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Event
Private Imaginings: The Films of Edward Owens
Los Angeles Filmforum presents Private Imaginings: The Films of Edward Owens Sunday, March 3, 2019, 7:30 pm At the Spielberg Theatre at the Egyptian, 6712 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90028
In our screening with Josh Mabe on January 18 of some Chicago favorites, we were blown away by the film Remembrance: A Portrait Study, by Edward Owens, previously unknown to us. In response, weve decided to screen all three of Owenss films currently in distribution! Were not the only ones; on January 21, MoMA ran a similar show, and Light Industry in New York has also done one, along with one in Chicago. But that might well be it, and this show might be the Los Angeles premiere of two of his films, both little known works from the mid-1960s. But who was Edward Owens? A queer black artist, working first in 8mm, discovered by Gregory Markopoulos at the Art Institute of Chicago. Encouraged by Markopoulos to go to New York, Owens did, and became part of the scene, and made three marvelous films, largely portraits, with references to Markopouloss Twice a Man as well. But in 1971, he gave up filmmaking, returned to Chicago, and lived a different life. Ed Halter found the titles in the Filmmakers Coop collection, interviewed him in 2009 shortly before his death, and started the rediscovery of Edward Owens. We hope youll join us as we spread the word about these beautiful films, all made before Owens was 21 years old.
"(Edward Owens) may well be one of the few for whom 'amateur' and 'professional' need have no significance whatsoever: true to his own native talents, with grim determination uncanny, whether the mind in the arts is for or against beauty or its opposite twin, chaos. So that with each subsequent struggle to complete a film he will leave us breathless with anticipation for his next work." Gregory Markopoulos on Edward Owens' film AUTREFOIS
Tickets: $10 general; $6 for students/seniors; free for Filmforum members. Available in advance from Brown Paper Tickets at or at the door. For more information: www.lafilmforum.org or 323-377-7238.
Bio: In the mid 1960s, Edward Owens was an African-American teenager attending the Art Institute of Chicago when Gregory Markopoulos arrived to found the schools film program. Owens, who was then studying painting and sculpture, had already been making 8mm movies for a few years; impressed by the maturity of his work, Markopoulos encouraged him to move to New York. Owens arrived in Manhattan in 1966 with Markopoulos, who quickly ushered him into the world of the citys cultured demimonde, introducing him to figures like Andy Warhol, Gerard Malanga, Marie Menken, Gregory Battcock, and filmmaker-poet Charles Boultenhouse. Soon, Owens became romantically involved with Boultenhouse, and moved into the West Village apartment where Boultenhouse already lived with his lover of many decades, the legendary critic Parker Tyler, who accepted the arrangement. Over the next four years, Owens created a cluster of films that display an increasing mastery of form, inspired by Markopouloss style but transformed into something purely his own. With each subsequent struggle to complete a film he will leave us breathless with anticipation for his next work, Markopoulos remarked around this time. Owenss featurette Tomorrows Promise shows the particular influence of his mentors Twice a Man, telling the elliptical tale of a broken romance between a man and a woman through strobing edits, layered images, and dramatically lit nudes. The sophistication of the film is all the more impressive when one considers that Owens was only eighteen years old when he made it. The extant reel of Tomorrows Promise still bears the filmmakers editing marks, as if a work in progress, though this is the version placed in distribution by Owens, and likely screened at the Fourth International Film Exhibition at Knokke-le-Zoute, Belgium in 1968. Even Tyler, who by the 1960s was highly critical of many new filmmakers, granted Owens curmudgeonly praise for the film, writing that Tomorrows Promise bore a quality so pictorially exciting that the next thing he must do is listen to my advice. But the true breakthrough in Owenss work can be seen in his following two films, Remembrance: A Portrait Study and Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts. Both were shot in Chicago, and bring his formidable repertoire of techniques to bear upon nonfictional subject matter: his own family and their circle. Remembrance pictures his mother, Mildered Owens, and her friends Irene Collins and Nettie Thomas. The women are shown drinking, smoking, and hanging out, their faces lit like 17th-century paintings, set to a soundtrack of pop songs. Tyler noted its achievements by listing Remembrance among the key works of the avant-garde in his landmark study Underground Film: A Critical History. Originally titled Mildered Owens: Toward Fiction, the achingly silent Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts