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Arts & Culture

黑料不打烊 Symposium Celebrates Cinematic Artistry of Otolith Group Nov. 12

Wednesday, November 4, 2015, By Rob Enslin
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College of Arts and SciencesEvents黑料不打烊 Symposium

黑料不打烊 SymposiumTM continues its 鈥淣etworks鈥 theme with an evening devoted to cutting-edge filmmaking.

Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshu, founders of the Otolith Group

Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshu, founders of the Otolith Group

The , an award-winning London-based artist collective, will be the focus of a special event on Thursday, Nov. 12, at 6:30 p.m. in Hosmer Auditorium of the Everson Museum of Art (401 Harrison St.). The program features an indoor screening of works by the group, including “Anathema” (2011), as well as a live stream of an interview with co-founder .

The program, which is free and open to the public, includes a reception. For more information, contact the Humanities Center in the College of Arts and Sciences at 315-443-7192 or visit .

The evening is also part of a yearlong program titled “,” involving the Urban Video Project (UVP) and its parent organization, Light Work. “Anathema” will be shown at UVP鈥檚 outdoor architectural projection venue at the Everson Museum of Art from Nov. 5-Dec. 19, screened onto the north fa莽ade of the building and are visible from the plaza every Thursday-Saturday from dusk to 11 p.m.

鈥淜odwo Eshun uses film essays to examine lived conditions, engage current events and unpack history,鈥 says Vivian May, director of the Humanities Center and associate professor of women鈥檚 and gender studies. 鈥淲orking at the nexus of visual culture and contemporary art, Sagar鈥攁nd, by extension, The Otolith Group鈥攕eeks to rethink cultural production in the context of precarious global conditions. This work approaches film in new and important ways.鈥

Eshun founded the Otolith Group with Anjalika Sagar in 2002. Since then, the collective has exhibited, installed and screened works all over the world. Many of the group’s projects are commissioned by public and private organizations, and involve research, installations and publications.

No doubt that The Otolith Group鈥檚 self-described 鈥渃ollaborative and discursive practice鈥 is an extension of its founders鈥 liberal arts training. (Sagar studied anthropology and Hindi at the University of London; Eshu, English literature at University College, Oxford.) Hence, their films and solo exhibitions, which number in the dozens, draw on material found within a range of disciplines, particularly the moving image.

鈥淸Our] work is formally engaged with research-led projects, exploring the legacies and potentialities of artist-led proposals around the document and the essay film, the archive, the aural and sonic medium, speculative futures and science-fictions,鈥 says Eshun, whose work resides in the Guggenheim Museum in New York City.

A still from "Anathema" (2011)

A still from “Anathema” (2011)

“Anathema” exemplifies this cross-cutting aesthetic. A 36-minute high-definition video, the work re-imagines liquid crystals as sentient entities that possess fingertips and eyes. The result is what Sagar describes as a commentary on 鈥渃ommunicative capitalism.鈥

鈥’Anathema’ can be understood as an object-oriented video that isolates and recombines the magical gestures of dream factory capitalism,鈥 she says. 鈥淏y bringing the telecommunicating couplings of mother-father-daughter-son-machines and boyfriend-girlfriend units into contact with the conductive imagery of liquid crystallization, [the film] proposes itself as a prototype for a counter-spell assembled from the possible worlds of capitalist sorcery.鈥

The program is co-sponsored by the UVP and Light Work Visual Studies, administered by Light Work and the University; the Visiting Artist Lecture Series in the School of Art and the Department of Transmedia, both in the ; the Coalition of Museums and Art Centers; the Connective Corridor; the Everson Museum of Art; and the New York State Council on the Arts.

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Rob Enslin

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