The Wooden Lightbox - Alex Mackenzie
Part of the Artist Film And Video season
7:30 p.m. Wednesday November 11 2009
Directed by Alex MacKenzie
Certificate Unknown
Length: Unknown
Format: 16mm
"the wooden lightbox: a secret art of seeing" is a hand-processed black and white film created partially with some hand-made emulsion, and presented on a hand-cranked 16mm projector which Alex constructed out of cast off pieces of projectors and rewinds and then encased in wood. Alex will be here to show us how it works.About Alex:Alex MacKenzie has been working as a media artist for over 15 years with a focus on various models of expanded cinema and light projection involving the handmade image. He was the founder and curator of the Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images, the Blinding Light!! Cinema and the Vancouver Underground Film Festival. His live media works are presented at festivals and underground screening spaces throughout Europe and North America, most recently at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, Lightcone in Paris, Anti-Matter in Victoria, and at Cinecycle through LIFT/Pleasuredome in Toronto. He will be touring the British Isles in late 2009. Alex received a Bachelor of Arts Degree with Honours in the School for Studies in Art and Culture (Film Studies), Carleton University, and has worked with a variety of independent film organizations over the past 15 years including Mainfilm, Pacific Cinematheque, Cineworks, and Doxa. He recently completed residencies at Atelier MTK in Grenobles, France and at Struts Gallery/Faucet Media in New Brunswick. Alex is the co-editor of Damp: Contemporary Vancouver Media Art (Anvil Press 2008), interviewed David Rimmer for Loop, Print, Fade + Flicker: David Rimmer's Moving Images (Anvil Press 2009) and is currently designing handmade film emulsions and manually-powered projection devices for gallery installation and live performance.About the film:the wooden lightbox: a secret art of seeing is an exploration and reconfiguration of cinematic apparatus and emulsion. Using the early development of cinema as a marker for cultural, technological and economic change, these film cycles draw from turn of the century cinematic prototypes and long forgotten ideas surrounding the moving image and its early promise. At the core of this approach is the use of a homebuilt hand-cranked projector in an expanded cinema format to present a striking array of handmade and processed emulsion. The vast potential of the film frame is drawn out through imagery both archaic and contemporary in shape and form. Hypnosis, panorama, motion studies, expectation, magic, the dreamworld and sleight of eye conspire in this intimate and immersive framework.the wooden lightbox: a secret art of seeing is performed live with a hand-cranked 16mm projector built and assembled from various relic 16mm projector and rewind parts and framed in a wooden box. Ten "chapters" are presented over the course of 4 reels. Film speed is varied manually by cranking more quickly or more slowly, while direction of the action is controlled by winding forward and backward. An average of 8 frames of 16mm can be cranked for every second of time elapsed. Colour gels are used to tone the black and white images while lens and hand interference are used to distort and/or partially obscure the image. Sound consists of a series of tracks shaped for the specific chapters and acting as guides to the progression of the images. TWL is an ongoing work in progress, an assembly of images entirely handprocessed and contact printed, transforming and developing as new materials are added and deleted.Why you should come:Alex will be here, as part of his UK tour.“…[Mackenzie’s] work often has an otherworldly quality, as if we were seeing images for the first time…his process allows for the re-entry of a sense of wonder, what theorist Walter Benjamin once referred to as the promesse de bonheur, or the utopian promise of technology that can only be reproduced through an artistic reinvestment in the hidden possibilities of a medium. Through his rediscoveries, MacKenzie takes us back to the birth of the moving image…”-Chris Kennedy, Strategies of the Medium III: In the Dark, Toronto (LIFT/Pleasuredome).

Beyond Language presents a broad selection of Barber's influential video work from past 30 years from proto-Scratch works of the early ’80s to his 90's lo-tech 'slacker' videos and his recent return to assemblage and appropriation. Narrative is at the centre of much of his work, whether deconstructing it as in Scratch, or creating humorous and absurd situations to find existential meaning in the margins of modern life. We are very fortunate to have George Barber in person, in conversation with the programme's curator Matthew Noel-Tod.
American feminist film-maker Anna Biller is a true auteur. Writer, producer, director, actor, musician and art director. When we showed her sexploitation feature, VIVA, earlier in the year, it was one of our most controversial nights. Tonight we show Anna's short films, and she joins us in conversation from Hollywood (via the miracle of Skype).
"the wooden lightbox: a secret art of seeing" is a hand-processed black and white film created partially with some hand-made emulsion, and presented on a hand-cranked 16mm projector which Alex constructed out of cast off pieces of projectors and rewinds and then encased in wood.
Image of projector and info on the piece:
http://www.alexmackenzie.ca/lightbox.html
You can see a sample of it here:
http://www.alexmackenzie.ca/lightbox_sample_clips.html
and stills here:
http://alexmackenzie.ca/images/lightbox_1.jpg
http://alexmackenzie.ca/images/lightbox_2.jpg
http://alexmackenzie.ca/images/lightbox_3.jpg
Film-maker and writer Kenneth Anger was a seminal figure in both gay and experimental film, and influenced rock and roll, theatre and dance almost as much as film.
Come for the launch of the first in a series of Friday night screenings celebrating the wonder and horrors of computer-generated imagery! Tonight: King Kong, the 2005 remake of the 1933 classic.
Come for the second in a series of Friday night screenings celebrating the wonder and horrors of computer-generated imagery! Tonight local artist James Hutchinson will show some of his short animations and following that he has chosen The Fifth Element for us to see, on 35mm.
James Holcombe makes amazing films made on Super 8 and 16mm film. He's well placed to master these magical materials, - he works at No.w.here lab, an artist's film lab in London, where he passes the alchemy on - teaching processing and printing techniques at regular workshops.
Richard Tuohy is in the UK from his native Australia presenting work at Leeds International Film Festival. Luckily for us Star and Shadow have managed to nab him for a late addition to our always brilliant, irregular series of artists 16mm film screenings.
Richard Tuohy is in the UK from his native Australia presenting work at Leeds International Film Festival. Luckily for us Star and Shadow have managed to nab him for a late addition to our always brilliant, irregular series of artists 16mm film screenings.
Richard Tuohy is in the UK from his native Australia presenting work at Leeds International Film Festival. Luckily for us Star and Shadow have managed to nab him for a late addition to our always brilliant, irregular series of artists 16mm film screenings.