Roger Beebe’s Films for 1–8 Projectors

image from the film Roger Beebe’s Films for 1–8 Projectors

image of Roger Beebe showing his Films for 1–8 Projectors

In the wake of our years (+) of lockdown and of telepresence, Roger Beebe returns to the road with a program of 16mm multi-projector performances.  

The program features several newer works (Lineage (for Norman McLaren) (2019, 4 x 16mm), de rerum natura (2019, 3 x 16mm + video), Home Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry (2021, 4 x 16mm), alongside some of his best-known projector performances (including the seven-projector show-stopping Last Light of a Dying Star (2008/2011)). 

He will also include a sampling of recent essayistic videos, presented as live-narrated documentaries. These works take on a range of topics from the forbidden pleasures of men crying (Historia Calamitatum (The Story of My Misfortunes)) to the racial politics of font choices (The Comic Sans Video) and the real spaces of the virtual economy (Amazonia).

To get a sense of what his shows look like, check out this video from a show he did in Austin in 2009:  

“Beebe’s films are both erudite and punk, lo-fi yet high-brow shorts that wrestle with a disfigured, contemporary American landscape.” (Wyatt Williams, Creative Loafing, Atlanta)  

“[Beebe’s films] implicitly and explicitly evoke the work of Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander, all photographers of the atomic age whose Western photographs captured the banalities, cruelties and beauties of imperial America.” (David Fellerath, The Independent Weekly)

About the filmmaker

Roger Beebe is a filmmaker whose work since 2006 consists primarily of multiple-projector performances and essayistic videos that explore the world of found images and the “found” landscapes of late capitalism. He has screened his films around the globe at such unlikely venues as the CBS Jumbotron in Times Square and McMurdo Station in Antarctica as well as more likely ones including Sundance and the Museum of Modern Art with solo shows at Anthology Film Archives, The Laboratorio Arte Alameda in Mexico City, and Los Angeles Filmforum among many other venues. Beebe is also a film programmer: he ran Flicker, a festival of small-gauge film in Chapel Hill, NC, from 1997–2000 and was the founder and Artistic Director of FLEX, the Florida Experimental Film Festival from 2004–2014. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Art at the Ohio State University.

Ithaca Premiere

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