux that followed quite legitimately justified the movie’s claim in Cahiers du cinéma’s top 10 films of all time. A biography of Armenian poet Sayat Nova’s life told in visual and poetic form, rather than pursuing a literal course, Orthodox iconography and Persian miniatures blinked into life. Newly dyed wool is slopped from steaming cauldrons, animals pour through a hive of catacombs, quasi-religious figures glow with an unearthly light, books lie scattered across impossible surfaces, pages turning in the breeze.

The Colour of Pomegrantes (Sayat Nova): Sergei Parajanov, 1968

At the heart of all burns the arresting image of Parajadov’s androgynous muse, Georgian actress Sofiko Chiaureli, playing no fewer than six roles, both male and female. More of a cultural spa experience than a standard visit to the cinema, watching The Colour of Pomegranates is a visual feast that we can pick at or gorge upon, a precursor to Derek Jarman’s rich visual style or Matthew Barney’s super-stylised filmic orgies (see The Cremaster Cycle).

Like a butterfly cupped in the palm of a hand, this painterly dream is the very definition of movement suspended, an intake of breath before release.

14Jan/10

Into The Woods

You can never have enough magic capes, as I discovered earlier last year. Shamefully I have only just got around to documenting this particular project for the Big Screen Liverpool from Charlotte Gould in partnership with moves, although thanks are also due to my friend Mandy Tolley for creating the most intensely red cloak with the biggest button I have ever seen. Yes, even bigger than Kirsty Allsopp's secret cache.

6Jun/09

Greedy Edith

Greedy Edith

Post-moves09 I'm still returning time and again to watch Shelly Love's new commission for the big screens, a moves / Sadler's Wells co-production conceived specifically for outdoor display. Greedy Edith features a grand lady (Polly Bowman, who also wrote and performed the score), sitting for a portrait in her 17th Century attire, but edited with discordant jump cuts and accompanied by a pie-fingered piano soundtrack that starts off demurely but soon runs awry. Utterly mesmerising, and hinting at a decay beneath the iced façade, a stuffed dog watches in silent judgement.

30Mar/09

Ludic Second Life Narrative

Image: Charlotte Gould

Image: Charlotte Gould

Another presentation with moves09, Ludic Second Life Narrative hails from the too-clever-by-half brain of Charlotte Gould, a member of the Creative Technology Research Group at The University of Salford Adelphi Research Institute for Creative Arts & Sciences. Designed for large format public video screens, this project questions the way that the public embody themselves in virtual worlds whilst allowing users to explore alternative networked spaces.

Staged in an enchanted wood as a virtual retreat from the actual urban environment, the avatars or virtual others have a surreal, puppet-like quality rather than the stereotypical Barbie & Ken analogy. Via camera-tracking technology the user/s will be able to control the puppet in a natural, intuitive way without recourse to keyboards or hand-held devices - existing in a dual dimension of both here, and there…

Ludic Second Life Narrative
Big Screen Liverpool (in association with moves09)
Saturday 25th April / 2 - 3pm

29Mar/09

The Huge Entity

The Huge Entity
The programme for moves09 has now been revealed, and we have not one, not two, but three new commissions for the Big Screen Liverpool. First up, screen chum Sam Meech (of The Model City notoriety and spoken of in reverential tones by local fame-crazed insects, eager for a starring role in the sequel) returns with The Huge Entity - which will also include a live intervention by dancer Mary Prestidge. Take it away Sam…

“Using the camera on top of the Big Screen to provide a live video feed, the images are processed in real-time using a software called Isadora. As people move through the space, on screen this is re-presented as coloured trails of movement. This may or may not make people aware of their routes as they navigate through the passing shoppers. Those people who become aware of the trails of energy they leave may begin to then play with that, moving in new ways through the space and deliberately crossing the paths of other people."

The Huge Entity
Big Screen Liverpool (in association with moves09)
Friday 24th April / 1 - 3pm

18Jan/09

moves night

Moves Night

To kick off the moves09 season, moves launches moves night, an informal artist forum for sharing and discussing dance and movement-related screen-based art at different stages of the creative process, moderated by a journalist or industry professional.

For the very first moves night, the work in progress of two North West-based artists, Annabel Newfield and Markus Soukup will be on show. Annabel will present her brand new work, 'Cracks Threshold', and Markus Soukup will revisit his film 'Roles Roll' screened at moves07.

Run in partnership with DiGM, the event will take place at The Green Room in central Manchester and be moderated by Gitta Wigro, freelance curator for screendance and former programmer for Dance On Screen London at The Place

moves night
The Green Room
Wed 21st January / 6.00 - 9.00pm
Free