Curated by Mark McElhatten. Eve Heller was in attendance to introduce the screenings.


Sat 4 May, 2:30pm – Programme 1

Nocturne
1980/89, 10 min, 16mm, silent

The Secret Garden
1988, 18 min, 16mm, silent

Remains To Be Seen
1989/94, 17’30 min, 16mm

Twilight Psalm II: Walking Distance
1999, 23min, 16mm

Total running time: ca. 80 min

More info


Sun 5 May, 2:30pm – Programme 2

Crossroad (w. Mark LaPore)
2005, 5 min, digital

In Memorium (Mark Lapore 1952-2005)

Rehearsals For Retirement
2007, 11 min., digital

Last Days In A Lonely Place
2007, 20 min., digital

Still Raining Still Dreaming
2008, 12 min., digital

Twilight Psalm IV: Valley Of The Shadow
2013, 5 min., digital

Total running time: ca. 60 min

More info


Sun 5 May, 4:30pm – Programme 3

Yes, I Said Yes, I Will, Yes
1999, 3 min, 16mm

The Exquisite Hour
1989/94, 14 min, 16mm

The Snowman
1995, 8 min, 16mm

The Emblazoned Apparitions
2013, 6 min, digital

Twilight Psalm III: Night Of The Meek
2002, 23 min, 16mm

The Summit
1980s, 16 min, Super-8mm-to-digital

Total running time: ca. 75 min

More info


 

Lost And Found, You Still Remain There: A Phil Solomon Retrospective

Sat 4 - Sun 5 May, 2024
Cost: £14 - £42
Address:
ICA Cinema,
The Mall, London SW1Y 5AH

A three programme retrospective of films by Phil Solomon presented by Sonic Cinema and The Phil Solomon Project.

Internationally acclaimed American filmmaker Phil Solomon (1954-2019) created a body of cinematic virtuosity and poetic resonance that profoundly expanded the found footage genre, as he explored and exploited material idiosyncrasies of his sources – whether chemically altering the emulsion of Hollywood films and personal home movies or détourning the digital gaming universe of Grand Theft Auto. In his analog days, Solomon described himself as an inverse archeologist, throwing “Schmutz” on cultural artifacts to defamiliarize the imagery, creating works that walk a fine line between abstraction and figuration, unfolding an interior emotional vocabulary seamlessly married to meticulously constellated worlds of sound. – Eve Heller


With thanks to Eve Heller and Mark McElhatten. Very special thanks to Mark Toscano at the Academy Film Archive.

Eve Heller initiated the founding of the Phil Solomon Project together with Mark McElhatten in the wake of Phil’s passing in 2019. The PSP is dedicated to sustaining the preservation, distribution, screening, exhibition, and publication of Phil Solomon’s artwork and thought.


Supported by Austrian Cultural Forum London.

Austrian Cultural Forum