Press for Let's get tested
curated by Astria Suparak
for 50 Internationale Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen
/ 50th International Film Festival Oberhausen

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Let's get tested


COLUMBUS ALIVE:
"Astria Suparak: Let's Get Tested
Having traveled from Napoli, Italy to Normal, Illinois, independent film, video and audio curator Astria Suparak brings her well-chosen traveling program of experimental shorts by North American artists to Columbus College of Art and Design next week.

Included in the 14 featured pieces are an audio installation segment by Miranda July, and Jennifer Schmidt's Scan-Tron, which turns the worksheet from a standardized test into a shifting abstract field of circles and dots.

Gabriel Fowler creates a tightly edited explosion of explosions from Warner Bros. cartoons in Hit on the Head with 1000 Anvils. And in My Trip to Liberty City, Jim Munroe reconsiders the streetscape in Grand Theft Auto III as a nice place to vacation ("I never feel that getting in a car is the best way to see a city," he says in voiceover).

Two locally based video artists are also represented: CCAD professor Kon Petrochuck, who builds on big ideas through simple images in Anabolite See, and the Wexner Center's Mike Olenick, who creates a goulash of strange settings, past tragedies, song lyrics and other pop culture snippets in the slightly humorous, surprisingly disconcerting short Son of Samsonite.- Melissa Starker,
November 3, 2004


POOLSIDE
:
"We Loved Getting Tested!

ASTRIA SUPARAK BEGAN by asking us all to put our right hands up. To answer in the negative to any of her provocative questions would require movement and effort, a lowering of those arms, an interruption in the sea of hands. Affirmation was established as the default position. Together we filled the negative space above our heads, participating in the performance staged by Suparak-as-researcher. We were queried about life, death and art – the really big questions. And our efforts were rewarded! In the guise of the pollster, Suparak thanked us by presenting a curated package of new videotapes that ask and answer, “Who are we now?”

Let’s Get Tested draws on work from across the United States and Canada. Recent tapes by Alex Villar, Gabriel Fowler, Jeff Chapman, Jennifer Schmidt, Jim Munroe, JoEllen Martinson and William Scott Rees, Jon Sasaki, Kon Petrochuk, Mike Olenick, Miranda July, Jon Rubin, Paper Rad, Patrick Martinez and Sandy Plotnikof are a rare commodity in Winnipeg, and the capacity crowd was clearly hungry. Indeed, a voracious appetite for media arts seems to be gobbling up the Artspace building. Video Pool has expanded yet again, so that it now spills onto three different floors of 100 Arthur Street. Let’s Get Tested inaugurated the latest addition to the empire, the Poolroom, Video Pool’s new street level exhibition, research and workshop space.

Astria Suparak’s performance, in lieu of the standard curatorial introduction, brilliantly set up the themes of the program. Let’s Get
Tested explores the schism between the methodology of science and foible-filled humanness. For the most part, the tapes affirm the value of the ineffable and the elusive: immeasurable phenomena such as playfulness and pleasure. As Suparak writes, “This set of eclectic work reckons that life should be savored, wonder is a calculated state of mind, and love will survive.”

However, neither does this collection lack irony grounded in social critique. For example, in Jim Munroe’s My Trip to Liberty City, a player subverts the intentions of the videogame Grand Theft Auto by going for a walk, practising his mime, and administering care to another character. Paper Rad’s Welcome to My Homey Page takes the form of a personal web page — a modern-day marvel invented with military intents and technology — and joyfully crams it with the visual detritus of our culture, ranging from purple Barbapapa to Pink Floyd’s prism. Jon Rubin’s Among the Living depicts a beautiful flower, shot to resemble educational botany films, rocking out to the sounds of Anthrax.

