All creative works are derivative

European Souvenirs, a project by Doc Next Network, wants to re-conquer European imaginary. Remix techniques help us not only to understand the past, but also a way of re-writing our past.

Doc Next Network is working on European Souvenirs an independent, process-oriented, investigative, collaborative, innovative and high quality multi-media project that will shake up our minds and our prevailing imagery of the places we live in. The project is commissioned by the European Cultural Foundation in its quest for new European inspiring narratives, and designed by ZEMOS98 (Spain).

[FMP width=”640″ height=”360″]http://dnn.data-ant.com/dnn_wp_html/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/european_souvenirs_teaser_480x270.mp4[/FMP]

 

WHY DO WE DO IT?

VJs, or any artist who takes on the precepts of contemporariety as proposed by Marcel Duchamp and his ready-mades, uses the material at hand as a source of inspiration. The copying, manipulation and representation of the real includes images from films, DVDs, video clips and video games.

In an interview by ZEMOS98 about his remix of D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation, the musician and philosopher Paul D. Miller a.k.a. DJ Spooky said: “the profile of the DJ is already established in our minds, which is why the art of the 20th Century has become the inspiration for the art of the 21st century”.

In

Augustine of Hippo identifies three times:

“(…) a present of things past, a present of things present, and a present of things future. (…) The present of things past is memory, the present of things present is sight, and the present of things future is expectation”.

Loop

The greatest video remixer of history of  video art is precisely the father of  video art, its most famous pioneer: Nam June Paik. On the 1st of January 1984, artists from all over the world were invited to participate in a global satellite project called Good Morning Mr. Orwell as a tribute to George Orwell.

Paik’s main concern was to create an international product made up of a mix of synthesized images that he would remix together in real time. This work was the first television zapping experience involving Eastern and Western images, because Paik structured the tape as a collage of images. Paik’s collages –said Jean Paul Fargier – tend to infinity.

“Culture is an endless palimpsest”, according to Roland Barthes: no tradition, no memory, no myth is ultimate: the process of communication is endless indeed. “All creative works are derivative”, Nina Paley explains.

Our media landscape (Antoni Muntadas) is full of texts, audios, videos and pictures: a constant loop that puts together and build a common imaginary, that is, a cultural, symbolic and token dimension of norms, traditions, rituals, values, institutions, laws and symbols that a society has in common, respect and works as a frame for the ways of living together.

European Souvenirs departs from the convention of the traditional audiovisual memoire: the (media) archive. This process-oriented media project researches and translates a combination of media archives from different european institutions to show on the stage the connections between European media landscape and its social imaginaries, dealing with the representation of european identity, experience and tradition.

Inspired by avant-garde art movement philosophy, by its experimental techniques like the collage, influenced by expanded, abstract and live cinema and radically linked to the paradigm of remix culture, European Souvenirs retrieves media documents to implement, reconcile and capture the imagination of Europe.

Re-loop

Remix as a new cultural paradigm: memory, fiction, utopia and archive. Archives become treasures to be discovered, overwhelmed by the information age. European Souvenirs is a unique archive and source of media documents that tell other or important stories (not visible for the mainstream media): it can bring those stories to another stage, remixed in a highly qualitative live cinema performance that will tour in different countries. In a constant process of interaction, found images from the past produce new ideas:

“You don’t have to look for new images that have never been seen, but you have to work on existing images in a way that makes them new. There are various paths. Mine is to look for the buried sense, and to clear away the rubble lying on top of the images.” (Harun Farocki).

Chroma key (a photographic compositing technique based on the separation of colors in the original images)

Remix culture is much more than an artistic antecedent based on the idea of surrealist collage. Remix culture is much more than an audio sampling technique inspired by the origins of phonography and highlighted by Djs since the 80s. Remix is deeply embedded in our culture and influences the intersection of education, communication, culture and politics. European Souvenirs artists will tend to become invisible as the creators of the work.

Once the show begins, the home-videos and other found material from the archives will be suddenly charged with meaning not intended by the original producers. Techniques like sampling, dub, assemblage, collage, remix, chroma key or scratch are applicable to this particular project because of the availability of this ready-made material from the archives we work with.

Fade in (audio or video effect used to begin a sample in total silence or darkness and gradually increase the audio signal or lighten a shot to full brightness)

It makes sense for the European Souvenirs project to become archaeologists of image and sound in order to keep up with our age and to transform old footage in new and meaningful media. The souvenir as «a memento, keepsake or token of remembrance» is the core of the project. Apparently disconnected, a chaos of souvenirs is re-organized through remix techniques to capture completely new and updated visions and ways of imaging the society we live in.

Wipe (one shot replaces another following a 2-dimension pattern)

European Souvenirs champions the idea of a multi-layer reality woven of diverse identities, experiences and traditions. European Souvenirs represents that complex idea by a multimedia, collaborative, work-in-progress project which is characterised by the use of found footage and multi-layered rhythms. Remix techniques help us not only to understand the past, but also a way of re-writing our past.

