Diaries, dreams, the weather: Dicky Bahto, Gelare Khoshgozaran, & Mona Varichon

Friday, June 23
at l’Etna
71 rue Robespierre | 93100 Montreuil | France

Diaries, dreams, the weather: Dicky Bahto, Gelare Khoshgozaran, Mona Varichon

This program presents recent works by Dicky Bahto, Gelare Khoshgozaran, and Mona Varichon that incorporate personal, everyday experiences through diaristic filmmaking, found images, sounds, and texts to address the way we connect with others in art, action, protest, and poetry.

Mark Toscano of Los Angeles Filmforum says of Bahto’s films: “His varied and complex engagement with moving image and photographic media is steeped in a deeply felt humanity and empathy, manifesting through his inspired photographic eye and frequently direct interaction with and appreciation of the material vitality of film and cinema. His films achieve heightened emotional states of great intimacy and poetry, often channeling the uniquely aleatory qualities of film to carry a sensuality and spirituality hovering in the space between loving depiction and vaporous abstraction.”

Chris Fite-Wassilak says of Khoshgozaran’s work: “Through its levelling of fact and its attendant fictions, of dream and protest, Khoshgozaran’s work enacts a particular form of contemporary storytelling: wary of the essay film’s tendency for narration, which enacts a simplification or occlusion of sorts; but one that is equally wary of documentary’s voyeuristic and othering tendencies, what writer and filmmaker Fatimah Tobing Rony has called ‘fascinating cannibalism’. It is dispersed, subjective documentary that follows on from the work of practitioners like Trinh T. Minh-ha and finds echoes in contemporaries like Ana Vaz and Rehana Zaman. Khoshgozaran attempts a destabilised, critical and oneiric pulling away from the photographic document, mapping the effects on the mind of the globally dispersed forever war, and asking where we might go from here.”

Marion Vasseur Raluy says of Varichon’s: “Her works – whose approach can be compared to that of fan art – are certainly tributes to various personalities that she admires, from her mother to Assa Traoré. In this alternation between popular public figures and anonymous individuals, she tries to understand their motivations and desires by revealing their mechanisms of struggle as well as their political opinions. From English to French, from the private to the public sphere, or even social networks, Varichon produces video collages that make it possible to ‘make people speak’ and ‘make them hear’ differently. In this way she is reviving a heritage that has partly disappeared: that of beginning with the voices of others rather than her own.”

Dicky Bahto and Mona Varichon will both be present for a discussion / Q&A after the screening

program includes (not in order):

Dicky Bahto – A play in black and white (2022) Super 8 to video, 17 minutes
A few years ago my baba asked me to “make a film dedicated to him, about him, starring him.” I’ve finally fulfilled his request. Built around a reel of Super 8 home movie footage I made while playing backgammon with him, the film takes visual and conceptual motifs from the game itself and elaborates on them in a series of visual variations.

Dicky Bahto – six pages from a diary (2021) 13.5 minutes, Super 8mm
A film made from diary material collected between Christmas Eve 2019 in Paris and mid-November 2020 in Los Angeles, including a dolma-making lesson I gave to a friend, summer fruits under wildfire skies, and the street celebrations after the 2020 presidential election. Aside from the first minute, which has a collage of sound and music made by Tashi Wada and Julia Holter, all sound by Dicky Bahto; additional camera by Patrick Londen; with appearances by Faith Chang, Julia Holter, Patrick Londen, Tashi Wada, and Canela, Francis, & Katoosh.

Gelare Khoshgozaran – To Keep the Mountain at Bay (2023) Super 8 to video, 9.5 minutes
Using poetry and prose excerpts with footage shot in California and Caucasus Mountains, To Keep the Mountain at Bay is an homage to Etel Adnan. Through fragmented images and words the film attempts to map exile as a potential space of collectivity and transnational solidarity, against the passivity of nostalgia and assimilationist propaganda.

Gelare Khoshgozaran – Men of My Dreams (2020) Super 8 to video, 9.5 minutes
A poetic reflection on the artist’s exile that connects Tehran with Los Angeles, Men of My Dreams unfolds a series of vignettes that toy with the unstable ground between dream and reality. Treating the past as materially present in fragments of knowledge carried by the body, it delves into the artist’s personal history while seeking the idea of home in the lineage of antifascist thought, poetry, and activism.

