THE EVENT IS POSTPONED
We regret to announce that tonight’s screening of works by Lana Lin has been postponed. It will be rescheduled as soon as possible.
Monday September 30, 7:30pm
Corporeal Fluidity, Linguistic Flesh:
Early Films by Lana Lin and one by Lin + Lam
Curated by Morrison Gong
Still from “Taiwan Video Club” by Lana Lin (1999) — Image courtesy of the artist
“Woman’s writing becomes organic writing, nurturing-writing (nourricriture), resisting separation. It becomes a connoting material, a kneading dough, a linguistic flesh. And it draws its corporeal fluidity from images of water.” — Trinh T. Minh-ha, Woman, Native, Other
Microscope is very pleased to present an evening of films and videos by New York-based artist Lana Lin, organized by Morrison Gong. The program includes a selection of seven short works by Lin — including a collaboration with H. Lan Thao Lam — made between 1992 and 2005 on both 16mm film and digital video.
From Morrison Gong:
“The works included in the program were made over the past 20 years – from Lin’s 16mm film “I Begin to Know You” made in 1992, a found footage collage depicting historical images of women in domestic settings, to her 2015 video “Moby Ovary and Madame Dick” that draws inspiration from thematic connections between two literary classics. Also included in the program is Lin’s collaborative project “Unidentified Vietnam No. 18” with H. Lan Thao Lam (Lin + Lam), in which they re-edit U.S. sponsored Vietnamese propaganda films to question structured and internalized national policies. Most works will be shown in their original formats.
Lin’s films focus on discourses of identification and ethnographic landscape. Her works examine the product of gendered and racialized power dynamics implied in media representation. Lin’s Taiwanese heritage, as well as her Western upbringing, are two colliding waves that exchange and explore problems of translation across cultures.
Flux is a constant motif in Lin’s films. It not only symbolizes migration and transient bodies, but also acts as a conduit for cultural and linguistic memories. In her 1995 film “Stranger Baby”, the glistening texture of streaming water contrasts with the soft skin of a baby playing in it. Water is the bearer of a newborn, a new meaning. Whereas in “Mizu Shobai (Water Business)”, water speaks to a kind of sentimentality in both Japanese language and a mythic understanding of “the geisha’s” lifestyle; it carries more of an idiomatic significance. Moreover, Lin’s mixed usage of languages and audio materials echoes how translation functions as the foundation of ethnographic subjectivity. The layered soundtracks, paired with the filmic images, create speculative and evocative spaces for the spectators.”
Lin and Gong will be in attendance and available for Q&A following the screening.
General admission $8
Students & Members $6
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Lana Lin is a filmmaker, artist, and writer whose creative practice concerns embodied vulnerabilities. She has produced a body of experimental films and videos that interrogate the politics of identity and cultural translation through attention to the formal capacities and historical contingencies of moving image media. Since 2001, she has focused on collaborative multi-disciplinary research-based projects (as Lin + Lam) that examine the construction of history and collective memory. Her works have been screened and exhibited at BAMcinemaFest, Brooklyn, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Gasworks, London, and Oberhausen Film Festival, among others. Lin has received awards from the Javits Foundation, Fulbright Foundation, Jerome Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, and has been a fellow at the MacDowell Colony, Civitella Ranieri, and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics. Lin is Associate Professor of Film Theory and Digital Cinema Production in Media Studies at The New School, New York.
Morrison Gong uses film, video, performance and photography to dissect eroticism and confront their cultural taboos of sexuality. Their work often deals with exposure, viscerality and transformation: through recounting personal experiences, or re-interpreting literature and mythology with body movements, cinematic and spoken languages. Gong received their BFA from Parsons School of Design. Their work has been showed at Microscope Gallery, Vox Populi Gallery, Manhattan Independent Film Festival, and Hong Kong Arthouse Film Festival. Gong currently lives and works in Queens, NY.
Program:
I Begin to Know You
16mm by Lana Lin, color, sound, 1992, 2 minutes 30 seconds
“I Begin to Know You culls from a global image bank to offer some elusive variations on the picturing of women in the domestic arena … This concise, historical collage of images and image-making provides a remarkable interpretation on the idea of the ‘home-maker,’ where ‘home’ is the world and the maker is the feminine figure often looked at and rarely recognized.” — Jason Simon, catalog for Unite d’Habitation le Corbusier, Firminy, France, May 1993
Unidentified Vietnam No. 18
16mm film by Lin + Lam, color and b&w, sound, 2007, 30 minutes
Unidentified Vietnam No. 18 is a successor to the seventeen films in the Library of Congress South Vietnam Embassy Collection labeled only “Unidentified Vietnam, # 1-17.” Initiated by these 1960s propaganda films, the project calls into question the policies and politics of nation building.
Through the Door
16mm by Lana Lin, color and b&w, sound, 1992, 3 minutes
Compiled from found films, Through the Door is a mock travel film in which visual and aural narratives unfold independently, reinforcing and countering each other.
Mizu Shobai (Water Business)
16mm film by Lana Lin, color and b&w, sound, 1993, 12 minutes
“Through lyrical images and narrative shards, Lin builds a critique of the ways in which the figure of the Japanese woman exists in the imaginary.” – Manohla Dargis, LA Weekly
Moby Ovary or Madame Dick
Digital video by Lana Lin, color, sound, 2015, 1 minute
A one-minute gender juggling brew of narcissism, hysteria, and monstrous desire, drawing from eight adaptations of two modern classics.
Taiwan Video Club
Digital video by Lana Lin, color, sound, 1999, 14 minutes
Taiwan Video Club profiles a group of cost-cutting Asian immigrants who collect and trade videotapes of their favorite epics broadcast daily in Taiwan. Their pirate distribution marked a turning point in the history of consumer video when stories that were once passed on from mouth to mouth were then passed on from VCR to VCR. Taiwan Video Club’s visuals were duplicated from the “low grade” tape that united these diasporic women to their native culture and common past. Degenerated and heavily inscribed with text, the video is an invitation and challenge to work through one’s own process of translation while viewing.
Stranger Baby
16mm film by Lana Lin, b&w, sound, 1995, 14 minutes
Moving between fiction, non-fiction, and science fiction, Stranger Baby features collaged micro-narratives and interviews that report on the multiple meanings of the term “alien.” The layered soundtrack is composed of viewers speculating on the film’s images. Their responses, marked by anxiety, gravitate toward ready-made assumptions. The voices elaborate an allegory of race and gender relations that exposes the dangerous inclination toward racial profiling. The film’s internal monologue addresses both the attractive and threatening aspects of alienation, confessing to its allure while constructing a critique that challenges viewers to recognize themselves as possible agents or recipients of the vilifying gaze.
Total Running Time: 77 minutes
Still from “Unidentified Vietnam No. 18” by Lin + Lam (2007) — Image courtesy of the artists
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Microscope Gallery Event Series 2019 is sponsored, in part, by the Greater New York Arts Development Fund of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, administered by Brooklyn Arts Council (BAC).