Screenings
Karel Doing: ‘In Vivo’
Join us at The Cube for a screening of ‘In Vivo’ followed by a talk and Q&A with the artist.
Reality has countless layers, many of these will remain invisible to the untrained eye. In this elegy humans appear like ants, walking around their habitat in a preprogrammed way, while animals and plants act like individuals. This upside-down world has a strange attraction which is at once alienating and deeply familiar.
The surface of the film material itself is present like a skin that breathes and interacts with the living world in manifold ways: grainy, ephemeral, tinted, vibrating. Time and space are blurred into a reality that is both specific and universal. The film is simultaneously a documentary, a home movie and a symphony. We see scraps of the filmmakers' personal history including encounters with his friends and family. But beyond those commonplace scenes, the film offers an unusual encounter with the real, embedded in a delicate composition of images and sounds.
This is part of a BEEF curated programme series that shines a light on experimental and expanded film practices homegrown in the city and beyond.
This programme is supported by West of England Visual Arts Alliance (WEVAA) and funded by Arts Council England.
The surface of the film material itself is present like a skin that breathes and interacts with the living world in manifold ways: grainy, ephemeral, tinted, vibrating. Time and space are blurred into a reality that is both specific and universal. The film is simultaneously a documentary, a home movie and a symphony. We see scraps of the filmmakers' personal history including encounters with his friends and family. But beyond those commonplace scenes, the film offers an unusual encounter with the real, embedded in a delicate composition of images and sounds.
This is part of a BEEF curated programme series that shines a light on experimental and expanded film practices homegrown in the city and beyond.
This programme is supported by West of England Visual Arts Alliance (WEVAA) and funded by Arts Council England.