Gpod

Dweller on the Threshold - Secret Project Robot, May 16th

Posted by Dr Grey in Video, Events, GPC, Experimental, Occult, Art, Fesitvals, Lectures, Academia, Film (Monday May 4, 2009 at 2:28 am)

Raymond Salvatore Harmon “Dweller on the Threshold”
Transcendental Video Installations and Paintings Curated by Pendu

Opening reception Saturday, May 16, 2009 at 5:00pm

Exhibition will remain on view from May 16 - June 6

Media artist, occultist, painter, filmmaker, record producer, and director of the London based Equinox Festival Raymond Salvatore Harmon will present this rare exhibition of his paintings at the Secret Project Robot gallery in Brooklyn in conjunction with this year’s No Fun Fest.

Harmon’s work draws heavily on the abstract visualizations of various esoteric and ecstatic traditions. Rooted in the spray paint based work of street art these brightly illuminated creatures seem to project forth from the subconscious ocean of nightmare and surrealistic dreamscapes associated with the use of trance inducing entheogenic consumption.

First coined by the English author Edward Bulwer Lytton in his groundbreaking novel Zanoni (1842) the “Dweller on the Threshold” represents a form of guardian whose role in the development of the spiritual path of the mystic is one of both opposition and reflection. Harmon’s work represents the output of visual meditations on the various aspects of the Dweller as represented in the fiction of Lovecraft, Borges, Cortazar, and the writing of Thomas Vaughan.

Join us in celebrating the unknown recesses of the human mind during this one of a kind exhibition. Opening reception Saturday May 16th at 5pm.

+++

Saturday, May 16 - Opening @ 5pm with a performance by CM*Chaos Majik and video by Raymond Salvatore Harmon

Sunday, May 17 @ 6pm - Raymond Salvatore Harmon will deliver a lecture entitled “On the Nature of Light: The Cinematic Experience as Occult Ritual” based on his recently published essay of the same title in MIT’s Performance Arts Journal.

Hosted by Secret Project Robot @ Monster Island 210 Kent Ave (entrance on river street) Brooklyn, NY 11211

http://www.raymondharmon.com
http://www.pendu.org

Gpod

UbuWeb Featured and New Resources March 2009

Posted by Dr Grey in Audio, Video, GPC, UbuWeb, Documentary, Music, Art, Poetry, Film (Monday March 2, 2009 at 4:58 am)

UbuWeb Featured and New Resources
March 2009

Featured:

March
Selected by Naomi Beckwith

1. Tristan Tzara “A Note On Negro Poetry” (1918)
2. Stan Douglas “Der Sandmann”
3. Ben Patterson Tells Fluxus stories [MP3]
4. Stephen Vitiello “Drum and Organ” [MP3]
5. Farfa “Affaraffari” [MP3]
6. Alfred Leslie & Frank O’Hara “The Last Clean Shirt”
7. Anton Corbijn “Some YoYo Stuff: An observation of the observations of Don Van Vliet”
8. Mona Hatoum “Measures of Distance”
9. Tehching Hsieh “One Year Performance No. 2″
10. Aram Saroyan “Crickets” [MP3]
BONUS: Ming Xiao-Fen Live at Roulette

Naomi Beckwith is a curator at the Studio Museum in Harlem.

New:

C. Spencer Yeh - Audio Works (2005-2009)
Yeh is active both as a solo and collaborative artist, as well as with his primary project, Burning Star Core. As an improviser, Yeh is focused on developing a personal vocabulary using violin, voice, and electronics. As a sound artist/composer, Yeh works with all aspects available surrounding a work, aurally and physically, as elements key to the cumulative experience. He is concerned not only with the sensual aspects of ’sound organization,’ but the gestural qualities as well. Yeh has collaborated with a deep and ever-growing list of artists and groups, including Tony Conrad, New Humans with Vito Acconci, Evan Parker, Thurston Moore, Amy Granat with Jutta Koether, Justin Lieberman, Don Dietrich and Ben Hall (as The New Monuments), Prurient and Jandek. Included here are several full-length albums, assorted singles and radio works, featuring solo and collaborative works.

