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Chapter 7 Peter Tscherkassky Manufractures Two Minutes of (Im)Pure Cinema

  • Tom Gunning
© McGill-Queen's University Press

© McGill-Queen's University Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Process Cinema: Handmade Film in the Digital Age 3
  5. Histories of Handmade Film
  6. Twenty-Four Signatures per Second: Direct Animation and Gestural Repetition 21
  7. At the Limits of Cinema: Marie Menken’s Notebook 40
  8. Artisanal Filmmaking in Australia 57
  9. Process as Practice
  10. Self-Skilling and Home-Brewing: Some Reflections on Photochemical Film Culture 75
  11. After: A Beginner’s Guide to Alchemy 85
  12. How and Why: A Few Notes Concerning Production Techniques Employed in the Making of My Darkroom Films 90
  13. Peter Tscherkassky Manufractures Two Minutes of (Im)Pure Cinema 96
  14. Echoes of the Earth: Handmade Film Ecologies 108
  15. Signs of the Three: Process and Composition in Works by Bruce Elder, Izabella Pruska-Oldenhof, and Blake Williams 125
  16. Notes on the Materiality of Language in Synthetic Sound Film 151
  17. Labs and Collectives
  18. The Artist-Run Film Labs 165
  19. Toward Artisanal Cinema: A Filmmakers’ Movement 172
  20. Impalpable Boundary, Invisible Common: From Ciné-Clubs to Artist-Run Film Labs in Korea 194
  21. A Collective Charge: Collectif double négatif/ Double Negative Collective 214
  22. A Short Overview of the Production and Distribution of Alternative Filmmaking in France 231
  23. Letter to Frédérique Devaux concerning Isou’s Traité de bave et d’éternité 244
  24. Experimental? It’s Not My “Type”! 247
  25. A Dangerous Encounter: Lab Laba-Laba and the New Order’s Archive of Authoritarianism 250
  26. Pedagogies
  27. The Materiality of Abstract Animation: The Discovery and Analysis of an Unreleased Film by Gordon Webber 271
  28. “Sight Unseen”: The Ethos of Handmade Films 279
  29. Your Film Farm Manifesto of Process Cinema 292
  30. Chemistry Class: Jeffrey Paull, the Escarpment School, and the Legacy of Process Cinema at Sheridan College 294
  31. The Sound We See: Growing a Global Slow Film Movement 319
  32. A Travelogue in Two Parts: Hand Processing in the Sahara and Finding no.w.here 336
  33. Counter Cinemas
  34. Some Recipes for Disaster in the Films of Deirdre Logue and Helen Hill 353
  35. The Immediate Sensuous: 369
  36. Tearing Up the Screen: 390
  37. Projection as Performance: Recent Directions in Canadian Expanded Cinema 407
  38. Digital Interfaces
  39. Practice, Interface, and Outcome: 429
  40. Dismantling the Cinema: Restraining Presentness with Locative Media and Experimental Architecture 440
  41. Writing the World: Medium Specificity and Avant-Garde Film in the Digital Age 459
  42. Hardware Hacking, Software Modding, and File Manipulation: Process Cinema in the Digital Age 483
  43. Illustrations 499
  44. Contributors 505
  45. Index 513
Process Cinema
This chapter is in the book Process Cinema
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