
In an online interview, experimental filmmaker and violin drone pioneer Tony Conrad relates a story: one night, underground drag superstar Mario Montez wandered into the apartment Conrad shared with filmmaker Jack Smith, and at Smith's behest began an impromptu performance. When Smith flicked on a beaten up 16mm projector to serve as a makeshift spotlight, he and Conrad became transfixed by the play of light that reflected off Montez's sequined outfit. While it would be glib and certainly fun to declare that 1960s structural film was born from the glittering gyrations of a drag queen, Conrad's anecdote is but one development in his longstanding fascination with the excessive sensory effects of shooting light out into the void. Conrad's 1965 16mm film The Flicker is perhaps his purest and best-known manifestation of this 30 minutes of black and white stroboscopic bliss (or hell) that cast its long shadows over Brian Gysin's dream machines, and more contemporarily, Anthony McCall's striking digital light and fog projections. You'll have the chance to see how much flashing light your eyes can take when San Francisco Cinematheque presents screenings of Conrad's films in conjunction with the New York-based polymath's weekend-long residency at the concurrent Activating the Medium Festival. While Sunday night's program features The Flicker, it also puts it into context as a jumping off point for Conrad's subsequent process-based films and public access video works, in which activities such as electrocution and cooking take on a rhythm as mesmerizing as staring into the pulsating light of a film projector.
TONY CONRAD: FLICKERING JEWEL
Fri/3, 5 p.m. (Program One: "Window, Perspective Shadow")
Sat/4, 8 p.m. (Program Two, with Conrad in performance)
Sun/5, 7:30 p.m. (Program Three: "Flicker and Process Films/Works on Video"), $15
San Francisco Art Institute, 300 Chestnut, SF
Also from this author
"3020 Laguna Street in Exitum" transforms a doomed Cow Hollow domicile into nine site-specific artworks
"Bros Before Hos" tackles the rough business of being a man
"Bros Before Hos" tackles the rough business of being a man
Also in this section
Michael Glawogger wraps up his 'globalization trilogy' with a look at the world's oldest profession
A true-crime tale inspires Richard Linklater's cheerful new black comedy
Short takes on SFIFF 2012, week two
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- I'll change the first two I - May 24, 2012
- You have a lot of leverage with supes up for re-election - May 23, 2012
- SF Ocean Edge, - May 23, 2012
- I can enjoy GG Pk without a million lbs of toxic tire particles - May 23, 2012
- "We need 6 supes..." The way - May 23, 2012
- Well you would know, wouldn't - May 23, 2012
- Good editorial against plastic turf project in Richmond Review - May 23, 2012
- Judith is right - May 23, 2012
- You're misspelling "Lucretia" - May 23, 2012
- San Diego Park & Rec: plastic fields cost 50% more than grass - May 23, 2012










