Wednesday, February 2, 2011

free thursday night walker cinema: Jay Rosenblatt's early works

The Walker will be screening early pieces by American art/experimental/short/documentary filmmaker Jay Rosenblatt at 7:30 this Thursday for free:
This program highlights films that examine history and behavior and find the psychological links between them: Human RemainsRestrictedShort of Breath, and The Smell of Burning Ants (1990–2000, 16mm, 60 minutes). 
Rosenblatt's pieces have screened in venues as varied as the MOMA and Cinemax, which speaks to the appeal of his work.  Learn more about his career when he comes to speak at the Walker this Friday:
After a weeklong run of his recent work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, San Francisco–based Jay Rosenblatt visits the Walker to present his newest film, The D Train (2011). Senses of Cinema calls him “arguably the most highly esteemed composer of short films working in the United States today: his films are ironic, humorous assemblages that disturb viewers with their juxtapositions and ambiguity, exposing enigmatic and yet indissoluble relationships within films, between films, and among films and their viewers in general.” Since 1980, Rosenblatt has been constructing distinctively personal and witty explorations on expansive topics—life and death, psychology and history, the human condition—exclusively using discarded footage from a variety of sources. His delicately detailed compositions have been described as “tightly controlled aural and visual essays, poems, and stories, often all three at the same time.” Rosenblatt’s award-winning short films have screened at major festivals worldwide as well as on HBO, the Independent Film Channel, and the Sundance Channel.

For this special evening, Rosenblatt introduces a program that includes the premiere of his new film, along with several recent shorts: Afraid So, The Darkness of Day, I Just Wanted to Be Somebody, andPhantom Limb. He then joins Walker film/video curator Sheryl Mousley for an in-depth conversation about his work. 2005–2011, video and 35mm, 75 minutes.

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