6.6. - 10.6.2012

Tribute to Miranda Pennell

Date: Sunday, May 30th, 2010, 8 p.m.
Location: Metro Kino

 

What connects run-down pubs, woodlands and remote meadows, private living rooms, frozen rivers and functional class rooms? They are all dance floors, as long as you behold them with the eyes of the British artist Miranda Pennell. Rhythm is to be found everywhere and choreography doesn’t seem to be tied to specific places and situations. Thus even a spontaneous domestic quarrel becomes an expressive dance duel in the vibrantly coloured living room, and exercising soldiers are drawn into the maelstrom of a (apparently or actually) thoroughly composed mass-choreography.

Pennell’s special approach to these movements and the discovery of choreography in every day situations often reveals astonishing moments and, then and again, inspires a smile. It is an exceptional kind of dance film: the people who move in the pictures aren’t forced into a perfectly arranged choreography; the object isn’t dance in the studio, on the stage or in a musical. Pennel’s films and videos look at rituals and performance in every day life.

With her compositions of images Miranda Pennell, originally educated in New York and Amsterdam as a dancer, doesn’t merely create a dance in pictures, but also dance with pictures – from emotional situations to tranquil moments that manage to contrast the movement. Pennell’s main objective is always the relationship between (dance-like) movement, the surroundings and sound. Her films often found their way onto the screens of festivals and received awards world wide (most recently 2008 in Rotterdam). In 2006 the Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen dedicated a “Profile”-Programme to her. Furthermore her works are increasingly shown within the context of art – e.g. in galleries and exhibitions. Miranda Pennell lives and works in London.

The tribute to Miranda Pennell is made possible by the cooperation with the In-Person-Programme of sixpackfilm. The artist will be present at the screening.

 

FILM PROGRAMME (72 min)

Monsieur X
UK 1990, 9 min, Digibeta

Lounge
UK 1995, 6 min, Digibeta

Tattoo
UK 2001, 9 min, Digibeta

Human Radio
UK 2002, 9 min, Digibeta

Magnetic North
UK/Finland 2003, 9 min, Digibeta

Fisticuffs
UK 2004, 11 min, Digibeta

You Made Me Love You
UK 2005, 4 min, Digibeta

Drum Room
UK 2007, 15 min, Digibeta

 

What do you attach the greatest importance to when it comes to your work?

I was trained as a dancer and choreographer, but soon turned my attention to objects of the „real“, non-theatrical and non-fictional world, things I felt I could explore through film. The desire to disclose basic human processes in every day performances and choreographies and to shed light on the secretive mechanism of human expression is at the core of these films. When I direct my focus on formalised and codified social rituals, I am interested in finding out what relationships individuals have with groups. In these films you will frequently find a strong contrast between the formal aspects of choreographical codes and the disclosure of experience within the depiction.

How do you go about using music and sound?

Sound and music take on a central role in my films. I plan the form that I want to give the sound in my films, while simultaneously thinking about the pictures. Due to the absence of dialogues there are ample opportunities for creating interesting and surprising relations between the sound and images. Drum Room (2007) for example mirrors my experience of walking around a music school, where sounds often transmute due to sound insulation or because of instruments that are only to be heard with the help of earphones; where individual experiences of music are often private and don’t correspond to the perspectives of a third-party observer. The subject of the films is not only the playing of music, but the act of hearing music. The sound in this film continually shifts the audience’s perspective and dramatically changes the notion of reality.