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November 23, 2008





Tate Modern



Malcolm Le Grice
Horror Film 1 1971
© The artist


Expanded Cinema for Rothko
28 - 30 November 2008

All events free –
first come, first served


Tate Modern, Level 2 Gallery
Bankside

London SE1 9TG

Nearest tube: Southwark

+44 (0) 20 7887 8888

http://www.tate.org.uk



To celebrate the current blockbuster exhibition at Tate Modern,  
Rothko, this unmissable weekend features an accompanying series of  
dynamic moving image installations and performances by Malcolm Le  
Grice, and the debut of The Room, a new live film and music  
collaboration by Luke Fowler, Keith Rowe, Peter Todd.

Expanded Cinema for Rothko: The Room
Luke Fowler, Keith Rowe, Peter Todd
Friday 28 November, 19.00 – 19.45
Level 2 Gallery, Tate Modern

The Room is the first event in an ongoing series of collaborations by  
three artists. 16mm films by filmmakers Luke Fowler and Peter Todd are  
intertwined with live guitar improvisation by legendary experimental  
guitarist Keith Rowe. The filmmakers work independently, recording in  
different rooms, then bring the films together for each unique  
performance.

Expanded Cinema for Rothko: Malcolm Le Grice
Saturday 29 November - Sunday 30 November
Level 2 Gallery, Tate Modern

Malcolm Le Grice is one of Britain's most innovative filmmakers.  
Originally trained as a painter, he has consistently explored the  
experience of moving images within the art gallery as much as the  
cinema. This two-day presentation, held in conjunction with the Rothko  
exhibition, focuses on his dynamic use of colour and abstraction  
through a series of multiple screen installations and performances.

The daytime programme consists of two repeating installations for  
three screens, including over 10 works:

Saturday 29 November, 10.00 - 17.00
Sunday 30 November, 10.00 - 17.00

The evenings will feature three live performances by Malcolm Le Grice:  
Horror Film 1, Threshold, and Berlin Horse

Saturday 29 November, 20.45
Sunday 30 November, 18.00

1. Horror Film 1, 1971, 14 minutes, 3 screens	
Horror Film is a live performance work, first presented in 1971. It  
shows three layers of changing colour on 16mm film, mapped by Le  
Grice's body as he moves away from the projection, exploring the  
presence of the body and its complex colour shadow.

2. Threshold, 1972, 17 minutes, 3 screens, music/sound Malcolm Le Grice
Threshold explores the concept of an edge, one where transformations  
occur or are restricted, such as the border of a state; or where one  
optical experience transforms to another; or the point at which  
abstraction occurs. The performance is a live improvisation by the  
artist experimenting with the abstract colour fields of the film by  
moving the projectors. The central image is of border guards at a  
frontier post. It also includes a short section of computer-generated  
abstract animation made at the Government Atomic Energy Laboratory in  
Britain in 1969.

3. Berlin Horse, 1970, 9 minutes, 2 screens, soundtrack by Brian Eno
Berlin Horse is based on two sequences of film, one of a horse being  
exercised, shot in the village of Berlin near Hamburg northern  
Germany, and another found piece of early newsreel showing horses  
being led from a burning stable. Both pieces of film have been  
refilmed and visually treated then combined, creating a poetic drama  
as the two images and narrative are integrated.

For details visit http://www.tate.org.uk
To book, telephone +44 (0) 20 7887 8888










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====
Paul Brown - based in the UK Aug-Dec 2008
mailto:[log in to unmask] == http://www.paul-brown.com
UK Mobile +44 (0)794 104 8228 == USA fax +1 309 216 9900
Skype paul-g-brown
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Visiting Professor - Sussex University
http://www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/ccnr/research/creativity.html
====