Mona Varichon – 2k19 Weather Diaries ou La météo du monde d’avant (2022) 28 minutes
Part of Varichon’s ongoing Insta Stories Archive series, in which she uses the Instagram stories of strangers to recreate in real time events ranging from the world historic to the banal from multiple perspectives. Made with a wink to George Kuchar’s Weather Diaries, Varichon traces her movement and personal experiences through the videos of others, with the idea of weather as drama a recurrent motif, creating a self-reflective and personal diary entirely from the disposable videos of others.

bios:

Dicky Bahto lives in San Francisco. He has exhibited work utilizing still and motion picture photography, sound, and performance at a variety of museums, galleries, microcinemas, film festivals, conferences, alternative spaces, and scenic locations spanning the Northern Hemisphere, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to a series of nooks, crannies, and underbrush along and under Sunset Boulevard. Recent projects include a 72-minute long film, For Liz Harris, which accompanied several live performances by Grouper on her winter 2022 tour in Europe and the United States; a video performance of Mieko Shiomi’s Mirror Piece commissioned by The Getty; an on-going multimedia collaboration with pianist Lolita Emmanuel exploring the relationship between traditional and contemporary practices in Assyrian visual and musical arts; and he is currently working on a three-hour long film to accompany a performance by Sarah Davachi at MOMA in New York this coming September. He has a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (RIP) and an MFA from the University of California, Riverside. He currently teaches in the film department at the California College of the Arts.

Gelare Khoshgozaran is an undisciplinary artist, filmmaker and writer whose work engages with the legacies of imperial violence. Gelare uses film and video to explore narratives of belonging outside of the geographies and temporalities that have both unsettled our sense of home, and make our places of affinity uninhabitable. Gelare has presented her work internationally, with current and upcoming exhibitions at the Hammer Museum, MASS Moca, and the Delfina Foundation in London. With a BA in Photography from University of Arts in Tehran (2009), and an MFA from University of Southern California (2011), Gelare lives and works in Los Angeles.

Mona Varichon lives and works in Paris. She received her MFA from ArtCenter College of Design (Pasadena, CA) in 2018. She wonders where and for whom artworks live, and whether her work can exist online or in a community before it exists in a gallery or museum. She recently presented performances at the Centre Pompidou (Paris, France) and the Capc musée d’art contemporain (Bordeaux, France), and her work has been exhibited at Les Urbaines Festival (Lausanne, Switzerland), Alienze (Vienna, Austria), the Sifang Art Museum Satellite (Shanghai, China), the National Gallery (Prague, Czech Republic), Cocotte (Treignac, France), Balice Hertling (Paris, France), and in Los Angeles at The Vanity Gallery, in lieu, the Redcat Theatre, the Echo Park Film Center, and The Egyptian Theater. She was recently a resident at Laura Owens’s Studio of the South in Arles, France and is currently translating to French the memoirs of American artists George and Mike Kuchar.

Diaries, notes, & sketches: May 5 at Artists Television Access

May 5, 2023
Diaries, notes, & sketches: Dicky Bahto & Mona Varichon

Artists Television Access
922 Valencia St, San Francisco

doors at 8 pm / show starts promptly at 8:30 pm

This program presents recent video works by Dicky Bahto and Mona Varichon that variously utilize diary filmmaking, found imagery/sounds, and collaborations with their parents.

Mark Toscano of Los Angeles Filmforum says of Bahto’s films: “His varied and complex engagement with moving image and photographic media is steeped in a deeply felt humanity and empathy, manifesting through his inspired photographic eye and frequently direct interaction with and appreciation of the material vitality of film and cinema. His films achieve heightened emotional states of great intimacy and poetry, often channeling the uniquely aleatory qualities of film to carry a sensuality and spirituality hovering in the space between loving depiction and vaporous abstraction.”

Marion Vasseur Raluy says of Varichon’s: “Her works – whose approach can be compared to that of fan art – are certainly tributes to various personalities that she admires, from her mother to Assa Traoré. In this alternation between popular public figures and anonymous individuals, she tries to understand their motivations and desires by revealing their mechanisms of struggle as well as their political opinions. From English to French, from the private to the public sphere, or even social networks, M. Varichon produces video collages that make it possible to ‘make people speak’ and ‘make them hear’ differently. In this way she is reviving a heritage that has partly disappeared: that of beginning with the voices of others rather than her own.”

