Teaching experimental film: On the practical and analytic treatment of avant-garde cinema
Abstract
This article highlights the potential of experimental and avant-garde cinema in film educational contexts. In the first part, Stefanie Schlüter evaluates her practical experience in working with 10- to 11-year-old schoolchildren. Based on reflections by Peter Kubelka, Stan Brakhage and others, she emphasizes the act of engaging with film material (scratching, painting) as a genuine haptic and perceptual experience. In the second part, Volker Pantenburg reframes classical avant-garde films by Gary Beidler, Peter Tscherkassky and Morgan Fisher as valuable, implicitly didactic 'lessons of cinema'. In a playful and elaborate way, these films perform and display basic qualities of the moving image: movement and stillness, materiality and narration, format and affect.Keywords: EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA, MATERIALITY, CHILDREN'S WORKSHOPS, ANALOGUE FILM, HAPTIC APPROACH
How to Cite: Pantenburg, V., & Schlüter, S. (2018). Teaching experimental film: On the practical and analytic treatment of avant-garde cinema. Film Education Journal, 1(2). https://doi.org/10.18546/fej.01.2.02
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