Video Commission Residency 2022 Screening

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Details:

Date: September 16, 2022

Doors: 7pm / Shows: 7:30 + 9PM

Location: The Output

FREE SCREENING

VP is excited to announce the screening of four new videos created by the recipients of the Video Commission Residency for 2022! VCR is a residency for the creation and exploration of experimental screen-based work.

Featuring new work by Warren Chan, Pluetoe Ilunga, Sarah Boo, and Jaye Kovach, please join us for the premiere of these gorgeous new works.

The VCR Program ran from June 15 - August 15, 2022. The VCR program is a residency for the creation and exploration of experimental screen-based work.

VIDEOS

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Warren Chan - Pixels of the Orient

Pixels of the Orient appropriates Western media depictions of East Asian for a psychedelic and comedic exploration of ahistorical East Asian aesthetics and identity.

Western film and television depicts East Asian culture through a pastiche of Chinese and Japanese symbols–often mixed with other influences from across Asia–filtered through an Orientalist lens that associates this “Asianness” with the exotic and mysterious. Stuck in a feedback loop, replicating and distorting itself endlessly in the vacuum of its fiction, this soup of vague Asian iconography ceases to have much relation to historic cultural practices.

While there is much valid criticism of these representations as othering and fetishistic, Pixels of the Orient aims not to critique but to reclaim. Presenting the appropriated images in the context of a video guide to Asian culture–with chapters dedicated to Asian scenery, the Chinatowns of the West, and Eastern cuisine, medicine, spirituality–this video recontextualizes these depictions to explore the construction of diasporic identity. By embracing the beauty, the contradictions, and the absurdities of this contrived culture, Pixels of the Orient rejects commodified notions of “authentic Asian identity” and instead seeks resonance in artifice.

The video synth effects used in Pixels of the Orient represent the agency of the audience. It posits that there is a reciprocal relationship between media and audience–that the ideologies of mass media are not absorbed uncritically, and that this media can be engaged with and reshaped on one’s own terms. And perhaps that is a defining experience for the Asian diaspora–to actively shape one’s identity through salvaging and curating what little representation can be found

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Pluetoe Ilunga - i am a program

"I am a program" is a documentary style short video examining the influence of television programming on the young mind and adults alike. The film is narrated by two synthesized artificial voices that function as guides alongside the visuals
This film aims to refute the notion that watching television is a primary source of amusement and an effective cerebral programming tool.
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Sarah Boo - Virtual Spectres

Virtual Spectres combines scrolling social media feeds with incomplete body scans, situating them together in 3D space. Moving patterns emerge when layers of TikTok footage are superpositioned and the silhouettes of their creators briefly occupy the same time and space, being swiped together and then away. The video ruminates on our existence as cyborgs in a state of the in-between and everywhere. How does it feel to have body-consciousness that is stretched between macro spaces and virtual spaces, duplicated between flesh organs and corporately owned data centers across the world?
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Jaye Kovach - Dust

Dust (2022) is an exploration of legacy and what it means to me as a queer, disabled, butch
trans woman living as a white settler on Treaty 4 territory. What does legacy even mean when
your body and identity stand to be misinterpreted in your absence due to the rise of a global
christo-fascism? When your very existence is inextricably tied to the ongoing histories of
capitalism and the settler-colonial project, is it ethical to dream of leaving a mark on the world? I
don’t have any answers, but I know that it’s impossible to opt out as the land that I seek to
return to is not my own.

what’s the point
of leaving
any kind
of legacy behind
when they find
our bones they’ll
say that we’re men
(how dare they)
– from “Weak” by Forced Femme