Dalia Neis, Magdalena Bazantova, Stephanie Barber & Margaret Tait
This is a rare opportunity to see a selection of films by 3 contemporary filmmakers from Prague, Baltimore and London, followed by a Q&A with the artists. The programme is supplemented by a selection of Margaret Tait’s films.
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Tuesday 1 December 8pm DALIA NEIS - SELECTED FILMS MISSING MEILICH Followed by a Q&A with the artist |
PROGRAMME NOTESMISSING MEILICH (2004 | DV | Colour & b&w | 22 mins) GORAY 1648 (2007 | DV | Colour & b&w | 8 mins) SAINTS (2005 | 16mm | b&w | 5 mins) LALLA SOULIKA (2005 | DV | Colour | 4 mins) |
| Venue: The Workingmen’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, London E2 6NB | Tickets on door only: £6/£4 to Close-Up members |
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Tuesday 8 December 8pm MAGDALENA BAZANTOVA - SELECTED FILMS ABCDevil Followed by a Q&A with the artist |
PROGRAMME NOTESABCDevil (2008 | DV | Colour | 8 mins) I AM 30 AND LIFE IS SHIT (2009 | DV | Colour | 11 mins) SNOW QUEEN (2009 | DV | Colour | 13 mins) THIS FILM B (2009 | DV | Colour | 10 mins) MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS aka Sandokan (2009 | DV | Colour | 6 mins) ROCKET (2009 | DV | Colour | 9 mins) |
| Venue: The Working Men’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, London E2 6NB | Tickets on door only: £6/£4 to Close-Up members |
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Tuesday 15 December 8pm STEPHANIE BARBER - SELECTED FILMS FLOWER, THE BOY, THE LIBRARIAN Followed by a Q&A with the artist |
PROGRAMME NOTESFLOWER, THE BOY, THE LIBRARIAN (1996 | 16mm | Colour | 6 mins) LETTERS, NOTES (2000 | 16mm | Colour | 6 mins) THEY INVENTED MACHINES (1997 | 16mm | Colour | 7 mins) TOTAL POWER DEAD, DEAD, DEAD (2005 | 16mm | Colour | 3 mins) A LITTLE PRESENT (for my friend Columbus the explorer) (1997 | 16mm | Colour | 3 mins) WAR STORY (2008 | DV | Colour | 7 mins) THE VISIT AND THE PLAY (2008 | DV | Colour | 8 mins) DWARFS THE SEA (2007 | DV | Colour | 7 mins) THE INVERSION, TRANSCRIPTION, EVENING TRACK AND ATTRACTOR (2008 | DV | b&w | 13 mins) Stephanie Barber creates meticulously crafted, odd and imaginative films and videos. She has had solo screenings of her work at MoMA, NY, Anthology Film Archives, San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center, Chicago Filmmakers and many other museums, galleries and artspaces around the world. “Stephanie Barber…has one of the most original visions to emerge recently from the diverse experimental film scene. Deceptively simple at first, her work is unique in the way it alters and even suspends time.” — Fred Camper, The Chicago Reader |
| Venue: The Working Men’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, London E2 6NB | Tickets on door only: £6/£4 to Close-Up members |
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Tuesday 22 December 8pm MARGARET TAIT - SELECTED FILMS PORTRAIT OF GA |
PROGRAMME NOTESPORTRAIT OF GA (1952 | 16mm | Colour | 4 mins) AERIAL (1974 | 16mm | Colour | 4 mins) HUGH MACDIARMID, A PORTRAIT (1964 | 16mm | b&w | 9 mins) WHERE I AM IS HERE (1964 | 16mm | b&w | 33 mins) TAILPIECE (1976 | 16mm | b&w | 9 mins) Margaret Tait was one of Britain’s most unique filmmakers. She studied at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome during the height of the neorealist movement, before returning to Scotland in the early 1950s and founding her own film company, Ancona Films. Over the course of 46 years she produced over 30 films including one feature, and published three books of poetry and two volumes of short stories, while living between Orkney and Edinburgh. Tait described her life’s work as consisting of making film poems, and denied suggestions that they were documentaries or diary films. She often quoted Lorca’s phrase of ’stalking the image’ to define her philosophy and method, believing that if you look at an object closely enough it will speak its nature. This clarity of vision and purpose, with an attention to simple commonplace subjects, combined with a rare sense of inner rhythm and pattern, give her films a transcendental quality, while still remaining firmly rooted within the everyday With characteristic modesty, Tait once said of her films, that they are born “of sheer wonder and astonishment at how much can be seen in any place that you choose … if you really look.” “No aspiring film-maker, or filmgoer, could possibly fail to be inspired by her precious work” - Sukhdev Sandhu, The New Statesman “A unique and underrated filmmaker, nobody like her. Born of the Italian neorealists, formed of her own Scottish pragmatism, optimism, generosity and experimental spirit, and a clear forerunner of the English experimental directors of the late 20th century. A clear example of, and pioneer of, the poetic tradition, the experimental tradition, the democratic tradition, in the best of risk-taking Scottish cinema.” — Alt Smith This screening is supported by LUX |
| Venue: The Working Men’s Club, 44-46 Pollard Row, London E2 6NB | Ticket: £5/FREE to Close-Up members |







