Warren Sonbert Retrospective at Tate Modern

Warren Sonbert Retrospective at Tate Modern
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Warren Sonbert Retrospective at Tate Modern
 
 
Warren Sonbert
Warren Sonbert with his film camera

© The Estate of Warren Sonbert

 


TATE  
Tate Modern, London
Thursday 24 October - Sunday 27 October


Warren Sonbert is one of the seminal figures in American experimental film. A precocious talent, he had his first career retrospective before he turned 21 years old, establishing his reputation early as a key innovator in New York's counter-culture during the 1960s. Encouraged to take up filmmaking by Gregory Markopolous, his early works were populated by denizens of Warhol's scene such as superstar René Ricard and Gerard Malanga, as well as art critic Henry Geldzhaler. Often characterised as diaristic, his films pay close attention to intimate details of his surroundings and relationships that evolved from his living in New York and San Francisco, but also developed a unique lyrical form that transcends their quotidian detail to explore our individual human position in the world at large.

 

Defined by many contrasting influences from rock-and-roll to opera, from Douglas Sirk's classic Hollywood melodramas to the montage theories of Dziga Vertov, his films constantly question the world around him and positions the minutiae of day-to-day experience in an epic, international framework. His complex editing style - cutting rapidly between time periods, cultures and continents - creates a polyphonic cinema embraced equally by film and by literary circles leading to his close association with the New York School and Language Poets from the San Francisco Bay Area (including Michael Brownstein, Larry Fagin and Anne Waldman as well as Carla Harryman and Charles Bernstein). The first complete retrospective of his work in the UK, this series will position newly restored works alongside films by his peers such as Stan Brakhage, Abigail Child, Nathaniel Dorsky, Gerard Malanga, Gregory Markopoulos, Jeff Scher, and Andy Warhol, as well as Douglas Sirk's feature film Tarnished Angels (1957).

 

A special panel discussion with archivist Jon Gartenberg, writer Lynne Tillman and historian James Boaden, follows the Warren Sonbert: Where Did Our Love Go? programme on Saturday 26 October.

 

Co-curated by Jon Gartenberg with Tate Film.
Individual screenings introduced by Jon Gartenberg

 

The films of Warren Sonbert were preserved through the efforts of the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS in cooperation with the Academy Film Archive. Archivist Jon Gartenberg developed this film preservation initiative with the support of Ascension Serrano (The Estate of Warren Sonbert) and John Hanhardt (former senior curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum). The prints of Warren Sonbert's films in this retrospective exhibition are made available through Light Cone (Paris), the European distributor of his films. Program notes for this series by Jon Gartenberg, with additional contributions by George Clark.

 

Tate Film is supported by Maja Hoffmann / LUMA Foundation

 
Events in this series

Thursday 24 October 2013, 19.00 - 21.00

Friday 25 October 2013, 19.00 - 20.30

Friday 25 October 2013, 21.00 - 22.30

Saturday 26 October 2013, 15.00 - 17.00

Saturday 26 October 2013, 17.00 - 18.30

Saturday 26 October 2013, 19.00 - 21.00

Sunday 27 October 2013, 15.00 - 17.00

Sunday 27 October 2013, 17.00 - 19.00

Sunday 27 October 2013, 19.00 - 21.00 

 


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