Jonathan Meese Scarlettierbaby’s Revolutions Parfum: Dictatorship of Art (2008)

Jesper Just Bliss & Heaven (2005); A Vicious Undertow (2007)

Andreas Gursky Gursky Wolrd (documentary, 2002)

Meredith Monk Ellis Island (1981); Book of Days (1989)

Neil Goldberg Eight Films (1993-2000)

People Like Us Nine Additional Films [see features column] (1999-2008)

Gpod

UbuWeb New Additions

Posted by Dr Grey in Audio, Video, GPC, UbuWeb, Documentary, Experimental, Art, Film, Audiobook (Monday February 9, 2009 at 9:41 pm)

UbuWeb New Additions:

VALIE EXPORT …Remote… Remote… (1973); Mann & Frau & Animal AKA Man & Woman & Animal (1973); Syntagma (1983)

Nick Zedd War is Menstrual Envy (1992)

Takeshi Murata Silver (2006)

Francis Thompson NY, NY: A Day in New York (1957)

Ken Jacobs A Tom Tom Chaser (2002)

Nam June Paik Lessons from the Video Master (Documentary, 2006)

Jose Luis Castillejo The Book of I’s (1969)

Bernard Heidsieck 50/70

Gpod

UbuWeb Featured and New Resources Jan/Feb 2009

Posted by Dr Grey in Audio, Video, GPC, E-Books, UbuWeb, Music, Experimental, Art, Academia, Film (Wednesday February 4, 2009 at 2:31 am)

UbuWeb Featured and New Resources
January and February 2009

Featured:

February
Selected by Dennis Cooper

1. Alexander Kluge ‘Brutality in Stone (Yesterday Goes on Forever)’
2. Ryan Trecartin ‘I-Be AREA’
3. Alain Robbe-Grillet ‘Jealousy’
4. Douglas Huebler ‘Variable Piece 4 New York City: Secrets’ [PDF]
5. Tellus #15: The Improvisors
6. Rene Ricard ‘Rene Ricard famous at 20′
7. Chris Burden ‘Documentation of Selected Works 1971-74′
8. Claude Simon ‘Properties of Several Geometric and Non-Geometric Figures’
9. Glenn Branca/The Static ‘The Static’
10. Terayama Shuji ‘Experimental Image World Vol. 1′

Dennis Cooper is the author of eight novels, most recently ‘The Sluts’ and ‘God Jr.’ (both 2005). With the French director Gisele Vienne, he has co-created theater five works, most recently ‘Jerk’ (2007). He’s a Contributing Editor of Artforum, and editor of the publishing imprint Little House on the Bowery/Akashic Books. His blog is here.

January
Selected by James Hoff

1. Sjollander/Weck: Extracts from Monument
2. Ron Rice: A Brief History of Anti-Records and Conceptual Records
3. Alan Sondheim: Run by Me
4. Ulay: Action in 14 Predetermined Sequences
5. Joseph Nechvatal: viral symphOny (28′09″)
6. Henry Chopin Performance: Undated
7. CoLab: All Color News Sampler
8. John Cage / Wim Mertens “So that each person is in charge of himself.” from A Dip in the Lake
9. Dec-Francis: Rant 2
10. Charlemagne Palestine: Island Song

James Hoff is an artist living in New York City. He, along with Miriam Katzeff, is the co-founder of Primary Information.

New:

Brian Joseph Davis - Audio Works (2004-2008)
UbuWeb is pleased to feature soundworks from this innovative young Toronto-based artist. Extending the vocabulary of Pluderphonics, Davis’ brilliant media deconstructions are pointed and hilarious at the same time, with each concept perfectly matching its aural form. Included here is Minima Moralia, punk rock versions of Adorno tracts; 10 Banned Albums Burned Then Played is exactly what it sounds like, and includes discs by everyone from Stravinsky to the Sex Pistols to 2 Live Crew; Greatest Hit is a collection of single tracks composed from entire “Greatest Hits” albums (imagine all 22 songs of The Carpenters’ 1968-1983 playing simultaneously); the hilarious Yesterduh, where passersby were stopped and asked to sing, from memory and with no practice, the Beatles’ “Yesterday”; Original Soundtrack, a piece derived from the sounds of 20 DVD menus; Voice Over, a script composed from over 5000 film taglines then performed by a professional voice over artist; and Eula, where a women’s chorus sings the End User License Agreement.

