Skin Inscribed: Contemporary Brazilian Hand-Processed Films [In-Person Only]
Northwest Film Forum Seattle, WA
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Event
Skin Inscribed: Contemporary Brazilian Hand-Processed Films [In-Person Only]
Sat Jun 07: 7.00pm PDT
$15 General Admission $10 Student/Child/Senior $7 Member
About (Various Filmamkers, 2019-2025, 45min, Brazil)
Curated by Tetsuya Maruyama
Just as a painter applies raw paint on a canvas, a filmmaker applies light (and other matters) onto film strips. This hand-picked program features works produced at artist-run film labs (film laboratories by artists, for artists) scattered throughout the country, born from the vast and diverse geopolitical territories of Brazil. The relationship of physical sensations with plants and nature/ culture (humans), film-skin profaned as a tangible material, event that comes into being an ephemeral situation when it passes through a projector. This group of works, far from commercial movies, emerge from the personal interests of each artist without expecting anything in return. Should they be called, more appropriately, photographs in action?
FILMS IN THIS PROGRAM:
Typefilm an Armory Show João Reynaldo | 4 | color | 16mm single-projection | 2022 Typefilm an armory show is a cameraless animation work, entirely typed on film.
Wild Flower Moira Lacowicz | 5 | color | 16mm double-projection | 2025 Wild Flower is an expanded piece still in progress, originally projected in a double-channel format, where the process and the connection between images drive the film. Starting from delicate phytograms, it moves through negatives of flowers, subjective beach landscapes, fishermen in their daily lives, culminating in the visceral beating of a heart.
untitled(three moons) Tetsuya Maruyama | 10 | b&w | 16mm double-projection | 2024 a moon, two moons, three moons *No projector runs at the same exact speed as another, even with the standard frame rate of 24 per second. There is a (d)effect that could not be counted in number and this imperfection is apparent to our retinal perception throughout a long transformation, as if it were the lunar orbit.
Corpse of Water/Confined Flux Helder Martinovsky | 14 | b&w | 16mm single-projection | 2020 A mass of water appears as heavy clouds, which fall over the mountains and gush out of the earth in the form of springs, which become rivers. That follow their course as a flow of energy organized in the harmony of their own chaos, until they encounter morbid obstacles.
Walden Street Duo Strangloscope | 3 | b&w | 16mm double-projection | 2019 Video is the perfect medium for melancholic meditations on the visible and the ephemeral. How to go through good or bad dreams a solitary journey through a world in which images bring together the imaginary and the marvelous with all their possible combinations. A space in the limits of reality, but that inevitably refers to reality. Nature reconstituted by images? We do not want to copy nature, we do not want to reproduce, we want to produce as a plant produces a fruit.
Consider | 3 | b&w | 16mm | 2024 bombs like fireworks, the artifice of televised war in a soft, black sky, perforations of light in the films velvet for any serious reflection, the sidereal CONSIDER in memory of the fallen in Gaza, the stars.
I will remember Lucy | Maria Mion | 3 | b&w | 16mm | 2022 How many times does it take to access memory to remember someones image before it changes or disappears? This film addresses the fragmentation of memory through a sequence of reproductions of a photograph using various analog techniques.
Bleach Farm | Lgia M. Teixeira & Francisco B. Gusso | 3 | b&w | 16mm | 2024 A photochemical experiment in 16mm. Film processed with eco-developer made from field sunflowers, tinted and toned manually, with the intervention of sodium hypochlorite on the film.
Location
Northwest Film Forum (View)
1515 12th Ave.
Seattle, WA 98122
United States
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Ticketing, concessions, cinemas, restrooms, and our public edit lab are located on Northwest Film Forum's ground floor, which is wheelchair accessible. We have a limited number of assistive listening devices available for programs hosted in our larger theater, Cinema 1. These devices are maintained by the Technical Director, and can be requested at the ticketing and concessions counter.
The Forum does NOT have assistive devices for the visually impaired, and is not (yet) a scent-free venue. Our commitment to increasing access for our audiences is ongoing, and we welcome all public input on the subject!
If you have additional specific questions about accessibility at our venue, please contact our Patron Services Manager at rajah@nwfilmforum.org