Most of these tapes are extremely short, delighting the audience with a quick-and-beautiful silliness that is nonetheless thoughtful,
even profound. Alex Villar’s refusal to go around fences, climbing ever higher obstacles only to climb down them again, becomes an act of poetic rebellion in Temporary Occupations; Jeff Chapman’s Not Microwavable brattily points to the ubiquitousness of technology by microwaving the camera used to shoot this tape; Jon Sasaki presents the minutiae of rules and intricate strategy involved in a pointless adolescent pastime in Circle Game; and Gabriel Fowler edits cartoons of our youth into a loop, omitting everything but the explosions, creating eye-candy of never-ending destruction in Hit on the Head with 1000 Anvils. Similarly, the hypnotic beauty of Jennifer Schmidt’s Scan-Tron, which animates hundreds of computer punch cards representing the answers to who-knows-what questions, and Sandy Plotnikoff’s Hoodies, a study in surface identity which positions the artist in various jackets in various locations, are as formally compelling as they are playful and conceptually resonant.

However, the end of the program becomes darker. Digits, by JoEllen Martinson and William Scott Rees, skillfully and ironically
recreates the persona of the “sexy terrorist” of the 1970s. This trope is so far removed from the images and reality of our time, it creates an alarming dissonance. Similarly, the distance between what we first see in Patrick Martinez’ Untitled (after the visible human project) and what is revealed over time is unsettling. Seductive abstract forms reveal themselves to be repeated cross-sections of two human bodies, our meaty flesh. This shift in Let’s Get Tested, from deliciousness to political and corporeal reality, is difficult. But the strength of Martinson, Rees and Martinez’ work sustains it.

Sadly, this is not true of the final two tapes in the package, Kon Petrochuk’ Anabolite See and Mike Olenick’ Son of Samsonite. The former is simply, tediously long. The audio component seems to posit faux scientific theories while beautiful film footage elucidates nothing. This tape proves, once again, how economical video art can be: suddenly 14 minutes feels like hours! Son of Samsonite Samsonite, on the other hand, alienates with content. This beautifully crafted piece juxtaposes the common but nonetheless boring duo of sex and death. Fragments of lyrics from love songs and other pop culture sources are layered with references to the Lockerbie airline disaster and a stalker’s sexual obsession. A man in a bathtub embraces a life-size photograph of a woman buried in ice. The implied necrophilia is unmistakable, although the reason for its inclusion in this hopelessly muddled tape is not, leaving me to wonder whether the appropriate response to Son of Samsonite is ennui or outrage.

Also somewhat baffling is an audio piece by Miranda July, created for elevators as part of the 2002 Whitney Biennial. Removed from the context for which it was created, this fictitious scene (is it from a TV show? a movie? life?) inspires nothing more than mild curiosity. What would be unexpected or even compelling within the transitional space of the elevator becomes one-dimensional when subjected to the focused attention of a darkened screening room. July has an ardent following among Winnipeg performance and video artists. This piece, God’s Love, left us wanting more.

Thus the work represented in Let’s Get Tested ranged tremendously. Most pieces were short, strong and sweet; some long, oblique
and torturous. However (and this is one of the many compelling oddities of Winnipeg), we were all excited to have the opportunity to see it, and grateful to Astria Suparak for embarking upon her mission to take video art wherever there is an audience: schools, sports bars, artist collectives, living rooms, skating rinks, churches, even artist-run centres!

Rarely can Winnipeggers see current, cutting-edge digital or electronic art from other regions without hopping on a plane ourselves.
The overwhelming success of Let’s Get Tested at Video Pool and the flurry of discussion and critique it has provoked are a testament to an appetite for more. Let’s hope that Suparak continues with her zealotry, criss-crossing the globe as a present-day video prophet, and brings us another package of tapes soon. Be they good, bad, or ugly, we will lift our hands into the air and say say, yes, we love the medium.

Let’s Get Tested was presented by curator Astria Suparak in Video Pool’s Poolroom, Friday, Nov. 26, 2004" - Shawna Dempsey, p. 35-41, 2005.


THE PHILADELPHIA WEEKLY
:
"The A-List
On 20th and Christian is one of Philly's best-kept secrets: the St. Charles Rollerskating Rink. Housed across the street from St. Charles Church, the rink is open every Friday and Saturday night, and for a nominal fee you can rent a pair of skates and ride the rink all night.

