Food For A Blush ? A Strange Example Of British Art School Cinema Of The 1950s

Mittwoch, 11. Mai 2016 - 18:15 Uhr

IFK

Anomalous to the otherwise social-realist ethos of the British ?Free Cinema? movement of the 1950s, ?Food for a Blush? is a short, 30-minute film made between 1956 and 1959 by two students at the Chelsea School of Art in London. It was described by one of its makers as ?a documentary of worry? filmed beetween bedsits and bombsites.

While the emergence of teen sub-culture in Britain during the late 1950s has become well-trodden ground for cultural historians, the drab and desolate pre-pop years of the Austerity, as experienced by restless and enquiring youth, are perhaps less documented. ?Food for a Blush?, an amateur film made by art students Elizabeth Russell and Nicholas Ferguson, depicts a twilight world in the final years before the youth explosion enabled by Pop. Here are bored young adults searching for a cultural language to call their own?and coming up with a comic-surreal hybrid that anticipates by a decade the arch, retro-Edwardian Pop Dada of the 1960s. Ambiguous, dream-like, existentially disoriented, ?Food for a Blush? owes as much to Cocteau as it does to Charlie Chaplin. As Russell observed, it was inspired by the anxiety that underlay ?the post-Teddy Boy aimless coffee-bar feel of the King?s Road of 1955.?
Drawing on a meeting in the summer of 2009 with its ?star?, Michael Bracewell introduces the film, its history and context.

Michael Bracewell was born in London in 1958. His new book, ?Live for Today: An Experience of Art, 1983?2013? will be published in autumn, 2016. He is IFK_Guest of the Director/Writer in Residence.

Termin

Flimmer Ratte
Michael Bracewell, Vortrag, Screening
Mittwoch, 11.05.2016 18:15
IFK
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