film.text.performance.film
organized by Ralph McKay
"…to understand something you have
to have both language and image."
- David Gatten
"An artist paints so that he will have something to look at; at times
he must write so that he will also have something to read."
- Barnett Newman, late 1947
Part II:text
Friday 11 & Saturday 12 April 2008
Goode Crowley Theater
David Gatten
Michael Tracy and Christopher Rincon
Julia Meltzer and David Thorne

Image: film still: David Gatten, How
to Conduct A Love Affair, 2007.

Image: film still: Michael Tracy, Ultramarine (work
in progress), 2008.

Image: Still: Julia Meltzer and David
Thorne, We Will Live to See These Things, 2007.
In December 2007 Ballroom Marfa
launched film.text.performance.film, a two-part
program pairing seeminly disparate areas of contemporary cinematic practice
and bringing together a diverse roster of artists with established international
reputations rooted in either filmic performance or visual text. Live
cinema as experienced in December gives way to the projected word in
April with Part II: text. Normally consumed as
a solitary, interior experience, words will be amplified and magnified
for contemplation by a theater audience.
In 1921 Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand collaborated on the short film Manhatta,
which intercuts images of Manhattan with lines lifted from a Walt Whitman
poem. The goal was not to tell a story, but to create a new cine-poetry
of text and image. From this early instance, poetic cinema has
evolved over epochal rifts and mergers, from Surrealism and the advent
of sound in movies, through Structuralism and Postmodernism. Contemporary
artists interested in the intersection of text and image, whether they
take the digital road or detour around it, are defining what this tradition
looks and sounds like in a time when information saturation, not to mention
distortion, challenges the very meaning of word and image.
Assembling in Marfa will be a faction of contemporary artists who are
peeling the page one frame-at-a-time in an inquiry into the visual dimension
of language, ranging from David Gatten's reflection
on the role of documents and Michael Tracy's secret,
worldly recitations to Julia Meltzer and David
Thorne's digital archives where images become a fault-line between
world views and hidden narratives.

Friday 11 April, Goode Crowley Theater
7:00pm
Michael Tracy (Director) and Christopher Rincon (Cinematographer & Editor)
Ultramarine (work in progress, 59 min. An allegory about aesthetic
crisis finds two characters, Sculpture and Music, separated by emotional
and geographic distance, the alienation of urban space. Architectural
settings from Mumbai and St. Petersburg are woven into a bleak pinnacle
of gripping remembrance from times of final empire, creating a universe
of anxiety in which neither society's decadence, nor its burden of consumption,
is sustainable.
Saturday 12 April, Goode Crowley Theater
5:00pm
Julia Meltzer and David Thorne: (www.speculativearchive.org)
It's Not My Memory of It (2003, 25 min) is a documentary about
secrecy, memory, and documents. Mobilizing specific historical records
as memories, which flash up in moments of danger, the tape addresses
the logic of the bureaucracy of secrecy.
We Will Live to See These Things, or, Five Pictures of What May Come
to Pass (2007, 47 min. Competing visions of an uncertain
future shot in Damascus, Syria —the chronicle of a building in
downtown Damascus, a recitation anticipating the arrival of a perfect
leader, an interview with a dissident intellectual, a portrait of a Qur'an
school for young girls, and an imagining of the world made anew.
6:45pm
David Gatten
Download
PDF: Scott MacDonald interviews David Gatten for Film Quarterly
Secret History of the Dividing Line (2002, 20 min). Paired texts
as dueling histories. A journey imagined and remembered. 57
mileage markers produce an equal number of prospects.
The Great Art of Knowing (2004, 37 min). Find yourself resting
uneasily half way up the stairs: Something has left the body, yet the
body remains: what has left is on its way Elsewhere but cannot help but
look back: this look animates the world
How To conduct a Love Affair (2007, 8 min). An unexpected letter
leads to an unanticipated encounter. Have a cup of tea dear. I'll trade
you a stitch from the past in return for a leaf from the future.
8:00pm
Panel discussion with moderator Christian Gerstheimer,
El Paso Museum of Art

