White Light Cinema Presents
The Black Films of Aldo Tambellini &
Aldo Tambellini and Otto Piene’s Black Gate Cologne
Introduced by SAIC Professor Bruce Jenkins
Sunday, September 26, 2010 – 7:30pm
At The Nightingale
(1084 N. Milwaukee Ave.)

Black Is
Aldo Tambellini (b. 1930) was a vital part of the New York arts scene in the
1950s and 60s. He was a painter, sculptor, poet, photographer, film and video
maker, multi-media artist, television pioneer, curator, organizer, and arts
activist. During that period he produced the Black Film series, an extraordinary
group of seven films (six of which are showing) that were well known at the
time but have only recently begun to be “rediscovered” with screenings
in Leeds, UK, in 2007 and in Boston earlier this year.
White Light Cinema is pleased to present these films in new digital transfers
(prints in the U.S. are currently unavailable), along with one of only a few
screenings thus far of Tambellini and Otto Piene’s pioneering television
broadcast BLACK GATE COLOGNE, which only had its first public US screening in
2009.
We are also extremely pleased to have School of the Art Institute Professor Bruce Jenkins introducing the program.
"A central figure in the East Village art scene that thrived during the 1960s, poet, painter, sculptor and pioneering multi-media artist Aldo Tambellini (b. 1930) has only begun to be recognized for his prescient and innovative art. Throughout his long career, Tambellini has worked in a staggering range of media - from his early Arte Povera-style sculptures and abstract drawings done in Italy and America in the 1950s and 1960s, to his experimental work in early video and television art, which he pioneered alongside his close friend and occasional collaborator Nam Jun Paik, to the series of abstract films he made in the 1960s. Beginning in 1965 with Black Is, Tambellini launched a series of politically charged experimental films that explore the expressive possibilities of black as a dominant color and idea. For the most part Tambellini’s seven "black films" are made without the use of a camera but rather by carefully manipulating the film itself by scorching, scratching, painting and treating the film stock as a type of sculptural and painterly medium. Beautifully austere and hypnotically immersive, Tambellini’s films are also important expressions of an artist critically aware of the emergent Information Age and its possibilities. Often using found footage and filmed television, Tambellini’s films take a crucial pulse of the new moving image culture being formed in the Sixties." (Harvard Film Archives)
“As a key figure of the 1960s Lower East Side arts scene, Aldo Tambellini used a variety of media for social and political communication. In the age of Marshall McLuhan and Buckminster Fuller, Tambellini manipulated new technology in an exploration of the "psychological re-orientation of man in the space age." He presented immersive, multi-media environments and, having made his first experimental video as early as 1966, participated in early collaborations between artists and broadcast television. His dynamic Black Film Series (1965-69) extends from total abstraction to footage of the assassination of Bobby Kennedy, the Vietnam War, and black teenagers in Coney Island. Tambellini worked directly on the film strip with chemicals, paint and ink, scratching, scraping, and intercutting material from industrial films, newsreels and TV. Abrasive, provocative and turbulent, the series is a rapid-fire response to the beginning of the information age and a world in flux. "Black to me is like a beginning … Black is within totality, the oneness of all. Black is the expansion of consciousness in all directions.'" (Mark Webber, Evolution 2007)
PROGRAM:
BLACK IS (1965,
4 mins., b/w)
"To the sound of a heartbeat and made entirely without the use of a camera,
this film projects abstract forms and illuminations on a night-black background
and suggests as Tambellini says, 'seed black, seed black, sperm black, sperm
black.'" (Grove Press Film Catalog)
BLACK TRIP (1965, 5 mins, b/w)
BLACK PLUS X (1966,
9 mins., b/w)
"Tambellini here focuses on contemporary life in a black community. The
extra, the “X” of Black Plus X, is a filmic device by which a black
person is instantaneously turned white by the mere projection of the negative
image. The time is summer, and the place is an oceanside amusement park where
black children are playing in the surf and enjoying the rides, quite oblivious
to Tambellini’s tongue-in-cheek 'solution' to the race problem."
(Grove Press Film Catalog)
BLACK TRIP 2 (1967,
3 mins., b/w)
"An internal probing of the violence and mystery of the American psyche
seen through the eye of a black man and the Russian revolution." (AT)
BLACKOUT (1965, 9 mins., b/w)
BLACK TV (1968,
10 mins., b/w)
"Through the uses of kinescope, video, multimedia, and direct painting
on film, an impression is gained of the frantic action of protoplasm under a
microscope where an imaginative viewer may see the genesis of it all."
(Grove Press Film Catalog)
[All works above 16mm screening from digital video.]
BLACK GATE COLOGNE (1968, 47 mins., b/w, video) by Aldo Tambellini
and Otto Piene
“Black Gate Cologne' is often cited as the first television programme
made by artists. It was a live event involving films, light objects and the
participation of the studio audience. A comparable event took place in New York
in 1967, the inter-media piece ‘Black Gate Theater’, which was now
expanded by the possibilities of the new ‘Electronic Studio’ of
WDR television, whose electronic video mixing facilities could now be creatively
deployed for the first time. The close co-operation between artists and TV crew
created a synthesis of live atmosphere, Light Art, experimental film and electronic
image aesthetics. Two consecutive 45-minute broadcasts with different audiences
were recorded in the studio, and then in part copied one on top of the other
to intensify the transmitted product. Since the length of the broadcast was
criticized ‘despite, or indeed perhaps because of, its confusing wealth
of material’, WDR finally cut it to 23 minutes.” (Media Art Net)
The original long version will be screening.
Admission: $7-10 sliding scale