Scratch (a video editing technique as a variation of moving a vinyl record back and forth on a turntable)

“We need history, but not the way a spoiled loafer in the garden of knowledge needs it.” (Nietzsche, Of the Use and Abuse of History). “New techniques for our past and history, which are themselves our future.” (Walter Benjamin). European Souvenirs wants to re-conquer the destiny of present-day European imagination of itself.

Copy & Paste

“Our markets, our democracy, our science, our traditions of free speech, and our art all depend more heavily on a Public Domain of freely available material than they do on the informational material that is covered by property rights. The Public Domain is not some gummy residue left behind when all the good stuff has been covered by property law. The Public Domain is the place we quarry the building blocks of our culture. It is, in fact, the majority of our culture.” (James Boyle, The Public Domain).

WHEN
European Souvenirs is a live cinema performance that will be staged for the first time at Imagining Europe on Saturday, 6 October 2012 at the renowned cultural space De Balie in Amsterdam, and will tour afterwards in different countries across Europe and beyond.
MORE ABOUT EUROPEAN SOUVENIRS
The artists work with audiovisual material from leading European institutions that have opened up their archives for this project: Eye Film Institute (Amsterdam), Institute for Sound and Image (Amsterdam), OVNI Archives (Barcelona) and Filmoteca de Andalucía (Córdoba), Digital National Archive (Warsaw), SALT (Istanbul) and the British Film Institute (London).

Curated by Spanish artists and remix experts of ZEMOS98, European Souvenirs will be created by an artistic ensemble of five European media-makers that were born during the decades of the 1980’s and later in Spain, Poland, UK, Turkey and the Netherlands. They have different profiles complementing each other as media artists, performers, 3D animators, documentarians, musicians, DJs and VJs.

The audience will enjoy an audiovisual journey through the re-interpretation of home and institutional archives. This performance aims to capture the views of a new generation of media-makers to address key concerns and issues of the Europe we live in for a broad audience in Europe and beyond.

European Souvenirs has its own website with updates about the project, portraits of the artists and more. You can also stay up to date by becoming our friend: Like our Doc Next Network Page on Facebook!
WOULD YOU LIKE A REMIX CULTURE COURSE? GO TO http://blogs.zemos98.org/abrelatas/2012/07/04/remix-culture-course/

DOCUMENTARIST 2012

A 90-minute short documentary selection from the ever-expanding Doc Next Media Collection will be screened at Documentarist 2012 Documentary Festival in Istanbul today!

The selection includes short films, documentaries, political remixes and media biographies depicting alternative perspectives and new ways of storytelling, capturing the insights of young people and contributing to a new understanding of Europe across its various regions. The screening is presented by MODE Istanbul, the Doc Next Network partner in Turkey, and will be held at SALT Beyoglu today (June 6) at 16:00. A Q&A with the present media-makers will be held after the screening.

 

FILM LIST:

  • Demledik, Çökmesini Bekliyoruz, 6:05, Metin Akdemir, Hande Zerkin, Güneş Uyanıker, Gülgün Dedeçam, Turkey
  • İçimizden Biri (One of Us), 6:10, Gamze Akan, Ilgın Aksoy, Şengül Moral, Turkey
  • Sesler ve Gölgeler (Sounds and Shadows), 4:55, Selin Gündüz, Erkan Atay, Alper Dutkin, Ahmet Turan, Turkey
  • Gel-Git (Ebb and Tide), 11:01, Nazlı Kaya, Turkey
  • Launderette, 9:33, Alex Nevill, Bertie Telezynski, UK
  • Recover & Rebuild: Croydon, 4:59, Rebecca Richards, UK
  • Wires, 7:57, Jacob Dwyer, UK
  • Taki Typ Ptactwa (This Type of Birds), 12:06, Małgorzata Goliszewska, Poland
  • Biuro Rzeczy Zagubionych (Lost Property Fffice), 9:51, Anna Rok, Agnieszka Kokowska, Poland
  • Bez Widza, 6:03, Rafal Andrzej Glombiowski, Poland
  • El Sexo Sentido (Sex sense), 5:00, José Manuel Borrego, José Manuel Expósito, Pedro Fernández, Rosario Fernández, Noelia Fernández, Belén Márquez, José Antonio Márquez, Iván Ruiz Vergara, Pablo Domínguez, Spain
  • Cuentos ilustrados (Illustrated Stories), 12:07, Pablo Domínguez Sanchez, Felipe G. Gil, Spain
  • Our Dangerous Demands, 2:00, Malaventura, Spain
  • The Manifacture of Consent, 2:22, Enrico Argento, Portugal

For the screening info on Documentarist website click here. For more information: www.modeistanbul.com

 

Doc Next makers visit Sheffield

8 Doc Next Network media-makers, selected by our hubs from the UK, Turkey, Spain and Poland will visit Sheffield Doc /Fest this year. Sheffield Doc/Fest brings the international documentary family together to celebrate the art and business of documentary making for five intense days in June. Doc/Fest is a film festival, industry session programme and market place, offering pitching opportunities, controversial discussion panels and in-depth filmmaker masterclasses, as well as a wealth of inspirational documentary films from across the globe.

