Jonas Mekas and the New York Avant-Garde
Jonas Mekas and the New York Avant-Garde
The exhibition presents Jonas Mekas' (1922-2019) work in the
expanded sense. It covers his filmic practice as well as his
intellectual, organizational, and often bluntly administrative
approach to the labour of building and running multiple
institutions and fostering new habits of looking at film as an art
form. The exhibition focuses on the first three decades of Mekas'
activities, starting with his coming to New York as a displaced
person in 1949, through to him becoming a central figure in
advocating, producing, distributing, promoting, and preserving the
filmic avant-garde.
The exhibition features Mekas' filmic corpus, including his
celebrated diary films that epitomize his lifelong practice of
recording glimpses of everyday life: while they show personal
experiences, marked by exile, longing, family, and friendships,
they are also steeped in the social and political events of the
day. Though known primarily as a poet and a filmmaker in Lithuania,
Mekas wore many more hats that granted him the title of the
'godfather' of American avant-garde cinema. Before premiering his
first film, Mekas together with his brother Adolfas Mekas began
publishing Film Culture magazine in 1955 and soon joined
the Village Voice as a film critic. These became the main
outlets through which Mekas channeled his ideas about film as an
art form of personal expression and called for a new kind of cinema
free from censorship and existing production and distribution
systems.
An alternative arts movement sprang up across New York in the
postwar years, as artist-run spaces, groups, and cooperatives took
the production and distribution of art into their own hands in
response to mainstream institutional structures and official
cultural politics. Mekas had been a crucial part of it. By the
mid-1960s, Mekas' loft at 414 Park Avenue South became a
headquarters for the fermenting avant-garde film culture; a
sleepless hub frequented by filmmakers and artists alike. This
decade marked Mekas' embrace of the avant-garde spirit, as he took
part in the formation of the New American Cinema Group, and the
establishment of the Film-Makers' Cooperative, the Filmmakers'
Cinematheque, and Anthology Film Archives. These time-consuming
activities occasionally seeped into his filmic diaries and even, as
Mekas suggested, to some degree determined his films' fragmentary
structure. They are presented in the exhibition through a selection
of critical writings, photographs, magazines, institutional
ephemera, and other archival material arranged in porous conceptual
clusters on the table traversing the exhibition space. Images,
sounds, and materials Mekas collected and organized throughout his
lifetime - in his films and in his personal archive - serve today
as an entry point into the history of avant-garde film culture in
New York.
The exhibition pays tribute to this era of the burgeoning American
avant-garde film scene and contextualizes Mekas' output by
presenting a selection of works by filmmakers who shared his
aesthetic sensibility, whom he championed, and with whom he worked,
including Gideon Bachmann, Stan Brakhage, Shirley Clarke, Maya
Deren, Storm de Hirsch, Ken Jacobs, Marie Menken, Carolee
Schneemann, Paul Sharits, Jack Smith, and Andy Warhol. A selection
of films is screened behind the curved wall in the specially
designed projection rooms. These rooms are loosely inspired by the
Invisible Cinema, an experimental movie theater designed by the
Austrian artist and filmmaker Peter Kubelka and originally
installed at Anthology Film Archives in 1970.
Curators: Inesa Brašiškė and Lukas Brašiškis
Architects: Isora x Lozuraityte studio
Graphic design Laura Grigaliūnaitė
Partners: Jonas Mekas Estate, LRT, Skalvija
film centre
Financed by Lithuanian Culture Council
Sponsors: Lewben Art Foundation, Consulate
General of the Republic of Lithuania in New York, Exterus /
Fundermax, UAB "Stiklita Vilnius", UAB "Flexpro", hotel
"Narutis"
Media Sponsor: "JCDecaux"