focuses more directly on his mother, setting her regal depiction amidst delicate pulses of editing and oblique superimpositions, evoking the gap between the homebound realities of life and desires for far-off luxury and refinement. Owenss filmmaking career tragically ended when he was only twenty years old. By his own account, his addiction to drugs and an as-yet-undiagnosed bipolar disorder began to take their toll. After a near suicide attempt at a hotel, Owens left New York in 1971 to return to Chicago, where he finished his college degree but never completed another film, living the rest of his life out on the South Side where he was raised. I had only discovered Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts in 2009, by reading its description in the catalog of the Film-makers Co-op. There was little other information about its maker on file, and I assumed he might be dead. But then I noticed that he had made the film when he was very young, and decided to look up his phone number, wondering if he might still be alive in his native Chicago. One of the numbers worked, and over several more phone calls I interviewed Edward for many hours. It was from these discussions that numerous biographical details emerged. He was overjoyed that someone had seen and loved his film after so many years, and had forgotten that the print was even at the Co-op. His conversations were full of salty humor and explicit gossip, but I also heard the voice of a much older man, vaguely alluding to medical problems, and speaking of dreams that had never come to pass. The narrative facts of daily existence had long overtaken the private imaginings of his youth. Only a few months after I first contacted him, Edward passed away, at just over 60 years old. - Ed Halter Screening: Digital preservations courtesy The Film-Makers' Cooperative. Program approximately 60 min.
Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts 1966, 16mm to digital, color, silent, 8.75 min. Probably the Los Angeles premiere. "A montage of still and moving images, mixing and alternating black people and white people, fantasy and reality, a presidential suite and a mother's kitchen: a sensitive, poetic evocation in the manner of the film-maker's "Remembrance". Brilliantly colored and nostalgic, it comprises a magical transformation of painterly collage and still photographic sensibility into filmic time and space." Charles Boultenhouse
Remembrance A Portrait of Study 1967, 16mm to digital, color, sound, 6 min. Remembrance: A Portrait Study is a filmic portrait of the artists mother, Mildered Owens, and her friends Irene Collins and Nettie Thomas, set to a score of 50s and 60s hit songs. Using Baroque lighting techniques, Owens captures the three women drinking and lounging one evening. - Tate Museum Owens wanted the film to play twice in a row, once with sound, once silent, and that is what we will do.
Tomorrows Promise 1967, 16mm to digital, color, silent, 44.75 min. Probably the Los Angeles premiere! Tomorrows Promise is a film about vacantness. Which physically does begin, reversed, upside down on the screen (but by what premise is it supported? , e.g. the film, so chimerical as life itself, follows its own way), suddenly another such position is taken (not in reverse), this time by a male figure and soon, in this same section, the girl of the reversed image reappears posed in a different way; a way obsessed by mood. Then a technical play of in-the-camera-editing occurs, more intense, brighter than in the first, reversed section. There are several inter-cuts which serve, in this and each subsequent section unto the end, as relative links into the final section: which is actually the story. The story the protagonist and her hero try to tell in their way is apophysis; except that pictures, clear visions take the place of words. My film could have been edited with precise tensions and a lucid straight narrative, but it was my aim to re-create the protagonist of my personal life. - Edward Owens ---------------------- Los Angeles Filmforum screenings are supported by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission and the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles. We also depend on our members, ticket buyers, and individual donors. Los Angeles Filmforum is the citys longest-running organization dedicated to weekly screenings of experimental film, documentaries, video art, and experimental animation. 2019 is our 44th year.
Coming Soon to Los Angeles Filmforum: March 10 Jim Finn March 14 Babette Mangolte March 15 - Babette Mangolte March 17 Peter Mays Retrospective, part 1 March 24 Films by Sara Kathryn Arledge March 31 Peter Mays Retrospective, part 2 April 7 Ariana Gerstein
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LocationSpielberg Theatre at the Egyptian (View)
6712 Hollywood Blvd,
Los Angeles, CA 90028
United States
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Kid Friendly: No |
Dog Friendly: Yes! |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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