Mechanical / Animal Memory

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Created from super 8 footage that was shot in the 1970s of the family dogs and the trains that my father worked on, this film explores the decay of memory and image. The super 8 film grew fungus while stored in a basement. It was then optically printed up to 16mm and slowed down so that the snowflake shaped fungus could be studied. Narration presents fragmented stories of childhood memories. This film was created as a source film, which was later physically cut up and reprinted with a flashlight to destroy the image and sound for the subsequent film «Mechanical/Animal Memory» which is owned by the NFB.

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01-01-2005

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US

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5 min

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Director
Amanda Dawn Christie

Amanda Dawn Christie

Since 1999 Amanda Dawn Christie has created dozens of experimental films, videos, expanded cinema performances, and installations, that have been presented around the world. She works with 35mm, 16mm, and super 8 film as well as analogue video, digital media, photography, installation art, sound art, electronics, and performance. Her work not only spans across these mediums but also brings them together in ways that blur the boundaries of where one discipline ends and the next begins. Amanda Dawn Christie has exhibited and performed in art galleries across Canada, and her films have screened internationally from Cannes to Korea to San Fransisco and beyond. She was the 2014 Atlantic finalist for the National Media Art prize, and recently had a 10 year retrospective exhibition of her work, called Land Lost, curated by Mireille Bourgeois, at the Galerie d’art Louise et Reuben Cohen. She was also included in the Marion McCain Biennale of Atlantic Contemporary Art, called Writing Topography, curated by Corinna Ghaznavi. Her films are distributed by the CFMDC (Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre) in Canada, the Dutchfilmbank in Amseterdam, and Lightcone in Paris. Another 10 year retrospective of her work, "Dividing Roadmaps by Timezones: 10 years of moving pictures 1999-2009", focused on her experimental films and screened at the Canadian Film Institute (Ottawa), the Winnipeg Cinematheque (Winnipeg), the Vogue Cinema (Sackville), the Halifax Independent Filmmakers Festival (Halifax), Amherst College (Massachussets), the Visual Studies Workshop (Rochester, NY), and Spectacle Microcinema (Brooklyn, New York). She has been an artist in residence at the Rotterdam International Film Festival (Netherlands), the Atlantic Filmmakers Cooperative (Halifax), the Wave Farm (Acra, New York), the Millennium Film Workshop (New York, New York), MDocs Storyteller's Institute (Saratoga Springs, New York), and the Island Media Arts Co-op (Charlottetown PEI). Since 1997, she has been actively involved with artist run centres, in both volunteer and staff positions: serving on various boards, working as both a technician and later as a director, teaching workshops, publishing articles, and serving on juries across Canada. She completed her MFA at the SFU School for the Contemporary Arts in Vancouver, before moving to Amsterdam. Upon her return to Canada she worked at the Faucet Media Arts Centre & Struts Gallery, in Sacckville, NB. She later worked as the director of the Galerie Sans Nom and the RE:FLUX Festival of Music and Sound Art, in Moncton, NB. She left the Galerie Sans Nom in 2014 to work full time as an artist with the support of a new media creation grant from the Canada Council for the Arts and a category A creation grant from Arts NB. Concepts and themes explored in her work focus primarily on the relationship between the human body and analogue technology in a digital age. Taking a relatively solitary approach, like a painter or a poet, Amanda Dawn Christie, often works alone making her films with the detritus of the capitalist entertainment industry. Many of her past works were made with short ends from industry films and were then hand processed with "found" chemistry in make-shift darkrooms.
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