***Please note the change of venue, to Arts One Lecture Theatre (opposite the Hitchcock cinema)***
A symposium at Queen Mary, University of London, presented by Visual Cultures, Electra and Think Tank.
With screenings from the collection of the Centre Audiovisuel Simone de Beauvoir
Speakers: Nicole Fernández Ferrer (Centre Audiovisuel Simone de Beauvoir), Kate Ince (University of Birmingham), Diane Gabrysiak, Laura Guy (Manchester Metropolitan), Lucy Reynolds (Central St. Martins), Ursula Tidd (University of Manchester), Marina Vishmidt
(Cinenova), Ed Webb-Ingall (Filmmaker), Emma Wilson (University of Cambridge), George Clark (Tate)
Saturday 31st May, 11am
– 7pm
Location:
Arts One Lecture Theatre
Arts
One Building,
Queen
Mary University of London
Mile
End Road
London
E1 4NS
This event is free but reservation is required. To reserve a place please register here
For further information please contact Ros Murray: r.murray@qmul.ac.uk
The Sony Portapak video
camera arrived in France in 1968, coinciding with the first incarnations of
second-wave feminism and the start of new forms of activism, which emerged from
an enduring sense of political dissent created by social movements following
the May 1968 protests. The convergence of portable video technologies, feminist
theory and activist movements that sought to counter the dominant
representations of gender and sexuality propagated by the mainstream cinema and
television industries had a lasting effect throughout the 1970s. The videos
produced were often made with immediacy, highlighting the political urgency of
actions and interventions, with little thought to how they would be preserved. In
1982 three of the key proponents of militant feminist video in France, Delphine
Seyrig, Carole Roussopoulos and Ioana Wieder, founded the Centre Audiovisuel
Simone de Beauvoir, with the aim of creating an alternative archive and
distribution network for feminist film and video. Inspired by the work of
feminist theorists and activists such as Simone de Beauvoir, Kate Millett and
Flo Kennedy, activist movements such as the FHAR
(Front Homosexuel d’Action Révolutionnaire), Les Gouines Rouges and the MLF
(Mouvement de Libération des Femmes) as well as the prolific work of 1970s
video collectives (Les Insoumuses, Vidéo Out, Vidéa), the centre has been a crucial
site for feminist film and video activity in Paris ever since.
This symposium celebrates the work
of the Centre Audiovisuel Simone de Beauvoir with, for the first time in the
UK, screenings of work from their collection, selected by the centre’s director
Nicole Fernández Ferrer. The event will explore the legacies and relevance of
feminist theory, film and video activism in European contexts: from 1970s
participatory video to more recent cinematic work; and from activist
documentary to experimental film through the work of Simone de Beauvoir,
Chantal Akerman, Agnès Varda, Annabel Nicolson, Sally Potter, Alina Marazzi, Carry Gorney, Carole Roussopoulos
and Delphine Seyrig, amongst others.
With support from The Leverhulme Trust and Queen Mary. Electra is funded by Arts Council England.
Related events:
Cherchez la Femme at [ SPACE ] 16th May - 13th July
Kate Millett symposium, 30th May
Radical Technology: Portapak study day, 14th May
With support from The Leverhulme Trust and Queen Mary. Electra is funded by Arts Council England.
Related events:
Cherchez la Femme at [ SPACE ] 16th May - 13th July
Kate Millett symposium, 30th May
Radical Technology: Portapak study day, 14th May