Tony Oursler EVOL (1984)

Lev Manovich Soft Cinema (2004)

Rebecca Horn An Erotic Concert (1998)

Brian Eno 14 Video Paintings (1981 and 1984)

Robert Irwin Primaries and Secondaries (2008)

Emile de Antonio Painters Painting (1969)

Michael Snow One Second in Montreal (1969)

Gpod

UbuWeb Featured Resources 2008

December 2008
Selected by Julian Cowley

1. Robert Ashley - Music with Roots in the Aether
2. Joe Jones/ Chicken to Kitchen Fluxus Meditation from Fluxsaints (1992)
3. Robert Wilson - Christopher Knowles The Sundance Kid Is Beautiful (1975) from Giorno Poetry Systems, Big Ego
4. Wolf Vostell - De/Collage [LP] (1980)
5. John Cage and Raahsan Roland Kirk - Sound?? (1966)
6. Nicholas Moore, Spleen (Ubu Editions, 2004)
7. Pina Bausch Documentary (directed by Anne Linsel) (2006)
8. David Behrman, Long Throw (Roulette, 2008)
9. Derek Bailey, Interview by Henry Kaiser (1987)
10. Vito Acconci, The Bristol Project (2001)

Julian Cowley contributes regularly to The Wire and occasionally to other music magazines. He has also lectured and written extensively on literature. During the 1980s he had the good fortune to work closely for several years with poet and critic Eric Mottram, whose inexhaustible conversation was, in effect, a foretaste of the UbuWeb experience.

—–

November 2008
Selected by Neville Wakefield

1. Willoughby Sharp Interviews Vito Acconci (1973)
2. Bas Jan Ader - Selected Works (1970-71)
3. Pipilotti Rist - Video Works (1986-2003)
4. Chris Burden - Documentation of Selected Works 1971-74
5. Johan Grimonprez - Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y (1997)
6. The Films of Jack Goldstein (1974-1978)
7. Gordon Matta-Clark - Splitting, Bingo/Ninths, Substrait (Underground Dailies) (1974-1976)
8. Lawrence Weiner - WATER IN MILK EXISTS (2008)
9. Psychic TV - “Unclean”
10. Robert Smithson - Bootleg of Hotel Palenque by Alex Hubbard (1969 / 2004)

Neville Wakefield is a writer and curator living in NYC. Recent film projects include ‘destricted‘ a compilation of commissioned films by Marina Abramovic, Matthew Barney, Marco Brambilla, Larry Clark, Gaspar Noe, Richard Prince and Sam Taylor Wood. Senior curatorial advisor to PS1 and curator of Frieze he is also creative director of ‘tar’ magazine.

—–

October 2008
Selected by Gary Sullivan

1. Jaap Blonk’s sound files
2. Dada Magazine
3. Drew Gardner’s sound files
4. Kenneth Goldsmith, editor, “Publishing the Unpublishable” series
5. George Kuchar’s films (especially “Corruption of the Damned”)
6. Anders Lundgerg, Jonas Magnusson and Jesper Olsson, editors, “After Language Poetry” papers
7. Paper Rad’s “P-Unit Mixtape”
8. Bern Porter’s page
9. Jerome Rothenberg’s Ethnopoetics : Soundings page (especially “Ca Dao, Vietnamese Folk Poems”)
10. Survival Research Laboratories, “Virtues of Negative Fascination”

Poet and cartoonist Gary Sullivan lives in Brooklyn with Nada Gordon. Together, they wrote the book Swoon. Gary’s most recent book is PPL in a Depot. He has published three issues of a comic book, Elsewhere, and maintains a blog by the same name at http://garysullivan.blogspot.com.

—–
September 2008
Selected by Rick Moody

1. Komar and Melamid & Dave Soldier, “The Most Unwanted Song”
2. Jacques Derrida, “On Religion” Part 1, Part 2
3. Assorted Street Posters
4. William Carlos Williams, “Danse Russe.”
5. Beth B., “Stigmata”
6. James Joyce, “Anna Livia Plurabelle”
7. Tellus #14, “Just Intonation”
8. Hugo Ball, “Karawane,” performed by Marie Osmond
9. Gregory Whitehead, “We All Scream Alone”
10. John Cage Meets Sun Ra

Rick Moody is the author of four novels, three collections of stories, and a memoir, THE BLACK VEIL. He also plays music with The Wingdale Community Singers.

