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Nathaniel Dorsky, Songs and Seasons
Arboretum Cycle

Director in Person
Screening on Film
$12 Special Event Tickets

For the last two decades, my filmmaking has explored the language or the continuity of the various. A montage, bringing together associations and subject matter through a variety of moods and energies and juxtapositions, is what propelled and inspired these ongoing cinematic investigations. The goal was always unity. The varied atmosphere of the films followed the more intimate needs of my psyche.

Within this polyvalent or open montage, there are often small sequences made up of the same subject matter suspended within the stepping stones of the various. Over recent years, these sequences began to take on more major roles in the storytelling, at times with an almost rebellious determination to free themselves of the restrictions of polyvalence.

For the past several years, California has experienced an extreme drought: several winter rainy seasons with barely any rainfall. But, this past winter, good fortune brought a bountiful amount of storms and liquid refreshment. The spring that followed took on magical and celebratory qualities of energy, joy, fullness and rebirth.

In walking distance from my apartment is San Francisco's Arboretum, located in Golden Gate Park. I decided that I would make an entire film on a single subject and that subject would be the light, not the objects, but the sacredness of the light itself in this splendid garden. What I did not know is that the great beauty of this magnificent spring would bring forth not one, but four films, each one immediately following the previous. I began the second week of February to photograph and finished the editing of the fourth film during the first days of August.

These four films spontaneously manifested as four stages of life: childhood, youth, maturity and old age. Elohim was photographed in early spring, the week of the Lunar New Year, the very spirit of Creation. Abaton was photographed a few weeks later in the full ripeness of spring, the very purity and passion of the Garden. Coda was photographed in late spring, in the aftermath of this purity, the first shades of mortality and Knowledge appearing. And finally, Ode, photographed in early summer, is a soft, textured song of the Fallen, the dissonant reds of death, seeds and rebirth. – Nathaniel Dorsky

Arboretum Cycle introduction and discussion with Haden Guest and Nathaniel Dorsky.

PROGRAM

  • Elohim

    Directed by Nathaniel Dorsky.
    US, 2017, 16mm, color, silent, 31 min.
    Print source: filmmaker
  • Abaton

    Directed by Nathaniel Dorsky.
    US, 2017, 16mm, color, silent, 19 min.
    Print source: filmmaker
  • Coda

    Directed by Nathaniel Dorsky.
    US, 2017, 35mm, color, silent, 16 min.
    Print source: filmmaker
  • Ode

    Directed by Nathaniel Dorsky.
    US, 2017, 16mm, color, silent, 20 min.
    Print source: filmmaker

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Nathaniel Dorsky, Songs and Seasons