Screenings | Art + Film | ACMI

Steve Carr | Stretching Time

ACMI is presenting a series of one-off screening of short and feature-length films by Australian and international artists.

In coming months ART+FILM will present Taiwanese conceptual artist Chen Chieh-jen’s seminal film Factory (2003), in partnership with the 20th Biennale of Sydney,  as well as two intense, hyper-sensory videos by New Zealand-born artist Steve Carr, in partnership with the Centre for Contemporary Photography.  ACMI’s May ART+FILM offering will comprise highlights from Carriageworks’ 24 Frames per Second exhibition, with each work highlighting the exhilarating physicality of dance as it is presented on screen.
 
ACMI’s monthly ART+FILM program will continue to provide unique insights into the work of local and international artists. Sessions are free, but bookings are required.
 
Details of upcoming screenings are below.
 
Tuesday 22 March, 6:30pm
Presented in association with the 20th Biennale of Sydney
 
Taiwanese artist Chen Chieh-jen will present his seminal work Factory (2003), followed by a Q&A. Factory is a 30-minute silent film made in collaboration with workers from the Lien Fu garment factory, seven years after its closing. The film captures post-industrial decay in Taiwan, but is also a meditation on the passing of time, offering an elegiac commentary on human resilience in the wake of economic advancement.
 
Chen Chieh-jen (b. 1960) has been a key figure in the development of Taiwanese conceptual art since the early 1980s. A self-taught artist, he was a prominent figure during Taiwan’s martial law period, challenging the limits of expression with guerrilla performances, underground exhibitions, and interventions in public spaces. He is now best known for ambitious video works that directly address social and political upheavals in contemporary Taiwan, and is particularly concerned with individual experience within communal settings, such as prisons, factories and places of industry. Chen’s films typically rely on the conventions of documentary filmmaking to elegantly weave together real and historical fiction, past and present, reality and illusion.
 
ACMI gratefully acknowledges the support of the 20th Biennale of Sydney in bringing Chen Chieh-jen to Australia. This event is made possible with generous assistance from the Nelson Meers Foundation. 

Tuesday 26 April, 6:30pm
Presented in partnership with the Centre for Contemporary Photography   
 
Join New Zealand artist Steve Carr in this intense, hyper-sensory exploration of his High Definition videos, Dead Time (2012) and Bubble, Cactus (2013). Carr’s work navigates the broad possibilities of film beyond traditional linear narratives, and these two works present a profound transformation of material. Together they draw into focus the connection between our sense of time and space, and the complex relationships between materiality, magic, performance, and cinema.
 
Represented by Michael Lett, Auckland and STATION, Melbourne, Carr has had work in many major New Zealand and international exhibitions. He has been a Lecturer in Fine Arts and Photography at Whitecliffe College of Arts and Design, Auckland, and is currently Senior Lecturer in Film at the University of Canterbury, School of Fine Arts, Christchurch, New Zealand.
 
This event coincides with Steve Carr’s major solo exhibition A Manual for Small Archives, at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, Melbourne. 

Monday 23 May, 6:30pm
Presented in collaboration with Sydney’s Carriageworks
 
24 Frames per Second was an ambitious exhibition of 24 newly commissioned moving-image installations, presented at Sydney’s Carriageworks in 2015. For ART+FILM, ACMI presents a suite of four artist films exploring dance as a fundamentally collaborative medium: Push (2015) by Kate Murphy (Australia), 1 or 2 Tigers (2015) by Ho Tzu Nyen (Singapore), The Fourth Notebook (2015) by Sriwhana Spong (New Zealand), and at least for a while anyway (2015) by Nat Cursio & Daniel Crooks (Australia).
 
Following the screening, join curator and writer Nina Miall from Carriageworks, and artist, choreographer and curator Nat Cursio, as they discuss the project. The conversation will address the commissioning process, and interdisciplinary collaboration in contemporary art.
 
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body.