DUSTY STACKS OF MOM: THE POSTER PROJECT + other colourful creations by JODIE MACK
Presented in collaboration with McIntosh Gallery, this screening features a selection of New Hampshire-based artist Jodie Mack’s quirky and colourful hybrid animations, inviting audiences to partake in her stunningly vibrant visual experiments. The centrepiece of the programme is a whimsical stop-motion animated rock opera performed by the artist.
Friday December 21, 2018
London Fringe Festival Theatre – 207 King St.
7pm – 8:30pm
$5 admission (or PWYC – no one will be turned away)
Programme:
Posthaste Perennial Pattern (2010, 4min, sound, 16mm)
Rapid-fire florals and morning bird songs bridge interior and exterior, design and nature.
Glistening Thrills (2013, 8min, sound, 16mm)
A shiny otherworld of holographic reverie pairs dollar store gift bags and haunting resound, unfolding an effervescent melancholy in three parts. Featuring compositions for bowed vibraphone by Elliot Cole.
Let Your Light Shine (2013, 3min, sound, 16mm)
A spectacle for prismatic spectacles. Handmade optical polyrhythms and a thousand rainbows explore the grating equation.
Dusty Stacks of Mom: The Poster Project (2013, 41min, sound, 16mm)
Interweaving the forms of personal filmmaking, abstract animation, and the rock opera, this animated musical documentary examines the rise and fall of a nearly-defunct poster and postcard wholesale business; the changing role of physical objects and virtual data in commerce; and the division (or lack of) between abstraction in fine art and psychedelic kitsch. Using alternate lyrics as voice over narration, the piece adopts the form of a popular rock album reinterpreted as a cine-performance.
Total duration of programme: 56 minutes
About the artist:
JODIE MACK is an experimental animator who received her MFA in Film, Video, and New Media from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2007.
Combining the formal techniques and structures of abstract/absolute animation with those of cinematic genres, her handmade films use collage to explore the relationship between graphic cinema and storytelling, the tension between form and meaning. Her films study domestic and recycled materials to illuminate the elements shared between fine-art abstraction and mass-produced graphic design. The works unleash the kinetic energy of overlooked and wasted objects and question the role of decoration in daily life.
Mack’s 16mm films have screened at a variety of venues including the Ann Arbor Film Festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival, Images Festival, Projections at the New York Film Festival, and the Viennale. She has presented solo programs at the 25FPS Festival, Anthology Film Archives, BFI London Film Festival, Harvard Film Archive, National Gallery of Art, REDCAT, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Shenzhen Independent Animation Biennale, and Wexner Center for the Arts among others.
Her work has been featured in publications including Artforum, Cinema Scope, The New York Times, and Senses of Cinema. Named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s 2014 “25 New Faces to Watch” and one of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts’ YBCA 100 in 2015, she is an Associate Professor of Animation at Dartmouth College. She is a 2017/18 Film Study Center Fellow and Roberta and David Logie Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. http://jodiemack.com/
McIntosh Gallery is a centre for the presentation and dissemination of advanced practices and research in the fields of art history and contemporary visual art. McIntosh serves the students, faculty and staff of Western University and the broader community of the City of London as a teaching and research resource. Ongoing programs and services actively promote innovative projects in the production, exhibition, interpretation and collection of visual culture. http://mcintoshgallery.ca
LOMAA wishes to thank the London Arts Council’s Community Arts Investment Program for their continued financial support. Additional thanks to London Fringe, Canyon Cinema and to McIntosh Gallery for co-organizing this event.