Dicky Bahto will be present to introduce the program.

program (not in order)

Dicky Bahto – A play in black and white (2022) Super 8 to video, 17 minutes
A few years ago my baba asked me to “make a film dedicated to him, about him, starring him.” I’ve finally fulfilled his request. Built around a reel of Super 8 home movie footage I made while playing backgammon with him, the film takes visual and conceptual motifs from the game itself and elaborates on them in a series of visual variations.

Mona Varichon – 2k19 Weather Diaries ou La météo du monde d’avant (2022) 28 minutes
Part of Varichon’s ongoing Insta Stories Archive series, in which she uses the Instagram stories of strangers to recreate in real time events ranging from the world historic to the banal from multiple perspectives. Made with a wink to George Kuchar’s Weather Diaries, Varichon traces her movement and personal experiences through the videos of others, with the idea of weather as drama a recurrent motif, creating a self-reflective and personal diary entirely from the disposable videos of others.

Mona Varichon – No I Was Thinking Of Life (CC) (2018) 12 minutes
Part of a video series stemming from various phone discussions between the artist and her mother. “…long distance, loss, improvisatory laws, and bilingualism each tie in as evasive subjects that find family resemblance in their total lack of control and risk of miscommunication. It’s straight out of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross” – Sabrina Tarasoff, Flash Art International, July 2018

Dicky Bahto – excerpts from what’s a life (concert diary) (2019) approx. 18 minutes
what’s a life? is a project that developed over the course of a few years incorporating material recorded on Super 8 film, cell phone video, and audio recordings. The recordings are a mix of portraits of musicians as well as diary material focused on sound and music. While the project was “alive” and I was still accumulating new material, I would present it as a multimedia installation or as expanded cinema performances involving multiple television screens, video and Super 8 projection, cassette tapes, and mp3 audio playback, editing the material anew for each presentation and incorporating varying amounts of chance and site-specificity into each version. After a few years of letting the work live, breath, and grow, I decided to stop it’ life in this form, and have since edited an hour and a half long single channel video work, some sections of which may be shown independently.

bios:

Dicky Bahto lives in San Francisco. He has exhibited work utilizing still and motion picture photography, sound, and performance at a variety of museums, galleries, microcinemas, film festivals, conferences, alternative spaces, and scenic locations spanning the Northern Hemisphere, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to a series of nooks, crannies, and underbrush along and under Sunset Boulevard. Recent projects include a 72-minute long film, For Liz Harris, which accompanied several live performances by Grouper on her winter 2022 tour in Europe and the United States; the film A play in black & white which combines home movie footage of his father with visual variations based on the game backgammon, commissioned by the television station Canal180 in Portugal with a composition scored for it by Matmos; a realization on video of Mieko Shiomi’s Mirror Piece for an exhibition of Fluxus performance works at The Getty Museum in 2021; the virtual experimental music performance group known as The Ensemble Whose Name is Uhhhhhmm… with Erika Bell, Morgan Gerstmar, and Stephanie Cheng Smith, which exists entirely within the video game Animal Crossing New Horizons; an on-going multimedia collaboration with pianist Lolita Emmanuel exploring the relationship between traditional and contemporary practices in Assyrian visual and musical arts; and he is currently working on a three-hour long film to accompany a performance by Sarah Davachi at MOMA in New York this coming September. He has a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (RIP) and an MFA from the University of California, Riverside. He currently teaches in the film department at the California College of the Arts.

Mona Varichon lives and works in Paris. She received her MFA from ArtCenter College of Design (Pasadena, CA) in 2018. She wonders where and for whom artworks live, and whether her work can exist online or in a community before it exists in a gallery or museum. She recently presented performances at the Centre Pompidou (Paris, France) and the Capc musée d’art contemporain (Bordeaux, France), and her work has been exhibited at Les Urbaines Festival (Lausanne, Switzerland), Alienze (Vienna, Austria), the Sifang Art Museum Satellite (Shanghai, China), the National Gallery (Prague, Czech Republic), Cocotte (Treignac, France), Balice Hertling (Paris, France), and in Los Angeles at The Vanity Gallery, in lieu, the Redcat Theatre, the Echo Park Film Center, and The Egyptian Theater. She was recently a resident at Laura Owens’s Studio of the South in Arles, France and is currently translating to French the memoirs of American artists George and Mike Kuchar.