—–
August 2008
Selected by Ben Rubin

1. Erik Saite - A Day in the Life of a Musician
2. Richard Leacock - For an Uncontrolled Cinema
3. William S. Burroughs - The Cut-Up Method of Brion Gysin
4. Claude Cloksy - The first thousand numbers classified in alphabetical order
5. Robert Smithson - A Heap of Language
6. Vito Acconci - RE
7. Marshall McLuhan - The Medium is the Massage, Side A , Side B
8. Raphael Rubinstein - A Brief History of Appropriative Writing
9. Marjorie Perloff - The Music of Verbal Space
10. Steve Reich - Pendulum Music (score)

Ben Rubin is a media artist based in New York City. He has been a frequent collaborator with artists and performers including Laurie Anderson, Diller+Scofidio, Ann Hamilton, Arto Lindsay, Steve Reich, and Beryl Korot.

—–
July 2008
Selected by Zach Feuer

1. Paul McCarthy - Painter (1995)
2. Pipilotti Rist - Video Works (1986-1999)
3. Richard Kern - My Nightmare (1993)
4. Bas Jan Ader - Fall I & II (1970)
5. Lynda Benglis - Female Sensibility (1974)
6. Sophie Calle & Greg Shepard - No Sex Last Night aka Double-Blind (1992)
7. Kembra Pfahler - Cornella; The Story of a Burning Bush (1985)
8. Robert Morris & Stan VanDerBeek - Site (excerpt) (1964, .mov)
9. Carolee Schneeman - Meat Joy (1964)
10. Dan Graham - Rock My Religion (1982-84)

Zach Feuer owns the creatively named Zach Feuer Gallery in New York City.

—–
June 2008
Selected by Ron Silliman

1. Frank Film (1973), Frank and Caroline Mouris
2. The Name (1973), Robert Creeley
3. Recollections of Grande Apachería (1973), Edward Dorn
4. Reading at Goddard College (1973), Robert Creeley
5. Carnival The First Panel: 1967-1970 (1973), Steve McCaffery
6. Black Tarantula Crossword Gathas (excerpt) (1973), Jackson Mac Low
7. A Vocabulary for Sharon Belle Matlin (1973), Jackson Mac Low
8. Heavy Aspirations (1973), Charles Amirkhanian
9. Armand Schwerner (1973), Phil Niblock (real video .rm file)
10. High Kukus (1973), James Broughton

Ron Silliman was once a slow left-handed second baseman. Now he lives in a faux forest in what was once the Biddle Estate.

—–
May 2008
Selected by Christian Bök

1. Claude Closky: “The First Thousand Numbers Classified in Alphabetical Order” (1989) [PDF]
2. Derek Beaulieu: “Flatland” (2007) [PDF]
3. Darren Wershler-Henry: “The Tapeworm Foundry” (2002)
4. Claude Simon: “Properties of Several Geometric and Non-Geometric Figures” (1971)
5. F. T. Marinetti: “Dune, Parole in Libertà” (1914)
6. Survival Research Laboratories: “Virtues of Negative Fascination” (1985-86)
7. Seth Price: “Video Game Soundtracks 1983-1987″ (2001)
8. Trek Bloopers
9. Anton Bruhin: “Rotomotor” (1976-77)
10. RACTER: “The Policeman’s Beard Is Half-Constructed” (1984)

BONUS TRACK:
IBM 7090: “Music from Mathematics” (1962)

Christian Bök is the author of Eunoia.

—–
April 2008
Selected by Laura Beiles

1. Anita Feldman and Michael Kowalski, Riffle (1985)
2. MoMA: Writing in Time (2007)
3. Piotr Kamler, Films (1960s-90s)
4. Fortunato Depero, Verbalizzazione astratta di signora (1916)
5. Penelope Umbrico, All the Dishes on Ebay (2002-03)
6. Catherine Jauniaux & Ikue Mori, ‘Smell’ (1992)
7. Abbie Hoffman Makes Gefilte Fish (1973)
8. Mary Lou Green on Andy Warhol’s Hair (1963)
9. Sophie Calle and Gregory Shephard, Double Blind (1992)
10. Cioni Carpi, Three Short Films (1960-62)

Laura Beiles is an associate educator in the Department of Education (Adult and Academic Programs) at The Museum of Modern Art, where she has organized programs with artists, poets, scholars, architects, and designers for seven years. In May of 2007, she received her MA in Art History from Hunter College, and received the Shuster Award for her thesis, “Creating National and International Identities: The Futurist Exhibitions at the Venice Biennale under Fascism, 1928-1942″. Prior to coming to MoMA, she worked at NYU’s La Pietra in Florence and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice.

