Monday, April 4, 2022

Three Shorts from Morgan Quaintance (2020-2021)

Three Shorts from Morgan Quaintance (2020-2021)

Three Shorts from Morgan Quaintance (2020-2021) Details

  • Year of Production: 2020-2021
  • Length: 66 minutes
  • Color: Color
  • Screening Format: Digital
  • Language: English

About the Film

These three shorts effortlessly reassemble idiosyncratic connections between our past and our present through rich archival material and astute writing.

After nearly a decade writing texts, critical in both approach and importance, that examine the sociopolitical entanglements of UK contemporary art, Morgan Quaintance started working in moving images through a series of acclaimed experimental film essays in 2018. Since then, his films have been well-received at top festivals (NYFF Currents, IFFR) and awarded prizes across a wide swath of festivals, from CPH:DOX and Punto de Vista to the Tacoma Film Festival. In this program, the DocYard is presenting a selection of the filmmaker’s most recent works, which further develop his practice of making linkages between the past and present, tracing aesthetic and political similarities across different spaces and movements, and positioning the personal as a necessary and additive lens to the discursive. These three short films assemble and reassemble interests across the cultural spectrum, from the “death gaze” of yellow journalism to very personal medical imagery, and are connected by clever, occasionally cheeky, and always incisive writing that makes ample use of written and spoken text. Amid the increasing prominence of essay films at major documentary and experimental film festivals around the world, Quaintance’s work is vital. (AS)

DocYard screenings are available virtually for passholders only this season – you can purchase a pass here.

About the Filmmakers

Morgan Quaintance Director

Morgan Quaintance is a London-based artist and writer. His moving image work has been shown and exhibited widely at festivals and institutions including: MOMA, New York; Mcevoy Foundaton for the Arts, San Francisco; Konsthall C, Sweden; David Dale, Glasgow; European Media Art Festival, Germany; Alchemy Film and Arts Festival, Scotland;  Images Festival, Toronto; International Film […] Read More

South

South Details

  • Year of Production: 2020
  • Length: 28 minutes
  • Color: Black and White
  • Screening Format: 16mm

About the Film

Taking two anti-racist and anti-authoritarian liberation movements in South London and Chicago’s South Side as a point of departure, South (2020) presents an expressionistic investigation of the power of individual and collective voice. Interlinked with Morgan Quaintance’s own biography (time spent living in both London and Chicago), the film also considers questions of mortality and the will to transcend a world typified by concrete relations. 

Winner of the 2020 New Vision Award at CPH:DOX, Denmark and the 2020 Best Experimental Film award at Curtas Vila Do Conde, Portugal.

Surviving You, Always

Surviving You, Always Details

  • Year of Production: 2021
  • Length: 18 minutes
  • Color: Black and White
  • Screening Format: 16mm

About the Film

In Surviving You, Always (2021), the transcendental promise of psychedelic drugs contrasts with a concrete and violent experience of metropolitan living. These two opposing realities form the backdrop for an adolescent encounter told through still images and written narration. 

Official Selection of the 2021 Open City Documentary Film Festival and winner of the UK Short Film Award, the 2021 Tacoma Film Festival and winner of the Best Documentary Short Film Award, and 2021 Best Experimental Film Award at Curtas Vila do Conde, Portugal.

A Human Certainty

A Human Certainty Details

  • Year of Production: 2021
  • Length: 20 minutes
  • Color: Color
  • Screening Format: 16mm

About the Film

A Human Certainty (2021) follows the neurotic ramblings of a death-obsessed romantic in the throes of post-breakup blues. The autoimmune condition of St. Lidwina, the tabloid street photographer Weegee, and the filmmaker’s own spiritualist grandmother all come together to reflect on a particularly painful day at the beach.