Hand Made: recent films by Dicky Bahto with Los Angeles Filmforum

Hand Made: Recent Films by Dicky Bahto

Hand Made: Recent Films by Dicky Bahto

Alas, Departing (2022) , by Dicky Bahto

Sunday January 8, 2023, 7:30 pm
At 2220 Arts + Archives, 2220 W. Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90057

In person: Dicky Bahto, Tashi Wada

Tickets: $12 general, $8 students/seniors, free for Filmforum members

Masks are still required at Filmforum shows – N95 or KN95.Artist, curator, and educator Dicky Bahto is not only widely known for his extensive practice in photography, film, installation, performance, and his numerous collaborations with luminaries of experimental music, but also as an educator and curator who has inspired and influenced many years of students and audiences alike with his profound appreciation and passion for the time-based arts and beyond.  His varied and complex engagement with moving image and photographic media is steeped in a deeply felt humanity and empathy, manifesting through his inspired photographic eye and frequently direct interaction with and appreciation of the material vitality of film and cinema.  His films achieve heightened emotional states of great intimacy and poetry, often channeling the uniquely aleatory qualities of film to carry a sensuality and spirituality hovering in the space between loving depiction and vaporous abstraction.

Filmforum is thrilled to showcase the work of its longtime friend and periodic collaborator, as we present a program of recent work by Dicky Bahto, including pieces made in collaboration with musicians Sarah Davachi and Raum (Liz Harris + Jefre Cantu-Ledesma).  The evening will conclude with a new expanded cinema collaboration with Tashi Wada.

total program length = approx. 75m

Notes and program by Mark Toscano.  Thanks to Dicky Bahto and Tashi Wada.

Dicky Bahto lives in San Francisco. He has exhibited work utilizing still and motion picture photography, sound, and performance at a variety of museums, galleries, microcinemas, film festivals, conferences, alternative spaces, and scenic locations spanning the Northern Hemisphere, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to a series of nooks, crannies, and underbrush along and under Sunset Boulevard. Recent projects include a 72-minute long film, For Liz Harris, which accompanied several live performances by Grouper on her winter 2022 tour in Europe and the United States; the film A play in black & white which combines home movie footage of his father with visual variations based on the game backgammon, commissioned by the television station Canal180 in Portugal with a composition scored for it by Matmos; a realization on video of Mieko Shiomi’s Mirror Piece for an exhibition of Fluxus performance works at The Getty Museum in 2021; the virtual experimental music performance group known as The Ensemble Whose Name is Uhhhhhmm… with Pluto Bell, Morgan Gerstmar, and Stephanie Cheng Smith, which exists entirely within the video game Animal Crossing New Horizons; an on-going multimedia collaboration with pianist Lolita Emmanuel exploring the relationship between traditional and contemporary practices in Assyrian visual and musical arts; and a collaboration of works on paper with Argentine-French artist César Cofone. He has a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (RIP) and an MFA from the University of California, Riverside. He currently teaches in the film department at the California College of the Arts.

Tashi Wada is a composer and performer based in Los Angeles. His music explores resonance and dissonance, using alternative tunings and simple structures to generate rich and unanticipated perceptual effects. Wada studied composition at CalArts with James Tenney and for many years performed alongside his father Yoshi Wada. Wada has presented his music internationally and collaborated with a range of artists including Charles Curtis, Simone Forti, and Julia Holter. Wada founded and runs the label Saltern. His most recent album Nue was released by RVNG Intl.

AlasDeparting2

Alas, Departing

Alas, Departing

2022, 7.5 minutes
music by Sarah Davachi

Toutcomposes

Tout par compas suy composés

Tout par compas suy composés

2022, silent, 10m

six pages from a diary still

six pages from a diary

six pages from a diary

2021, sound, 13.5 minutes

Sunlight crying

2022, music by Raum, 7.5 minutes

A play in black and white 7

A play in black & white (for baba)

A play in black & white (for baba)

2022, shown as silent, 17.5 minutes

A new expanded cinema collaboration with Tashi Wada

A new expanded cinema collaboration with Tashi Wada

September 2020 update

(September 2020) Most recent things are two films for tracks by Sarah Davachi from her upcoming album Cantus, Descant (see one below), and a short film made with Julia Holter and Tashi Wada for Bomb Magazine. I also have a pair of short stories I wrote in the first issue of Presence, edited by Liz Harris, limited edition print run.
Midlands (2020) music by Sarah Davachi, film by Dicky Bahto from Sarah’s album Cantus, Descant, out soon
Ephemeris (2020) film by Dicky Bahto sound by Julia Holter & Tashi Wada excerpt of Steam (Part 1) from Attica Blues (1972) by Archie Shepp Read an interview with Lil’ Jürg Frey.