—–
March 2008
Selected by Seth Price

1. Tessa Hughes-Freeland “Baby Doll” (1982)
2. Marie Menken “Glimpse of the Garden” (1957)
3. Robert Barry “Interview (1969)”
4. Ethyl Eichelberger “Jocasta (Boy Crazy) or “She Married Her Son” (1986)
5. Lytle Shaw “Low-Level Bureaucratic Structures: Principles of the Emeryville Shellmound
6. Taj Mahal Travellers “Taj Mahal Travellers on Tour” (1973)
7. Asger Jorn “Pataphysics: A Religion in the Making”
8. Racter “The Policeman’s Beard Is Half-Constructed” (1984)
9. Tristan Tzara “A Note on Negro Poetry” (1918)
10. I.B.M. 7090 “Music From Mathematics” (1962)

Seth Price is an artist.

—–
March 2008
Selected by Stephanie Strickland

1. Maya Deren, “Divine Horsemen”
2. “Concrete!” Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive
3. Jason Nelson, “Poetry Cube”
4. b. p. Nichol, “White Text Sure”
5. Yoko Ono, “Snow Is Falling All the Time”
6. Dick Higgins, “Horizons” [PDF
7. Ketjak: the Ramayana Monkey Chant
8. “Concrete Poetry: A World View” Mary Ellen Solt
9. Raphael Rubinstein, “Gathered, not Made: A Brief History of Appropriative Writing”
10. Kenneth Goldsmith and Conceptual Poetics

Bonus
11. Glossolalia: Speaking in Tongues
12. Caroline Bergvall, “About Face”

Stephanie Strickland is a poet. Her latest collaborative hypermedia work is slippingglimpse first shown at e-Poetry 2007 in Paris and published in hyperrhiz: new media cultures. Her latest book, Zone : Zero (with digital poetry CD) will appear from Ahsahta Press in fall 2008. She recently published “Quantum Poetics: Six Thoughts, in Media Poetry: An International Anthology,” edited by Eduardo Kac, co-edited The Iowa Review Web issue, Multi-Modal Coding: Jason Nelson, Donna Leishman, and Electronic Writing, and also co-edited the first Electronic Literature Collection, published by the Electronic Literature Organization.

—–
February 2008
Selected by Alan Licht

1. Derek Bailey Interview by Henry Kaiser
2. Richard Foreman MP3 loops from Now That Communism Is Dead My Life Feels Empty
3. Bruce Nauman “Record”
4. bpNichol — all sound works
5. Cornelius Cardew “Stockhausen Serves Imperialism”
6. Philip Guston/Clark Coolidge “Poor Richard”
7. Lou Reed “the View from the Bandstand”
8. Jack Smith “Buzzards Over Baghdad”
9. Richard Meltzer “Barbara Mauritz: Music Box”
10. Adrian Piper “Untitled 1968″

Over the past two decades, guitarist Alan Licht has worked with a veritable who’s who of the experimental world. He has released five albums of compositions for tape and solo guitar, and his sound and video installations have been exhibited in the U.S. and Europe. His new book Sound Art: Beyond Music, Between Media, the first extensive survey of the genre in English, was published by Rizzoli in fall 2007.

—–
February 2008
Selected by Bettina Funcke

1. Harun Farocki, Inextinguishable Fire (1969) and How to Live in the German Federal Republic (1986) - Note! Films Removed by copyright holder’s request
2. UbuWeb Hall of Shame
3. Robert Frank, Energy and How to Get It (1981)
4. J. G. Ballard, Shanghai Jim (1991)
5. Pandid Pran Nath Ragas of Morning and Night (1968)
6. Hrabanus Marus De adoratione crucis ab opifice / De Laudibus Sanctae Crucis Augsburg (ca. 845)
7. Jacques Lacan, Télévision (1973)
8. Joan Jonas “The Anchor Stone” (1988)
9. Inuit Throat Singing, from Ethnopoetics
10. Assorted Street Posters (1985-present) from Outsiders

Bettina Funcke is the Senior U.S. Editor of Parkett Magazine.

