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The Book of Wonders

Introduction by Mark McElhatten
Screening on Film

Seemingly poles apart, Stan Brakhage (1933-2003) and Méliès (1861-1938) were two independent spirits, explorers of multiplicity, dissection, starry realms, panoramas of the interior, metamorphosis and decay. In vastly different ways, they composed for a radiant screen, abandoning the usual notions of accepted perspectival space. Elevated vision playing along the optical fault lines where we trick ourselves into seeing things that don't exist, exist but “are not there” or habitually blinding ourselves from the full range of possible human vision. Exploring the mythic and the everyday, both filmmakers touched the boundaries between life and death, plumbing the depths of the subconscious, evoking terrors and natural splendors that summon childhood perceptions. Brakhage admired Méliès' films for their rhythmic integrity, and as investigations into semblance and actuality—revealing the nature of our unstable apparitional reality, life in flux. – Mark McElhatten

Stan Brakhage Metaphors on Vision programs introductions by Haden Guest and Mark McElhatten.

PROGRAM

  • The Dead

    Directed by Stan Brakhage.
    US, 1960, 16mm, color, silent, 11 min.
    Print source: Academy Film Archive
  • Baron Munchausen’s Dream - excerpt (Les hallucinations du baron de Münchausen)

    Directed by Georges Méliès.
    France, 1911, 16mm, black & white, silent, 5 min.
    Print source: Academy Film Archive
  • Commingled Containers

    Directed by Stan Brakhage.
    US, 1997, 35mm, color, 3 min.
    Print source: Canyon Cinema
  • The Garden of Earthly Delights

    Directed by Stan Brakhage.
    US, 1981, 35mm, color, silent, 2 min.
    Print source: HFA
  • The Kingdom of the Fairies (Le Royaume des fées)

    Directed by Georges Méliès.
    France, 1903, 35mm, black & white, silent, 17 min.
    5 min.
    Print source: Lobster Films

With its highly developed use of superimpositions, dissolves, multi-plane cinematography and hand coloring, this fairy tale is one of Méliès’ most elaborate and exquisite creations.

  • The Loom

    Directed by Stan Brakhage.
    US, 1986, 35mm, color, silent, 44 min.

Dedicated to Robert Kelly. A multiple-superimposition hand-painted visual symphony of animal life of earth. The Loom might be compared to musical quartet-form (as there are almost always four superimposed pictures); but the complexity of texture, multiplicity of tone, and the variety of interrelated rhythm, suggest symphonic dimensions. The film is very inspired by Georges Méliès: the animals exist (in Jane's enclosure) as on a stage, their interrelationships edited to the disciplines of dance, so therefore one might say this hardly represents "animal life on earth"; but I would argue that this work at least epitomizes theatrical Nature, magical Creature, and is the outside limit, to date, of my art in that respect. – Stan Brakhage

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