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FRESH AUFHEBUNG—Artistic
Interest in the Philosophically Negated Belief in Miracles
A film series compiled by Jutta Koether
Performance/Lecture by Jutta Koether, Thurs. Sept. 2nd 2004,
7 pm
"This film series is designed to showcase a special notion
of 'art film' and apply the topic of film and métissage to
the film itself. The selected films are not merely based on a single
idea, but are a fabric of cinematic ideas and genres—indeed,
the films are themselves nearly unclassifiable artefacts. These
'blended existences'—mixtures in which one can find overlapping
Pornocult/Underground/Horror/ DocuDrama/Drugculture/CrimeStories,
and so on—address their own hybrid nature in very different
ways.
Métissage is interpreted here as the 'cultures between cultures'
which result in this context—the feelings of destabilization
and the dissolution of affiliations. It is the blurring and new
formation of an art form as a world between worlds, in which loss
can also be experienced as liberating. There are expressions of
forms of non-insight that come precisely from these intermediate
worlds. There is fractured occultism. There is a potential for aggression
inherent in some of the films. Or cult structures. These films inhabit
an area beyond such categories as 'feature' or 'auteur' film, yet
in some cases, they are marked and enriched by practical experience.
In any case, the most personal subject matter intermingles with
the extremely general.
Something that causes the Aufhebung (denial) of self. To not become
part of the dissolution—not to inhabit the space inbetween
or to consider oneself to be the other niche, but to put oneself
on the line precisely there—that is the 'Aufhebung der Aufhebung'
(denial of denial). In other words: 'Fresh Aufhebung'—a process,
an artistic interest in the philosophically negated belief in miracles.
Something is communicated unintentionally in the works of this series.
Psychoaesthetic effects become clear in the process. There is a
mixing of effects. The film series becomes a living stage on which
'not being denied' is presented, and self-hybridization—a
productive negation of one's own nature and genre—is performed
in very different ways.
I consider such events to be a reinforcement of the practical-political
mysteries of artistic work, as rituals from which artistic action
can arise. Each film is its own existence on probation; each has
its own unique elements of tragedy and parody, and its own vivid,
momentary revelations of the inexplorable." (Jutta Koether)
The artist Jutta Koether lives and works in New York and Cologne.
Program:
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Kino in der Brücke
Kölnischer Kunstverein
Hahnenstraße 6
D - 50667 Köln
Telefon + 49 - 221 - 86 97 64 7
Telefax + 49 - 221 - 86 97 64 8
info@projektmigration.de
Admission Euro 5,- (Members KKV free)
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Colloque
de Chiens
Hypothèse du tableau volé, Raúl Ruiz,
F 1978, 88 min.
Ruiz's film began as a documentary about the writer and painter
Pierre Klossowski, but quickly turned into a fascinating feature
film essay. In the film, an art collector conducts a tour of his
fantastic collection of "living pictures." One mysterious
picture is missing. This is considered one of the most significant
French films of the 1970s.
Sat., 4 Sept., 7 pm
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Performance,
Donald Cammel, Nicholas Roeg, GB 1970, 105 min.
The story of a wanted gangster who hides out with the rock star
Turner (Mick Jagger) and loses himself in Turner's hedonistic world
of bisexuality and transcendence. He eventually seems to exchange
personalities with the musician.
Sun., 5 Sept., 7 pm
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Warner Bros. Pictures
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The Man We
Want to Hang, Kenneth Anger, USA 2002, Short film
Paganini, Klaus Kinski, I 1989,
82 min.
A portrait of the legendary "Devil's violinist" from Italy,
Nicolo Paganini (Klaus Kinski), who drove audiences wild with his
virtuoso performances. The framework of the film is a spectacular
concert during which Paganini simultaneously experiences the past
and the future.
Fri., 24 Sept., 7 pm
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Carsten Frank Filmverleih |
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Trouble Every
Day, Claire Denis, F/GER/JAPAN 2001, 97 min.
Claire Denis's horror thriller of love and desire displays bloody,
sadistic tendencies. The film stood apart when it was shown at the
Cannes Film Festival in 2001. There and elsewhere, "Trouble
Every Day" has distinguished itself from the "normal"
by making normality itself its subject in a realistic, fantastic,
and thus extraordinarily self-reflexive fashion.
Sat.,. 25 Sept., 7 pm

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Dead Man,
Jim Jarmusch, USA 1995, 116 min.
This film combines aspects of the western with film noir. In expressive
black-and-white images, the viewer witnesses a man's transformation
from clumsy bookkeeper (Johnny Depp) to western hero.
Fri., 1 Oct., 7 pm
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Kinowelt Filmverleih
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Woton’s
Wake, Brian de Palma, USA 1962
The Responsive Eye, Brian de Palma, USA 1966
Dionysus in 69, Brian de Palma, USA 1970
Sat., 2 Oct., 7 pm
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Medea,
Lars von Trier, DK 1979, 77 min.
Lars von Trier based his television adaptation on an unfilmed screenplay
by Danish director Carl Theodor Dreyer. It is an atmospheric and
powerfully visual version of the classic Greek tragedy, in which
Medea seeks bloody revenge for betrayal by her husband Jason.
Fri., 15 Oct., 7 pm
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Andy Warhol
TV Show, USA 1979,
Karl Lagerfeld TV Show
Sat., 16 Oct., 7 pm

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Projekt Migration, a project initiated
by the
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