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Tag: Ritz

Concert: Cleaning Women 2.2.2013

 

Cleaning Women / Visuals by Ich bin ein Fernseher
Ljudverket / Visuals by Vixen
Dj Arvid

Saturday 2.2.2013, 19.00–23.00
Ritz, Kirkkopuistikko 22

www.facebook.com/events/136480426511126/

Tickets for sale at www.studioticket.fi (10 €, 13 € at the door)

They come from Planet Clinus! Cleaning Women, space travellers making all kinds of otherworldly sounds with self-built instruments (made from household items), will visit Vaasa for the first time. During their 15+ years of existence, these cross-dressing zombies have put out 3 albums, played hundreds of shows all over our planet, and gained fame and respect as live soundtrackers to silent movies. In the grand Ritz their audiovisual fireworks will look and sound fantastic!

www.cleaningwomen.com

Warm body massage with various audio frequencies will be provided by Ljudverket, a live ambient & techno project / record label by Rasmus Hedlund and Tuomo Väänänen, two Vaasa-based sound artists and music producers. Visuals by Vixen.

www.soundcloud.com/ljudverket

And in the lobby bar, DJ Arvid, starting from 19.00.

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Artist talk 5.2.2010, Ritz

Jenny Baines | Artist in residence February and July 2010

Jenny Baines’ artistic practice exists in various forms that are all intrinsically linked by hope and the possibility of failure. When making films, Jenny performs repetitive actions for the camera, documenting herself carrying out apparently futile yet defiant physical feats. These actions can seem like a romantic response to, or an urge to escape from the space in which they are performed. The works are process-based, using the limitations of the equipment or her own physical endurance as a basis and frame in which to be created. The repetitively performed action is often absurd or pointless.

Examples of work include the film Untitled, Victoria Park, in which she attempts to climb a lamppost before the wind-up mechanism of the 16mm Bolex camera runs down, which is never possible as the film cuts before she can achieve this. And ‘Against the Tide’, where she swims against a tide too strong for her, resulting in being continuously washed out of the frame. The resulting films become absurd attempts to achieve pointless tasks.

Jenny graduated from the Slade School of Fine Art MFA in 2006. Her work has been exhibited at the Istanbul Biennial (2007) and other venues outside the UK in New York, Warsaw, Berlin, Bulgaria and Macedonia. Film screenings include Studio 1.1, London, Format Film Festival, Derby and Videoholica, Bulgaria. Her work is to be found in various collections including Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts, QUAD and Videoholica, Bulgaria. Jenny is currently an artist in residence in film at Kingston University.

“The films I shot when artist in residence at Platform deal with the same concerns in my practice and are made using the same techniques.

Mergere (working title) is from various locations (both in and close to Vaasa) where I filmed people ice-swimming. Using the wind-up mechanism of the 16mm camera, I was attempting to time the filming of each person entering the water so it would wind down and cut as they submerged, hoping for the result of the film showing a constant flow of people disappearing into the ice.

Rather than performing the action repetitively myself, I was more interested in the place, framing and observing of an action that was already happening naturally in front of me over and over. This was for practical reasons also.

I made a series of almost photographic films both in February and in July – where the films are a static shot of something I found slightly absurd. For example, a motor boat frozen into the sea and a lighthouse flashing at night. The only movement, other than that of the film, is of either snow blowing past in the first instance, or the light faintly flashing in the second.

On viewing the material on return I’m interested in combining architectural elements with some – bringing the film into the room with the viewer so they exist as an installation. In the case of Mergere, this would work well if projected floor to ceiling in a room with a white floor so the viewer could almost step into the image.

 

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Performance Night 23.4.2009

Agnes Nedregaard | Ritz, Vaasa

 

MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING

A performance displaying a visual scenario of costume, props and actions, asking how can we ever really understand one another, when our stories will always be so different?

The work is part of a larger research project, Imploding, about how our personal backgrounds inform the way we interpret situations and the people we meet. The project is supported by the Scottish Arts Council.

Performance duration: ca 15 min

In her work Agnes Nedregard explores how personal and cultural baggage informs our personal interpretations of situations, places and people. She places the experience of being a human body at the centre of her explorations, charging her performances with physical energy, actions and symbols.

The shared and unpredictable sensory and visual experience between artist, site and audience creates a platform for communication and this is where Agnes presents herself, dressed in absurd costumes, sometimes bringing objects or including projected video footage, allowing these elements to come together into an unpredictable but cohesive climax.

Agnes Nedregard is a Norwegian visual artist whose artistic practice is based within live performance whilst also encompassing video, film, drawings and sculptural installations. She graduated from the Masters of Fine Art programme at Glasgow School of Art in 2005, and has since showed her work at festivals, galleries and screenings in Europe and USA. In 2007 she was artist in residence at Stills in Edinburgh. She also teaches performance art workshops for art, theatre, film and architecture students. She is currently editor of http://www.performancekunst.no, a website for Nordic performance art. Collaboration is key to Agnes’ practice and recent collaborators include Brazilian aerial acrobat Raquel Nicoletti, Scottish painter Moray Hillary, Scottish composer Harold Nono, performance group FireBirds (2004-05), Molly Haslund (Denmark) and Anthony Schrag (Canada).

 

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“Tomma händer – Tomma händer – Empty hands”

Jörgen Erkius | Nordic Residency December 2008 – February 2009

 

The film “Tomma händer” is based on a poem by the Finnish poet and playwright Josef Julius Wecksell (1838-1907), namely the second of three fragments. It represents an early vision on later modernistic litterature and was written during the time of his mental breakdown. Probably in the year 1862 at the age of 23.

“Tomma händer
Mörka stränder
Sorgsen våg och tyst
Varifrån komma
Ord som blomma
Döden allt ju kysst”

 

14’00. In the roles of Josef Julius Wecksell: Sue Lemström and Julia Johansson.

The film had its premiere at Ritz, Vaasa, 12th February 2009.

 

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