An Evening Of Nicolas Provost Shorts (2002-2011)

Part of the Artist Films: The Invisible And The Real
Director: | Nicolas Provost |
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Certificate: | n/a |
Length: | |
Format: | Unknown |
Language: | Unknown |
Country: | Belgium |
Rare Selection of Shorts
This is a selection of highly acclaimed, award-winning shorts from Belgian filmmaker Nicolas Provost, who is a phenomenal and often confrontational imagist.
Facebook event:
http://www.facebook.com/events/426342344108814/?fref=ts
Programme of films
We'll show a 90 minute programme of shorts, that we've especially selected for the night. Some of the shorts that we'll show include:
Storyteller (2011)
Moving Stories (2011)
Stardust (2010)
Long Live the New Flesh (2009)
Plot Point (2007)
Gravity (2007)
MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE FILMS
Long Live The New Flesh (14 min, 2009) - Horror Films
Embracing the real and the perceived as a beautiful and natural hybrid, Provost’s work has often employed stock material from other films, rearranging and manipulating it in order to reveal its hidden narrative potential and to allow it to exist in new and exciting ways.
In Long Live the New Flesh, Provost uses found footage from classic cinema, from horror classics such as The Shining, Videodrome, The Thing, The Exorcist, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. He then uses a digital technique where the images appear to smash and bleed into one another. Brilliantly disturbing, and disturbingly brilliant.
Plot Point (15 min, 2007) - Street Footage
Other works, meanwhile look to the dazzling fabric of everyday life for their imagistic and cinematic intensity. In Plot Point, Provost shoots everyday observational footage (with a hidden camera) and then uses storytelling devices from mainstream Hollywood cinema to create a fictional film. Through Provost’s camera lens an average day in Times Square becomes the setting for a brooding, intense police thriller.
Gravity (6 min, 2007) - The Cinematic Kiss
From Nicolas Provost's website:
"The cinematic kiss is probably one of the most archetypical images to be found in film history. Playing with the physiological and cinematographic principle of the after-image, Provost causes dozens of fast-edited kissing scenes from European and American film classics to collide. The reassuring world of multiplied cinematographic kisses is shattered by a stroboscopic effect that plunges and looses us into the dizzying vertigo of the embrace where, as often in Provost’s cinema, love becomes a passionate battle in which monsters are finally unmasked."
Bataille (2011) - footage from Kurosawa's Rashomon
Below is a photo from BATAILLE, for which Provost used footage from Kurosawa's Rashomon, and edited it as if a mirror was going through it.
"BATAILLE represents a collision between extremely violent male forms, pitching into each other as mythical monsters."
Artist quotes
“How do you surprise an audience today when they’ve seen so much after 120 years of cinema?” So asked award-winning Nicolas Provost in an interview earlier this year.
“The most beautiful thing I discovered is the fine line between fiction and reality. The moment in which the audience asks themselves ‘is this real or is this fiction? I think it’s very strong feeling where you can see the magic dimension of reality and I believe that’s what it’s all about.” - NICOLAS PROVOST
With Provost’s debut feature The Invader impressing at festivals earlier this year, you shouldn’t miss this rare chance to catch these intensely provocative shorts on the big screen.
TICKETS
On the door: £5 / £3.50 (concessions)
Or advance tickets online: £4.50 and £3 (concessions) http://www.wegottickets.com/event/204687
Other films in the Artist Films: The Invisible And The Real:

15
Film: Andy Warhol's Screen Tests (1964-1966) + Live Musical Score By Hapsburg Braganza
15 Feb 2013, 7:30 p.m.
A selection of Screen Tests, pop art legend Andy Warhol’s fascinating series of moving-image portraits, shot over three years in his famous New York studio, The Factory.

21
Film: Fishtank (1998) + Short Film: Sunday (2009)
21 Feb 2013, 7:30 p.m.
This double bill brings together works from two distinct British artists whose body of work also includes photography.

28
Film: Bodysong (2003)
28 Feb 2013, 7:30 p.m.
Simon Pummell’s remarkable film recalls Bill Morrison’s Decasia (2002) in its astonishing accumulation of archive material, arranged here to evoke the entire process of life, from birth to death by way of love, violence, religion and so on.

14
Film: Our Daily Bread (2005)
14 Mar 2013, 7:30 p.m.
Award-scooping documentary Our Daily Bread is a highly impressive look at the mechanised process of food production.

24
Film: The Arbor (2010) + Short: The Girl Chewing Gum (1976)
24 Mar 2013, 7:30 p.m.
The perceived and the actual are at odds in this double-bill conclusion to our Real and the Invisible film season.