February 8, 2019 – Another Void: In memory of Paul Clipson

Friday, February 8, 2019
Another Void: In memory of Paul Clipson
at the University of Chicago (website)

Paul Clipson, who died last year at the age of 52, was one of contemporary cinema’s most underappreciated artists. His films, composed largely in-camera on Super-8 and 16mm, were explorations of perception with a formal rigor and inimitable virtuosity, built by re-exposing the film strip again and again until the images became dense with syncopated visual rhythms. Born out of collaboration with musicians, they were originally screened as part of live, ensemble performances. This program attempts to honor his practice by screening five of his stand-alone works (Light Year, Another Void, Chorus, Union, and Sphinx on the Seine) in the company of films by those he befriended, taught, and nurtured, including Konrad Steiner, Zach Iannazi, Dicky Bahto, John Davis, and Nathaniel Dorsky.

program:
Paul Clipson Sphinx on the Seine (2008)
Paul Clipson Chorus (2009)
Paul Clipson Union (2010)
Paul Clipson Another Void (2012)
Paul Clipson Light Year (2013)
John Davis Demolished Every Second (2014)
Dicky Bahto Once, maybe twice: or, The clockwork of summer (2013/2017)
Konrad Steiner Remains (1990)
Zach Iannazzi Old Hat (2016)
Nathaniel Dorsky Intimations (2015)

(1990-2017, 98 min., 16mm)

Curated by Sean Batton (CMS) with Dicky Bahto as part of the Graduate Student Curatorial Program.

Dicky Bahto is a filmmaker and educator whose work in still and motion picture photography, sound, and performance has been exhibited at a variety of venues across the Northern Hemisphere. He has himself taught at the Echo Park Film Center, Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, Otis College of Art and Design, and the University of California, Riverside.

January 26, 2019: Parallel Inquiries at UCR ARTS

1383_feature
Parallel Inquiries
at UCR ARTS
website

Borrowing its title from Christina C. Nguyen’s film, this program follows two recurring themes in experimental film from the 1960s to the present: the nature of the medium, and its relationship to time. The program looks at the legacies of two canonical works of experimental film: Paul Sharits’ T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G and Kurt Kren’s 31/75 Asyl. Proposing an imagined genealogy of these films into the present, the program includes works that share overlapping and divergent interests: on the one hand the use of flicker, repetition, solid color, and other formal and technical attributes of the medium; and on the other hand the relationships between lived/experiential time, clock time, and the metronomic time of the film strip. The program includes a world premiere by Mike Stoltz.

Program (all works shown on 16mm)

Paul Sharits T, O, U, C, H, I, N, G (1968)
Kurt Kren 31/75 Asyl (1975)
Rose Lowder Bouquets 11-20 (2005-9)
Christina C. Nguyen Parallel Inquiries (2016)
Jodie Mack Point de Gaze (2012)
Mike Stoltz Pull (2019)
Naomi Uman Kalendar (2008)
Tomonari Nishikawa Shibuya-Tokyo (2010)
Madison Brookshire Fountain (2016)

Q&A with curator Dicky Bahto and artist Madison Brookshire, Christina C. Nguyen, and Mike Stoltz.

This screening is curated by Dicky Bahto.

Image: Paul Sharits T, O, U, C, H, I, N, G (1968)

I Shall Love 2 – Julia Holter (music video)

Julia Holter I Shall Love 2
from the album Aviary
official video, released September 6, 2018

directed, shot, and edited by Dicky Bahto
color by Fotokem and Spectra Film and Video
colorist Willie Lawton
equipment Echo Park Film Center
photographed on Kodak Tri-x & 500T 16mm and Agfa 200D & Kodak Tri-x Super 8mm