All screenings held at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, in the Iris
and B. Gerald Cantor Auditorium, 3rd floor.
Welcome: Molly Seiler, Brooklyn Museum of Art; Nadine
Covert, Program for Art on Film
10:00am Program 1: FUNCTION & FORM
Introduced by: Barry Bergdoll, Architectural historian,
Columbia University
Charléty, un stade dans la ville (... A Stadium
in the City) (Oliver Horn, France, 1996) The Charléty
stadium, conceived by the father and son team of Henri and Bruno
Gaudin, is a harmonious exercise in calculation and design. Located
at the southernmost boundary of Paris, the 20,000-seat stadium,
built for track-and-field and rugby, is an open arena around which
a city has grown. Video. (26 min.)
Nemausus 1--Une HLM des Années 80 (Public Housing
for the 80s) (Stan Neumann and Richard Copans, France,
1995) Jean Nouvel, architect of such buildings as the Institut
du Monde Arabe in Paris and the Lyon Opera house, was commissioned
in 1986 by the city of Nîmes, in southern France, to design
114 public housing units. Video. (26 min.)
12:00 noon Program 2: ARCHITECTS
Introduced by Robert Siegel, Architect
In Search of Clarity: the Architecture of Gwathmey Siegel
(Murray Grigor, United States, 1995) Proponents of modernism,
the architectural firm of Gwathmey Siegel has built an international
reputation. Principals Charles Gwathmey and Robert H. Siegel discuss
their work, their influences, and the strength of their partnership.
Video. (45 min.)
A Vision Built: Zaha Hadid (Boris Penth, Germany,
1994) The architecture of Iraqi-born Zaha Hadid is characterized
by expressive shapes and quirky perspectives. Hadid discusses
her design process and the challenges of working in a male-dominated
profession. Video. (43 min.)
2:00pm Program 3: CONTROVERSY AND DEBATE
Peter Eisenman: Making Architecture Move
(Michael Blackwood, United States and Germany, 1995) American
architect and theorist Peter Eisenman speaks about his work and
his ideas of architecture which have fomented debate, as has his
collaboration with third-generation German architect Albert Speer.
Video. (56 min.)
Jørn Utzon: Clouds
(Pi Michael, Denmark, 1994) The Sydney Opera House has become
an international icon, yet its architect remains relatively obscure.
This Danish television production explores the history of the
building and the contre-temps that led to the resignation
of its visionary architect, Jørn Utzon, before its completion.
Video. (72 min.)
4:30pm Feature Presentation: TRAVELING WEST
Introduced by: Donna Goodman, architect and adjunct professor,
Pratt Institute School of Architecture
Mary Jane Colter: House Made of Dawn
(Karen A. Bartlett, United States, 1997) Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter
(1869-1958) was chief architect and designer for the Fred Harvey
Company and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. A proponent
of the Arts and Crafts philosophy, her designs for the Southwestern
locations drew inspiration from Spanish and Native American forms
and integrated each building to its natural and historical setting.
Video. (90 min.) PREMIERE
6:00pm Reception
7:00pm THE GETTY CENTER
Introduced by Karl Katz, Muse Film & TV
Concert of Wills: Making the Getty Center
(Susan Froemke/Bob Eisenhardt/Albert Maysles, United States, 1997)
Follows, over a thirteen-year period, the conception, planning,
and construction of the Getty Trust's new campus in Los Angeles.
Documents the complex interactions among architect Richard Meier,
Getty Museum director John Walsh, artist/garden designer Robert
Irwin, and various Getty principals. Video. (100 min.) The
filmmakers will be present.
Welcome: Anthony Caradonna, Chair, Undergraduate
Architecture Dept., Pratt Institute
10:00am Program 4: COLOR AND LIGHT
Introduced by: John Lobell, author and Professor, Pratt
Institute School of Architeture
The Walls of Mexico (El Mur y el muralismo)
(Guido de Bruyn, Belgium, 1993) The wall compositions of Mexican
architect Luis Barragan (1902-1988) play with color, structure,
and light in ways that recall the murals of Rivera, Orozco, and
Siqueiros. Video. (55 min.)
Louis Kahn: Silence and Light
(Michael Blackwood, United States, 1995) An appreciation of the
work of American architect Louis I. Kahn (1901-1974), showing
his major structures. Includes interviews and commentary by Kahn.
Video. (58 min.)
12:00 noon Program 5: ARCHITECTURAL VISIONS
Introduced by William Sloan, Museum of Modern Art
Two Impossible Films (Mark Lewis, Canada, 1995)
Filmmaker Mark Lewis imagines the opening and closing credit sequences
of two impossible films, set against the cityscape of Vancouver,
British Columbia. A witty and satiric commentary on the increasing
prominence of movie credits and on the role of Vancouver as urban
double for other cities. 35mm. (28 min.)
Il Girasole: Una Casa Vicino a Verona
(Christoph Schaub and Marcel Meili, Switzerland, 1995) In the
early 1930s, Italian engineer Angelo Invernizzi designed and had
built the Casa Girasole, near the city of Verona. Like the sunflower
for which it is named, the house revolves on its axis, turning
to follow the sun. 35mm. (17 min.) In Italian with French
subtitles. English transcript provided.
Bitings and Other Effects
(Clara van Gool, Netherlands, 1995) The bite of the tarantula
spider causes pain and purportedly an irresistible urge to dance.
The landscape and architecture of Palermo, Sicily, form a multidimensional
stage set for an inventive tarantella, choreographed
by Angelika Oei. 35mm. (30 min.)
2:00pm Program 6: OLD AND NEW
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (Ultan Guilfoyle/Allison
Lane, United States, 1997) Frank Gehry's design for the recently-opened
Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, has received international
acclaim from critics and artists. Video. (10 min.)
Carlo Scarpa (Murray
Grigor, Great Britain, 1996) Venetian-born Carlo Scarpa (1906-1978)
was radical in his approach to remodelling historic buildings,
showing tremendous confidence in combining the achievements of
the past with the invention of his own designs. Video. (57 min.)
3:30pm Round Table Discussion: Architects and Filmmakers
Moderator: Suzanne Stephens, writer/critic
Participants:
Michael Blackwood, filmmaker
Bob Eisenhardt, filmmaker/architect
Charles Gwathmey, architect
Murray Grigor, filmmaker
Deyan Sudjic, critic/architectural historian
5:00pm Lecture: Ada Louise Huxtable
, critic and author
Architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable discusses her latest book,
The Unreal America: Architecture and Illusion (New
York: The New Press, 1997)
7:00pm Feature Presentation: "A Tour through the
Whole Island of Great Britain"
Robinson in Space (Patrick Keiller, Great Britain,
1996) Keiller's fictional character, Robinson, an aesthete with
an interest in economic geography, was introduced in a previous
film, London.. The space alluded to in the
title is the increasingly unknown space of present-day England,
as the unseen Robinson-again accompanied by his sardonic researcher
and traveling companion (the voice of actor Paul Scofield)-here
embarks on an exploratory journey suggested by Daniel Defoe's
18th-century travel diary, Tour through the Whole
Island of Great Britain. 35mm. (84 min.) U. S. PREMIERE
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