  • Participants receive basic training in how to pitch documentary ideas, as well as getting expert feedback on their techniques, building confidence and media literacy skills;
  • Participants get the opportunity to experience one of the worlds largest and most important documentary festivals and get ideas of future career paths;
  • Participants network with other young filmmakers from Doc Next Network Hubs, as well as young filmmakers from the Second Light programme Life’s a Pitch, working together in the workshop, and then also spending time together outside of the workshop, promoting international networking and knowledge exchange;
  • Participants get to watch range of documentary films and attend masterclasses and activities on Documentary making, increasing their Media Literacy and giving them the opportunity to discuss and debate some of the documentaries screened.

Life’s a Pitch 

Life’s a Pitch is a lively pitching panel event for young people on talent and skills development schemes, Second Light (supported by The Grierson Trust) and the Doc Next Network. Come along to hear fresh, diverse voices and new ideas from different perspectives.

Second Light Doc Lab participants will be demonstrating their skills of persuasion in front of an industry panel, with Doc Next attendees pitching ideas that capture the views of young European media-makers today.

On the first day the participants will be trained in pitching techniques, and helped to develop ideas for a pitch, then on the second day they will pitch these ideas to a panel of industry professionals and live audience that can give them feedback on both their ideas and their pitching technique.

It’s similar to the Winning Pitch event held at the Future Film Festival, but spread over 2 days instead of 1.5 hours, so they will be given much more support and time to develop their ideas. This also won’t be a competition, and there will be no prize, unlike our event, with all participants getting detailed and constructive feedback on their work.

Doc Next at Industry area

A selection of Doc Next Network  films are screened in the video booth in the industry arena.

Wanted: Doc Next intern in Amsterdam

Are you our new intern? By joining our Youth and Media team you will be supporting the collaboration between Doc Next Network and IDFA (assisting in production, research and developing our online media collection). This internship is open to students of media or journalistic disciplines and runs for a period of four months from the beginning of September 2012.

Read the full job description here.

European Souvenirs

Five young European media-makers have now started work on European Souvenirs, a unique international remix project. It is commissioned by ECF, in the framework of Doc Next Network.

European Souvenirs artists Karol Rakowski, Barış Gürsel, Farah Rahman, Malaventura and Noriko Okaku © Ricardo Barquín Molero
European Souvenirs artists Karol Rakowski, Barış Gürsel, Farah Rahman, Malaventura and Noriko Okaku © Ricardo Barquín Molero

During the next few months, the artists will be taking up residencies in Seville, Istanbul, Warsaw and Amsterdam, where they will work with audiovisual materials from different European archives, looking into a more inclusive and complete idea of Europe. By re-mixing this media, they will review, re-investigate and re-consider prevailing imagery of (im)migrants in European societies and re-map Europe visually, geographically and mentally.

The artists work with audiovisual material from leading European institutions who have opened up their archives for this project: Eye Film Institute (Amsterdam), OVNI Archives and Filmoteca de Andalucía (Seville), Digital National Archive (Warsaw), SALT (Istanbul) and the British Film Institute (London).

The first residency took place from 17 to 22 April in Seville, with Spanish artist Fernando Malaventura coordinating the process. European Souvenirs will come together in a unique live cinema performance, premiering at ECF’s Imagining Europe event in Amsterdam in October 2012.

To check out what the five artists are doing, go to europeansouvenirs.eu to see their progress and results!

Trailer European Souvenirs - click to view

This work programme has been funded with support from the European Commission. This publication reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.

We are moving (on Facebook)

Unfortunately, Facebook does not allow to change the name of a page with over 100 likes. Since our Youth & Media Programme page on Facebook has nearly 1.000 friends (and good friends you are!!!) we are forced to move to a new page.

Please move with us! Our new page is www.facebook.com/DocNextNetwork. We offer updated events in Europe, a weekly Fraffi (Friday Afternoon Film) and news about anything concerning a new generation of European media makers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a few weeks time our old Facebook page is unpublished.

Doc Next Screening and events at Planet Doc Festival

The 9th PLANETE+ DOC FILM FESTIVAL will be held between May 11-20, 2012 in Warsaw and between May 14-20 in Wrocław, which will feature screenings of 40 films from this year’s program. In keeping with the tradition, during the first weekend of PLANETE+ DOC FILM FESTIVAL (May 11-13), the festival will be present in 20 Polish cities (as part of Digital PLANETE+ DOC Weekend)

More info http://planetedocff.pl/index.php?page=page&i=98

Flying Broom International Women’s Film Festival

Flying Broom International Women’s Film Festival has been organized every year since 1998 with the goal of using the narrative of cinema to raise public awareness about gender issues. More information: http://www.ucansupurge.org/dosya/15tanitim-web.eng.pdf