This Friday St. Charles hosts Let's get tested, a new program of short films curated by N.Y.C. filmmaker Astria Suparak. Suparak, who's made a name for herself on cross-country film tours, brings shorts from Jeff Chapman, Jennifer Schmidt, Alex Villar, Miranda July and several others. Originally curated for the 50th anniversary of Germany's Internationale Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen, 'Let's get tested,' says Suparak, 'reckons that life should be savored, wonder is a calculated state of mind, and love will survive.' And after the screening, the rollerskating action begins." - J.G.,
April 21-27, 2004


PHILADELPHIA CITY PAPER:

"Screen Picks
Many of the program's entries are heavy on concept... [Mike] Olenick's 10-minute short [Son of Samsonite] marries evocative imagery to competing text narratives on the top and bottom of the screen. Across the top, a CNN-style 'crawl' combines real-life disasters like the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 with memories of a failed romantic relationship, while subtitles along the bottom recycle fragments from pop songs. (Not surprisingly, songs by The Smiths turn up with great regularity.)... Like [Andy Warhol's] Chelsea Girls, you can imagine it being a different work every time you watch it." - Sam Adams, April 22-29, 2004


THE PHILADELPHIA WEEKLY
:
Let's Get Tested includes: "Alex Villar's Temporary Occupations, which finds a man traversing city streets in the most roundabout ways possible; ...My Trip to Liberty City, by Canuck Jim Munroe, which showcases the more placid sections of Grand Theft Auto III. The second half [of the program] gets a left-field tone-ectomy, in which Patrick Martinez's Untitled - an abstract portrait of different sections of the human body - is only the beginning. Mike Olenick's Son of Samsonite stands out, not only because of its length, but because it's the most expressionistic and maddening..." - Matt Prigge


INDEPENDENT FILM SHOW 4th Edition
:
(Translated from Italian)
"An experimental film does not regard cinema from its usages, but from its powers. It endeavours to evoke, to reveal and to renew them; but at the same time it contradicts, blocks and renders them limitless.

Events like the Independent Film Show in Naples are extremely rare because they give the experimental cinema, in all its radicalism, the attention that it so scrupulously deserves. The festival is exclusively dedicated to cinematographic experimentation: its history, its traditions, its breakaway movements, its classics, its cursed, lost and found filmsÉand, of course, its new ideas, its living marrow. This atypical event has reached its fourth year. The principle is simple: four days, four shows, four programmes. There are numerous discoveries, and some revived perspectives. This is a festival that takes its time to show and offers the opportunity of seeing.

Under the title Let's get tested, Astria Suparak, a young American curator, has selected a few recent productions showing new approaches, both on the aesthetic level as well as in their relationship with the medium. From different origins and destinations (film, video, music video, net animations, cd-rom or dvd), and made using a wide range of different techniques, these works are the fruit of the same original attitude, where obsolete material, images of the past and the latest developments in digital editing are reinvented with freshness and spontaneity. Their creators freely evolve between performance, writing, music and the various forms of visual arts with evident affinity for pop culture, video games and a particular attachment to the notions of amateurism and entertainment (close to the aesthetic of punk collage in a fruity version, the American Paper Rad collective's animation Welcome to my homey page is exemplary of this). Put together with jubilation by Astria Suparak, and with special attention paid to the ludic dimension, these films show that cinema does not necessarily have to be reduced to its devices, and that it is already spread out where it is not expected. - Xavier Garcia Bardon, 2003


THE PHILADELPHIA INDEPENDENT:
"CINE SKATE: GET TESTED
Synergy, n. The interaction of two or more agents or forces so that their combined effect is greater than the sum of their individual effects. As in, I can't wait to experience the synergy of tonight's rollerskating and short films at St. Charles in South Philly! As in, Astria Suparak's film program (Let's Get Tested) and my outfit (replete with knee socks and neck scarf) are going to have some great synergy. As in, you and I could really make the synergy at this synergistic cine skate event. As in, I'm done now." - April 18, 2004