It’s Not Brakhage

June 1, 2024

12 PM - 5 PM EDT

Join us for a looping screening of It’s Not Brakhage, an experimental essay film created by DARC’s inventive and talented member, Miles Rufelds. 

 

It’s Not Brakhage takes an innovative approach to essay filmmaking by blending formal experimentation with extensive historical research. 

 

During the Arts Court Open House on June 1, don’t miss the chance to experience this genre-bending and thought-provoking work, running from 12 PM to 5 PM. 

 

Admission is FREE.  

 

About the film 

 

It’s Not Brakhage is a hybrid essay + fiction film, structured around an unnamed narrator’s investigation into a mysterious film reel, believed to be a lost work by beloved experimental filmmaker Stan Brakhage. Though shrouded in speculation and actively contested, the film is suggested to be the sole remaining artifact from a ruinous 1959 film festival, which Brakhage helped organize with the DuPont chemical company.

 

Throughout the film, the narrator expounds on this mysterious film’s history, sifting through a patchwork of theories and speculations that have arisen since its discovery, and connecting the film reel to DuPont’s wider networks of military-industrial research and artistic patronage. Gradually, a sinister undercurrent begins to emerge, suggesting that the film might not just represent an uncanny crossover between mid-century networks of experimental film and military-industrial power, but might represent a forensic key connecting this 1959 collaboration with DuPont to Brakhage’s 2003 death from bladder cancer.

 

Weaving threads of speculative fiction within a wide corpus of extensive historical research, It’s Not Brakhage mixes detailed exposition, political invective, and conspiratorial intrigue to think through the uncomfortable proxies connecting histories of experimental film with military-industrial research and capitalist dominion. While the film’s narrator, the “lost Brakage” film reel, the 1959 festival, and Brakhage’s entire involvement with DuPont are ultimately fictional interventions, these fabrications serve to give structure to a pointed exploration of DuPont’s very real implication, throughout much of the 20th century, in a vast network of scientists, engineers, militarists, filmmakers, painters, and musicians, many of which hailed from the same families or drew from the same technologies.

 

With a blur of tropes from essayistic documentary, genre fiction, and experimental film, this work considers the ways unwelcome powers hide invisibly within artistic forms, and contemplates the vertigo of reckoning with this infiltration while under its thrall.



About the filmmaker

 

Miles Rufelds is an artist, writer, and filmmaker based in Toronto. He holds a Master of Visual Studies in studio art from the University of Toronto, and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Ottawa. With strong emphases on investigative research, conceptual strategies, and experimental forms of storytelling, Rufelds’ projects explore reciprocities and antagonisms between material and aesthetic systems. Rufelds has participated in exhibitions and screenings nationally and internationally, including the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, the Blackwood Gallery, PAVED Arts, the Karsh-Masson Gallery, ArtworxTO, and the SIM Gallery. Rufelds is also a co- founder and co-director of Toronto gallery ‘the plumb’.

 

Accessibility

 

All doors at DARC have accessibility buttons to press for automatic entry. DARC is located on the main floor (one story above ground) of the Arts Court building. DARC’s main entrance is located at 67 Nicholas Street which is fully wheelchair accessible. Alternate wheelchair-accessible entry is available through 2 Daly Ave at the Arts Court main entrance or the Ottawa Art Gallery. Elevator access is available from 9AM – 11PM. DARC staff are available and happy to assist with all inquiries and requests regarding physical access.

We also welcome inquiry, feedback, and resources regarding accessibility and accessibility improvement by phone (613.238.7648 x. 6) or by email at access@digitalartsresourcecentre.ca.

Visit https://digitalartsresourcecentre.ca/access/ for information on how to get to DARC, language barriers, fragrance policy, and access to programming.

About DARC's Free Events

Digital Arts Resource Centre (formerly SAW Video) is a not-for-profit, artist-run media art centre that fosters the growth and development of artists through access to equipment, training, mentorship, and programming. Our mission is to support a diverse community of media artists empowered by technology, programming and the exchange of ideas.

Our core principles are independence of expression, affordable access to all, and paying artists for their work. Digital Arts Resource Centre values diversity and actively promotes equity for all artists regardless of race, age, class, gender, sexual orientation, language, or ability.

We acknowledge that Digital Arts Resource Centre is located on land that is part of the unceded and unsurrendered Traditional Territory of the Algonquin people. We honour the Algonquin people and elders, whose ancestors have occupied this territory since time immemorial, and whose culture has nurtured and continues to nurture this land and its people.