Moving-image and time-based artworks can visualize multiple temporalities at once and bridge the gap between lessons of the inevitable past and the possibilities of the expectant future. In this online conversation to celebrate the opening of new exhibitions at McEvoy Foundation for the Arts in San Francisco, two innovators in the creation and presentation of video art, British artist Isaac Julien CBE RA and Oakland-based artist, curator, and writer Leila Weefur, discuss the poetics and architecture of cinema. Julien’s immersive film and photography exhibition Lessons of the Hour and Weefur’s resonant video program The New Labor Movements are on view at McEvoy Arts from October 14, 2020 through March 13, 2021. This event is presented by the McEvoy Foundation for the Arts.
Leila Weefur’s (She/They/He) practice in video, installation, writing, and curation examines the performativity intrinsic to systems of belonging present in our lived experiences. Their resonant video program The New Labor Movements creates an intertextual dialogue between emerging and established filmmakers whose works function as thoughtful responses to intergenerational conceptions of American and transnational Blackness. Through a series of “film movements,” presented at McEvoy Arts in 2020 and 2021, Weefur assembles a compositional discourse that explores philosophical, psychological, and emotional landscapes implicated in the lives of those living in the aftermath of slavery’s indirect effects.
This conversation is moderated by Greg Niemeyer, Chair and Professor for New Media in the Department of Art Practice at the University of California, Berkeley.
Co-produced by McEvoy Foundation for the Arts, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, and Berkeley Arts + Design.