Monday June 29, 7:00pm
Jonas Mekas
365 Day Project: Part Six “June”
of the 12 month screening premiere

artist in person – pizza break at mid-point
admission $6 – free for Members

dropofrainonlips

All images courtesy of Jonas Mekas © 2007


The screening premiere of Jonas Mekas’ “365 Day Project” reaches its half-way mark with Part Six: “June”. As the days get longer, Mekas’ thoughts turn to summer travels with family in Cape Cod and with friends Peter Kubelka in Capri, Tony Guerrero in Southern France, Philip Glass in Luxembourg, and Jackie Raynal in Paris. The artist also finds himself at the tomb of Juliet in Verona, in a garden dedicated to John Lennon in Girona (Spain) , and at an Italian Museum for Stradivari violins.

Mekas’ daily wanderings in New York City take him from Spoonbill in Williamsburg where Tosh Berman presents a book of his father’s photographs to the Upper East Side with Richard Serra at his MoMA opening, and a chance encounter with Taylor Mead in the East Village in between. The artist also pauses to offer advice on how to stop a headache and on the “beauty of changing one’s mind”, as inspired by Paris Hilton, and captures discussions on the mediums of film and video, including a proclamation by Kubelka about the future of his celluloid works. Other days are full of dance, drinks, music, and roses.

Also featured: Patti Smith, Raimund Abraham, Sarunas Bartas, Bradley Eros, and Andrew Lampert among others.

Running time: approx. 3 hours

Audience may enter and exit at any time.





June_richardserra

Richard Serra –image courtesy of Jonas Mekas


About 365 Day Project

“Every day of the year 2007 I placed on my website one new video usually about three to ten minutes in length.  By the time the project ended, I had made 38 hours of completed video works, the equivalent of twenty feature films… It was the most challenging undertaking I had ever done. The videos deal with my life in Brooklyn and my many travels of that year. It’s personal and anthropological (impersonal) at the same time.  During my travels I relied a lot on technical and other help from The Gang (Benn Northover, Sebastian Mekas — I travel most of the time with The Gang) and Elle Burchill was always ready at my Brooklyn station. You’ll see a lot of me and my friends, various daily activities, gettings together, a lot of music, and a lot of events around New York and Europe that year. The main challenge was to record it and share it immediately with many friends all over the world. Today I still do the same, but not daily, with less pressure, on my website www.jonasmekas.com” – Jonas Mekas

The videos in the “365 Day Project” were made available for download and playable on smartphones at a time when Facebook had just been made publicly accessible, Youtube had just been acquired by Google, and the first iPhone was about to be released later that year. The videos range from 30 seconds to 30 minutes.

Selections from the “365 Day Project” is currently on view at the Internet Pavillion, Venice Italy through November 22. The work  has previously been presented in its complete form as an installation (playing on 12 or 52 monitors) at ZKM, Karlsruhe (Germany); Hermitage, St. Petersburg (Russia); galerie du jour, Paris (France) and 2B Gallery, Budapest (Hungary).

taylormead

Taylor Mead – image courtesy of Jonas Mekas


_

Jonas Mekas was born in 1922 in Semeniškiai, Lithuania and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Mekas was brought to the US along with his brother Adolfas in 1949 by the UN Refugee Organization. Within weeks, Mekas borrowed money to buy his first Bolex camera and began to record brief moments of his life. Mekas is now among the most influential makers of avant-garde film and a master of the diaristic form.

His works are shown regularly in the US and internationally including recent solo exhibitions at KZM Karlsruhe, Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Stadmuseum Weisbaden in Germany; Serpentine Gallery, London, UK; Centre Pompidou, Paris; James Fuentes Gallery, NY; DOX Centre for Contemporary Art, Prague; MUAC, Mexico City; Krinzinger Projekte Vienna; National Museum of Art, Washington, DC. Mekas’ works have also previously exhibited at Moderna Museet, Stockholm; MoMA PS1, Queens; Documenta, Kassel, Galerie Du Jour, Paris; Venice Biennale, Venice; among many others.

Mekas has also published more than 20 books of prose and poetry, which have been translated into over 12 languages. He was co-founder of the influential Film Culture magazine and wrote his  “Movie Journal” column at the Village Voice for 20 years. He also founded the Film-Makers’ Cooperative in 1962, and in 1964 the Film-Makers’ Cinematheque, which eventually grew into Anthology Film Archives. Both are still operating under the original mission today.

spain

image courtesy of the artist



  • join our mailing list



    F T V instagram