Last updated October 5, 2016
Akerman’s search for images that represent nothing, and mean nothing else (except perhaps themselves – and even this is difficult enough) while she focuses her camera on observing the minutiae of women’s lives, is expressed in the first instance by her style: distant, clean, sober, looking at the image outside of the image. Rootless, detached images. Images in the Diaspora. Is it possible to return home, to where the image can exist, outside of the commandment? Is such an image even possible? (Dana Linssen on Akerman's filmmaking)
Despite their apparent simplicity, Akerman’s assured framing and narrative, built out of blocks of real time intercut by radical ellipses, are not easily replicated. Rather, the film’s impact is indirectly evident in the emergence of a new phenomenological sensibility and approach to observation and the weight of time... (Ivonne Margulies on Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles)
Unbelievable, unbearable news, but just confirmed by Libération.
Chantal Akerman has died.
Links to online, freely accessible studies of her work and to tributes to it will continue to be added below in the next days (as they will, undoubtedly, at KeyFrame Daily | Fandor, and elswehere). It's the only way that Film Studies For Free can process this news.... Incroyable....
By / With Chantal Akerman
- Chantal Akerman, 'Almayer's Folly: Synopsis and Statement of Intent', LOLA, 2, 2012
- Chantal Akerman + Catherine Breillat. Film and Theory. 2001 (By European Graduate School Seven Video Lectures)
- Chantal Akerman Film Director "Crossing Cinematic Borders"
- ADDED Senses of Cinema special tribute dossier (December 2015): Chantal Akerman: La Passion de L’Intime / An Intimate Passion
- Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin,' Chantal Akerman: a Primer', Sight and Sound, October 6, 2015
- Janet Bergstrom, 'Keeping a Distance: Chantal Akerman’s Jeanne Dielman', Sight and Sound, November 1999
- Nicole Brenez, 'Chantal Akerman: The Pajama Interview', LOLA, 2, 2012
- Rose Capp, 'A couch in New York: Chantal Akerman and sex in the city', Screening the Past, December 1, 2010 (Link via Adrian Martin)
- Adriana Cerne, 'Maternal Matters: Jeanne Dielman and Emma Bovary Strange(ly) Familiar Reflections on Everyday Domestic Scenes', Studies in the Maternal, 1:1/2, 2010
- Maria Fosheim Lund, 'Deja-Vu Melodrama: An Iconographical and Iconological Analysis of "Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles', Out 1 Film Journal (January 27, 2009)
- Catherine Fowler, The films of Chantal Akerman: a cinema of displacements, PhD Thesis, University of Warwick, 1995
- Fernando Franco, Les Variations Dielman [video, 2000]
- Ed Henderson, 'Jeanne Dielman...', Slant Magazine, June 8, 2003
- Alex Hudson, 'Chantal Akerman for beginners', Sight and Sound , June 4, 2015
- Alisa Lebow, 'Memory once removed: indirect memory and transitive autobiography in Chantal Akerman's D'Est', Camera Obscura May 2003
- Dana Linssen, 'A Letter', LOLA, 2, 2012
- Ivone Margulies, 'A Matter of Time: Jeanne Dielman, 23, Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles', Criterion Collection Essays, August 18, 2009
- Ivonne Margulies: 'La Chambre Akerman: The Captive as Creator', Rouge 10, 2006
- ADDED Barbara McBane, Walking, Talking, Singing, Exploding . . . and Silence: Chantal Ackerman’s Soundtracks', Film Quarterly, Fall 2016
- Drew Morton, Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles: Day x Day x Day [video, 2014]
- Vitro Nasu's website content on Akerman (link via Adrian Martin)
- Griselda Pollock, 'The Long Journey: Maternal Trauma, Tears and Kisses in a Work by Chantal Akerman', Studies in the Maternal, 1:1/2, 2010
- Jonathan Rosenbaum, 'Chantal Akerman: The Integrity of Exile and the Everyday', LOLA, 2, 2012
- Alison Rowley, 'Between Les Rendez-vous d’Anna and Demain on Déménage: m(o)ther inscriptions in two films by Chantal Akerman', Studies in the Maternal, 1:1/2, 2010
- Marion Schmid, 'Between Literature and the Moving Image: The Cinematography of Chantal Akerman', Revue critique de fixxion française contemporaine, 2012 (thanks to Adrian Martin for the link)
- Zain Jamshaid, 'Invested in Expression or in Its Destruction?: The Politics of Space and Representation in Chantal Akerman’s Cinema', Senses of Cinema, 64, 2012
Tributes to Akerman
- By David Hudson at Keyframe Daily | Fandor
- Miriam Bale, "Five Lessons from Ten Great Filmmakers: Chantal Akerman', Fandor, October 5, 2012
BERLIN: Testimony of a City by Andy Moore and Ian Magor
Using Chantal Akerman's News from Home [1977] here the city of Berlin is the stage for another journey through another city. Reflective and reversing timelines encourage the visual to interact with the spoken testimony.
The portrayal of desire on the cinema screen is necessarily problematic. Too often it is an assertion of masculine power, sometimes an idealised notion of romance, rarely the reality of sagging mattresses and aching muscles. Chantal Akerman's Je, tu, il, elle is set alongside two typical Hollywood portrayals of sexual passion.
The personal and the public. Private letters and open spaces. Home, exile. Chantal Akerman’s News From Home is often torn between personal introspection and visual ethnography. Here, its slow composure is put in to conversation with the chaos of Godfrey Reggio’s Koyaanisqatsi. Whilst the former tackles the personal and transcends towards the universal, the latter uses the universal to invoke a self-observating experience. If Koyaanisqatsi signals a life out of balance, News From Home tries to rectify that balance - in pace, in space and in the everyday. - Jessica McGoff
Belgian director Chantal Akerman gained world success with her masterpiece Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai Du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975) and consolidated her reputation with films like Toute une Nuit, Les années 80 and Le Marteau. In the early nineties Akerman shifted her career from strictly film into the arts. She participated, amongst other exhibitions, at dOCUMENTA 10 and 11. It dated from 1995 since Akerman exhibited in her native country with a massive retrospective. In Too Far, Too Close the M HKA presented an overview from Akermans oeuvre starting with the 1968 production Saute ma Ville and ending with her most recent work, Maniac Summer.
I went to see 'No Home Movie' at the Regents Street Cinema on Friday. Akerman was due to be there so it was doubly poignant to watch this simple film about her mother's last months through the lens of Akerman's own death. At one point, a typically long shot shows mother and daughter silhouetted together in her mother's darkened living room, resting on different sides of the room, making it feel like a kind of ante-chamber of mortality. At another ,Chantal and her sister, Sylviane, are trying to keep their mother awake in her chair by asking her to tell a story of what she did yesterday - it seems desperate but then tSylviane and her mother manage to tell a very funny anecdote together about a woman they saw with a very large bosom and an very small dog who was licking her thoroughly, at the conclusion of which the mother rallies to remark "By now she must have polluted the whole of Brussels". The whole film which I found very compelling is a subtle blend of melancholia and humour which very movingly portrays the intimacy of everyday life in Akerman's family and the enormous affection between mother and daughters.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your story of your viewing of this film, Lizzie. I saw (and loved) NO HOME MOVIE very shortly before hearing the news of Akerman's death, and so the seeing of it bled into my shock and sorrow at that news. Your comment makes me want to watch it again. And again. Thanks for taking the time to post it.
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