Thefilm-poem (also called thepoetic avant-garde film,verse-film orverse-documentary orfilm poem without the hyphen)[1] is a label first applied to Americanavant-garde films released afterWorld War II.[2] During this time, the relationship between film and poetry was debated. James Peterson inDreams of Chaos, Visions of Order said, "In practice, the film poem label was primarily an emblem of the avant-garde's difference from the commercial narrative film." Peterson reported that in the 1950s, overviews of avant-garde films "generally identified two genres: the film poem and the graphic cinema".[3] By the 1990s, the avant-garde cinema encompassed the term "film-poem" in addition to different strains of filmmaking.[4] Film-poems are considered "personal films" and are seen "as autonomous, standing apart from traditions and genres". They are "an open, unpredictable experience" due to eschewing extrinsic expectations based on commercial films. Peterson said, "The viewer's cycles of anticipation and satisfaction derive primarily from the film's intrinsic structure."[5] The film-poems are personal as well as private: "Many film poems document intimate moments of the filmmaker's life."[6]
David E. James and Sarah Neely are two academics who have sought to explore the relationship between poetry and film. James writes of the idea of the poet ‘In the modern world,poet designates a preferred medium; but the word also implies a mode of social (un)insertion. It bespeaks a cultural practice that, in being economically insignificant, remains economically unincorporated, and so retains the possibility of cultural resistance.’ Of Stan Brakhage, David E. James writes ‘The installation of the filmmaker as apoet had, then, both theoretical and practical components. It involved the conceptualization of the film artist as an individual author, aRomantic creator-a conceptualization made possible by manufacturing a tradition of such out of previous film history; and it necessitated a working organization, a mode of production and distribution, alternative to the technology, labour practices, and institutional insertion of Hollywood.’[7]
Sarah Neely in her chapterPoetry in her book on Margaret Tait draws upon Maya Deren and her contribution to thePoetry and The Film: A Symposium event organised by Cinema 16 in 1953 and later published inFilm Culture magazine to explore relationships between poetry and film and amongst other sources and quotes includes “As Maya Deren so persuasively argued at the Cinema 16 symposium, poetry is often concerned with capturing the invisible: an emotion in the object or thing, rather than the thing itself.”[8]
In his essayPoetry-Films and Film Poems inFilm Poems, William C. Wees differentiates between poetry-film using a film to ‘illustrate’ a poem, and film poems in which ‘a synthesis of poetry and film that generates associations, connotations and metaphors neither the verbal nor the visual text could produce on its own.’[9][10]
Examples of a film that fits in to the first isManhatta (1921) byCharles Sheeler andPaul Strand using the poem byWalt Whitman, while in the second isMeshes of the Afternoon (1943) byMaya Deren and Alexander Hammmid. Film Poems was a touring programme of films exploring the relationship between films and poetry curated by film maker Peter Todd. It first screened as a one-off programme at the National Film Theatre London on 19th of February 1998 and would launch the following year as a touring programme at various venues supported by The Arts Council of England and the BFI Touring Unit (and would be followed by a further threeFilm Poems programmes all curated by Todd).[11][12][13] The firstFilm Poems programme included two films by film maker and poetMargaret Tait which displayed the range and texture of her work with one filmHugh MacDiarmid A Portrait (1964) featuring the poet MacDiarmid reading his own work, while the otherAerial (1974) is without words and which author Ali Smith described as ‘a tiny poem’.[14] Sarah Neely also writes of this film ‘For this film, Tait moved away from the inclusion of spoken word on the soundtrack: instead the film’s poetry comes wholly from image and sound’ emphasising ‘Aerial seems a perfect distillation of Tait’s idea of a film poem.[15] Sophie Mayer inHow British Poetry Fell In Love With Film said Margaret Tait created her largely self-made films where she lived and would be described as ‘the only British artist truly making film poems’.[16]
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