Biographies
Michael Tracy (b.
Ohio, 1943) is included in major museums and art collections, among them
The Menil Collection and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He sustains
an ongoing dialog with Latin America and the cultural influences of Europe
and Asia. Tracy has produced work in bronze, painting, sculpture, and
architectural environments. His first work in video Xochitl Tlayecouani
(Flower Warrior) premiered in 1993 at Pacific Film Archive.
Christopher Rincon (b. Texas, 1970,) has worked in video
since 1995. He has edited for television broadcast and cinematic exhibition
with Tracy, including Culture, Water, and Money: The Passion of the
Frontier an award winning documentary on the contamintion of the
Rio Grande, The Butchershop of Divine Providence a collaborative
homage to the Mexican Revolution, and the upcomin work in progress Antique
Gamboge. They are also developing a series of video brooches.
Julia Meltzer (b. Los Angeles, 1968) and David
Thorne (b. Boston, 1960) are Los Angeles-based artists producing
videos, photographs, installations, and published texts. From 1999 to
2003, their projects centered on state secrecy and the production of
the past. Current work focuses on the ways in which visions of the future
are imagined, claimed and realized, specifically in relation to faith
and global politics. Recent projects have been exhibited in the 2008
Whitney Biennial, the 2006 California Biennial (Orange County Museum
of Art), Gallery Akbank Sanat (Istanbul), Kunstmuseum Goteborg (Sweden),
Palazzo de la Papesse, (Siena, Italy), Apex Art (New York), Momenta (New
York), the Hayward Gallery's (London) traveling exhibition program, Whitechapel
Gallery (London), the Oberhausen Short Film Festival (Germany), the International
Film Festival Rotterdam, the New York Video Festival, the Margaret Mead
Film Festival, and the Toronto International Film Festival, among others.
David Gatten (b. Ann Arbor, 1971), filmmaker, Henry
James fan, recent Guggenheim fellow and aspiring audio book artist, makes
bookish films about letters and libraries, lovers and ghosts that are
filled with words, some of which you can even read. His work has shown
around the world in museums, festivals, biennials, galleries, archives,
access centers, elementary schools, storefronts, on sides of buildings
and once on a barge that was floating down river. Six times his films
have played International Film Festival Rotterdam, five times in the
New York Film Festival, four times at the Pacific Film Archive, three
times at the London Film Festival, twice in the Whitney Biennial and
once upon a time for reasons still unclear to everyone involved at the
Kiel International Festival of Archaeological Film. You can find his
films in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American
Art and the Art Institute of Chicago but he can rarely find his glasses.
He lives and works by the water in Red Hook, Brooklyn and on Seabrook
Island, South Carolina and teaches 16mm filmmaking/Wallace Stevens appreciation
as a visiting artist at the Cooper Union in NYC.
Christian Gerstheimer (b. Flint, MI, 1965) is a graduate
of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Michigan State University.
His graduate thesis was The Use of Text in Art: 1988-1999. As
curator of the El Paso Museum of Art in El Paso, Texas he has curated
one-person exhibitions, authored artist essays for the Encyclopedia
of Twentieth Century Photography, as well as numerous other publications
for the El Paso Museum of Art. His latest group exhibition at The El
Paso Museum of Art titled Text as Art: From the 1960's Onward brought
together prints, photographs and sculpture that combine writing and images.
Ralph McKay (b. Monroe, LA, 1954) established and programmed
the Film Department at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston from 1976 to
1989. He has since programmed for Anthology Film Archives in NYC, the
Jewish Museum in NYC and Cinematexas in Austin. He is currently Program
Advisor to International Film Festival Rotterdam, manager of distribution
in the Americas for two European non-profit distributors, Sixpack Film
(Austria) and Filmbank (The Netherlands), and North American tour manager
for Swiss Films.

This program has been made possible
by a National Endowment for the Arts grant under the Challenge America:
Reaching Every Community Invitational Initiative. Additional
support provided by the Texas Commission on the Arts.
Ballroom Marfa would also like to recognize the following members
for their generous film.text.performance.film matching grant donations: Dr.
William Jordan & Robert Brownlee, Alice Negley Dorn, Jeanette
Ingberman & Papo Colo, Candace Worth & Christopher
Hamick, Victor & Anstis Lundy and Jimmy & Karen Welder. In
kind support provided by Titos Vodka, Austin TX.

Ballroom Marfa is a dynamic, contemporary
cultural arts space that provides a lively intellectual environment where
varied perspectives and issues are explored through visual arts, film,
music and performance. As an advocate for the freedom of artistic expression,
Ballroom Marfa's mission is to serve international, national, regional
and local arts communities and support the work of both emerging and
recognized artists working in all media. Ballroom Marfa is particularly
interested in helping artists and curators achieve projects that have
significant cultural impact but would be impossible to realize in a traditional
gallery or museum setting.
Ballroom Marfa is a non-profit
501 (c)(3) organization.
www.ballroommarfa.org
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