—–
January 2008
Selected by Alex Ross

1. Robert Ashley “She Was a Visitor”
2. Kurt Schwitters “Sonata in Urlauten”
3. John Cale “Loop”
4. The Films of Mauricio Kagel
5. Charles Amirkhanian “Dog of Stravinsky”
6. Bernd Alois Zimmermann “Musique pour le soupers de Roi Ubu”
7. Pauline Oliveros “Sound Patterns”
8. Ezra Pound “Sestina: Altaforte”
9. John Cage “4′33″”
10. Robert Ashley “The Wolfman”

Alex Ross has been the music critic of The New Yorker since 1996. His work has also appeared in The New Republic, The London Review of Books, Lingua Franca, and The Guardian. From 1992 to 1996 he was a critic at The New York Times. He has received two ASCAP-Deems Taylor Awards for music criticism, fellowships from the American Academy in Berlin and the Banff Centre, and a Letter of Distinction from the American Music Center for contributions to the field of contemporary music. He played keyboards in the noise band Miss Teen Schnauzer, which gave only one public performance, in 1991. His first book, “The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century,” a cultural history of music since 1900, was published in October 2007 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

Gpod

The GSpot #44- Greylodge, Alterati and Pilotlite Present: The Philosopher’s Stone

Posted by Pale Rider in Video, GPC, Occult, Greylodge Special Collections (Friday October 31, 2008 at 4:52 am)

In this very special edition of The GSpot, Joseph Matheny talks to Raymond Salvatore Harmon about the special release of his movie, The Philosopher’s Stone on Greylodge as a torrent to be followed by a “Press to Play” version being released on Altertube.tv and Pilotlite.com, and then a podcast edition to be released on Alterati, Greylodge and Pilotlite. Joe and Ray discuss art on the fringe, how Ray came to film making, the Chicago art scene, and why the economy means nothing to artists working on the fringes.


Subliminal Films present:The Philosopher’s Stone
Directed and produced by
Raymond Salvatore Harmon
featuring the music of Bog
starring Jacob Andrew Myers
introducing Isobel Julianna HarmonThe Philosopher’s Stone tells the story of Jacob Fausstman, a scientist and early alchemist who searches for the key to curing man of the disease of death. In his frustration Jacob stumbles onto another path to achieve his goals. Turning to the dark arts Jacob conjures the demon Mephistopheles and is given the key to eternal life. But his perceptions of ‘life eternal’ and the nature of his existence comes into question once he has obtained his desire for true knowledge.Base in equal parts on the Faustian archetype and the biographical story of Dr. Albert Hoffmann’s accidental discovery of LSD, The Philosopher’s Stone is an homage to early German Expressionist cinema and the psychedelic visualizations of drug culture.Courtesy of Greylodge.org+++What critics have said about Harmon’s work:’For Harmon, the visual density of the abstract imagery used will enable the viewer to enter an almost hypnagogic, liminal state, and become perceptually distant from the sense of the real. Once the enveloping visual content has become the landscape of the mind to the viewer, the subliminal content will have access to the subconscious mind.”  - Jack Sargeant“Accentuating the trio’s vibrant performances with colorization, layered collages, dense textures and split-screen effects, Harmon becomes a virtual fourth member of the ensemble.”  - All About Jazz, on Chronicle’The subdued flame-like flashes and sounds reinforce the feeling of quietly smoldering passion. Together, these elements come together to create a delicate composition which is abstract, yet full of feeling.’  - FilmThreat.com on Tiny Inconsistencies

+++

The Philosopher’s Stone will be available (via bit torrent) for full download FREE Oct 31st 2008 at GREYLODGE.ORG, subliminalfilms.org, and streaming at:

www.philosophersstone.org

for more information please contact:

stone@subliminalfilms.org

or visit

greylodge.org
subliminalfilms.org
raymondharmon.com
philosophersstone.org

+++

A letter from the director;

In choosing to distribute this film I have decided to skip the theatrical presentation stage and go directly to sourcing the film via the bit torrent network. By giving the public full access to this film I hope to encourage other filmmakers to realize the potential of their audience by abandoning the outdated model of cinematic distribution in favor of an open relationship with the viewers themselves.

After years of struggle with the format of distribution cinema has found an ever evolving platform of distribution on the internet. Years of so called  ‘format wars’, first between film gauges and then between dv formats, have ended in the wake of widening broadband access for the average person.

The ability for anyone to simple download and watch a film already exists, as does the ability for anyone to make a film and allow the world to experience it directly. The filmmaker has a wide range of encoding practices available that allow them to maximize video quality for each project’s distribution on the web. As further technologies and better codecs are develop the filmmaker will be able to expand on the available sources for the cinematic presentation.

As much as the Philosopher’s Stone visually represents a historic period in early 20th century cinema it looks forward to a future unfettered by lack of distribution and a platform for broadcast that gives everyone a chance to experience cinema to its fullest.

