Rare opportunity to see 16mm films by British artists Graham Ellard & Stephen Johnstone
Event description
A screening of:
Things to Come (2011)
Machine on Black Ground (2009)
FOSSIL (2019)
For an Open Campus (2016)
Q&A presented by Associate Professor Adrian Danks
Graham Ellard and Stephen Johnstone have collaborated since 1993. Their early work took the form of large-scale immersive video installations, and interactive digital works. These were exhibited widely and were included in key exhibitions of the period – 'V-topia: visions of a virtual world’ curated by Steven Bode, Eddie Berg and Charles Esche at Tramway, Glasgow, 1994 and ‘Revue Virtuelle 12 - Les hypermédias' at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
Since 2007 they have worked exclusively in 16mm film. By feeling their way in, using the camera as a resolutely analogue investigative tool, and through a very particular aesthetic of natural light effects, heightened colour, and close-up detail, the films immerse the viewer in a poetic and abstracted visual world.
Their work has been shown internationally, being included in group exhibitions at Photographer's Gallery, London, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki; Tate Liverpool; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Setouchi Triennale, Japan; Stroom Den Haag. Solo exhibitions include: John Hansard Gallery, Southampton; Site Gallery, Sheffield; De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill; Satellite Gallery, Nagoya, Japan; Royal Academy, London. Film screenings include; Rotterdam International Film Festival, Oberhausen Film Festival; Anthology Film Archives, New York; Image Forum, Tokyo; London Film Festival; Tate Britain, London.
Ellard and Johnstone also write together, their book; ‘Anthony McCall; notebooks and conversations’ was published by Lund Humphries in association with Kunstmuseum St Gallen, Switzerland, in 2015. Graham Ellard is Professor of Fine Art at Central Saint Martins, Stephen Johnstone is Professor of Fine Art at Goldsmiths College.
Presented by School of Art and School of Media and Communication RMIT University.
In partnership with the Artist Film Workshop (AFW)
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