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New York City Found and Lost

Director in Person
$12 Special Event Tickets

New York City Found and Lost program introduction and post-screening discussion with Jem Cohen, Brittany Gravely and David Pendleton.

Jem Cohen has been walking the streets of New York City for thirty years now, documenting its burgeoning street life. Over those years, however, seemingly endless waves of gentrification and, more recently, security restrictions have changed both the life on the streets and the freedom to film it. This program of short street portraits, some of Cohen's most beautiful and eloquent work, traces those changes.

PROGRAM

  • Coney Island End of God the Way It Must Be

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 1996, black & white, 3 min.
    Copy source: filmmaker
  • Little Flags

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 2000, digital video, black & white, 6 min.
  • NYC Weights and Measures

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 2005, 16mm transferred to digital video, color, 6 min.
  • Lost Book Found

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 1996, digital video, color, 37 min.

“And as I became invisible, I started to see things that had once been invisible to me." Informed by his experience as a street vendor in New York, Cohen crafted an homage to Walter Benjamin, whose work he discovered during the film’s construction. The narrator, a pushcart vendor, meets a man who is expert at fishing objects out of sidewalk gratings, collecting and selling this urban debris. Possessed by the memory of a mysterious book he almost purchased from the street fisherman, the narrator begins to see life through the template of this book and its eccentric, obsessive categorization of “places, objects, incidents.” Like the book’s author, Cohen and his stand-in become collectors of the accidental poetry of the street—art that has no calculable value, no official category—and when finally relegated to only memory, no actual substance. Tenderly coalescing Cohen’s preoccupations with urban existence, commodification and the art object, the film is a diaristic wander through the visible to the invisible, loosening the tethers of both to create an entirely unique phenomenon.

  • Night Scene New York

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 2009, 16mm transferred to digital video, color, 10 min.
  • Helianthus Corner Blues

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 2014, digital video, color, 3 min.
  • Real Birds

    Directed by Jem Cohen.
    US, 2012, digital video, color, 11 min.

Total running time: 76 min

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