This film is meant as a mirror, reflecting what has been onto what will become.

Obviam lux Lucis

Raymond Salvatore Harmon
October 3rd - 2008

Additions 11-06-08: More file formats available here - http://greylodge.org/gpc/?p=1583
Download a PDF of the PR

Download Torrent of the movie: The Philosopher’s Stone (new torrent added 11-03-08)

Download the special GSpot interview with  Raymond Salvatore Harmon below:

icon for podpress  The GSpot #44- Greylodge, Alterati and Pilotlite Present: The Philosopher's Stone [46:58m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Gpod

The Tracey Fragments

Posted by Pale Rider in Video, GPC, Link Dump, Experimental, Weird (Wednesday October 29, 2008 at 7:42 pm)

15-year-old Tracey Berkowitz is naked under a tattered shower curtain at the back of a bus, looking for her little brother Sonny, who thinks he’s a dog

Tracey’s journey leads us into the dark underbelly of the city, into the emotional cesspool of her home, through the brutality of her high school, the clinical cat and mouse games with her shrink and her soaring fantasies of Billy Zero - her boyfriend and Rock ‘n’ Roll saviour. Her travels also put her in contact with the seedier inhabitants of the city. Like Lance, her would-be saviour who ultimately puts her life in jeopardy

Tracey’s stories begin to intertwine truth with lies, and hope with despair as we move closer to the truth of Sonny’s disappearance

The Tracey Fragments stars Ellen Page in the title role and will have a limited theatrical release in the United States May 9th, 2008.

Download Torrent

Gpod

Youth Without Youth

Posted by Pale Rider in Video, GPC, Cinema (Wednesday October 8, 2008 at 10:31 pm)

Youth Without Youth is a 2007 film by Francis Ford Coppola, based on the novella of the same name by Romanian author Mircea Eliade.

It is Francis Ford Coppola’s first directed film since 1997’s The Rainmaker. It was distributed through Sony Pictures Classics in the United States and Pathé in the UK and France.

Walter Murch told the San Francisco Chronicle in May 2007: “Even though it’s not something he wrote, it’s based on a book Francis loves very much. I think people will be very surprised when they see it.”[cite this quote]

The film was shot with a Sony HDC-F900 in High Definition and edited on Final Cut Pro 5.[citation needed]

The movie has been screened in front of friends and fellow directors after the 79th Academy Awards Ceremony (in which he was a presenter).[citation needed]

Coppola has gone on record as saying that the movie is very personal, and not a standard Hollywood film.[cite this quote] Originally the movie was to be distributed by United Artists.[citation needed] Sony Pictures Classics distributed the film when it opened in limited release in the United States on December 14, 2007.

It was also announced that a trailer for the film will be on the Collector’s Edition DVD of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, another film by Coppola, which was released in early October 2007.

The September issue of Zoetrope: All-Story was construed as a special tribute to Youth Without Youth. The first half, edited by Tim Roth, contains photographs by Roth and short stories that address themes relevant to the story. The second half consists of interviews with the cast and crew, inserts penned by Coppola about the film making process, and the complete text of Eliade’s novella. More at Wikipedia
Download Torrent

Gpod

PILOTLITE ANNOUNCES AWARDS

Posted by Pale Rider in Video, GPC, Internet Culture, Independent, Websites (Friday October 3, 2008 at 9:57 pm)

PilotLite is excited to announce its first quarterly competition, which came to a close September 31, 2008. Determined by members of the PilotLite audience, the three winners will receive over $2000 in cash and additional prizes.  READ and SEE MORE

Gpod

Bad Money

Posted by Pale Rider in Video, GPC (Sunday September 21, 2008 at 2:11 am)

BILL MOYERS: If you read only one book on the route to this financial meltdown, I recommend this one: BAD MONEY: RECKLESS FINANCE, FAILED POLITICS, AND THE GLOBAL CRISIS OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM. The author, Kevin Phillips, has a history of being way ahead of the curve. As a young man working for Richard Nixon, he wrote THE EMERGING REPUBLICAN MAJORITY, a book that uncannily predicted how the GOP would regain power in Washington. Kevin Phillips saw our current crisis coming a long time ago. And in one book of historical insight after another, laid out the clues he was tracking. As recently as last spring in the AMERICAN PROSPECT magazine, Phillips wrote that what he thought was about to happen would be “unusual and potentially tragic.”

LINK

 
 


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