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Darren Banks

  • Object Cinema
  • TVS
  • Sins Deadly Sins
  • The Raven
  • Engine
  • The Fairman Collection
  • There Is No Other
  • Palace
  • The Animated
  • About
  • CV
  • News

IN THE CLOUD OF UNKNOWING: ENCOUNTERS WITH THE UFO PHENOMENON A Symposium & Residency Session at Mildred’s Lane

July 14, 2024
Source: https://mildredslane.org/

OBJECT CINEMA at MoMA, NEW YORK, 2022

July 28, 2022

Horror: Messaging the Monstrous

Jun 23–Sep 5, 2022

In the six decades since Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho reinvented horror as a mainstream box office attraction, the genre has morphed and mutated to become arguably the most complex and radically provocative in cinema. Much like musicals and gangster films during the Depression of the 1930s, or science-fiction amid the threat of McCarthyism and nuclear war in the 1950s, horror movies reflect the major concerns of our times. They are often a testament to the plagues of escalating factionalism and disfunction in the world, to humanity’s collective inability to address the conditions that threaten its future, from impending environmental collapse to racial, economic, and gender-based injustice and inequity. Rooted in reality and fueled by the fantastic, these works question the supremacy of humankind, and visualize a dizzying array of consequences for our folly. No other genre so effectively explores the mixtures of shock, fear, brutality, and grim humor that result from acknowledging the fragility of existence and accepting the ultimate end that awaits us all.

This 10-week series will highlight foundational works and key films that capture horror’s uncanny ability to embody the lurking fears evoked by evolving social, cultural, and political change in the world. Organized according to fluid themes that shaped how the works were conceived—Slashers, Horror of Place, Gender and Horror, Race and Horror, the Undead, Body Horror, Women Make Horror, Folk Horror, Eco Horror, and Creatures—the series comprises more than 100 features and an international selection of shorts by seasoned masters and important new filmmakers.

https://www.moma.org/calendar/film/5488

https://www.moma.org/calendar/groups/84

Object Cinema in Reanimated: The Contemporary American Horror Remake, Laura Mee, 2022

July 28, 2022

Explores American horror remakes produced since 2000 within key cultural, industry and reception contexts

  • Analyses remaking as a form of adaptation and offers new theoretical frameworks for understanding remakes and their prominence in contemporary film production

  • Situates horror remakes within their own industrial, cultural and genre contexts rather than solely comparing them to original versions

  • Case study analyses of a range of key films, distinct cycles, production companies, and thematic approaches

Reanimated offers a new perspective on twenty-first century American horror film remakes. Counter to the critical dismissal of genre remakes as derivative rip-offs, Mee approaches the films as intertextual adaptations which have both drawn from and helped to shape horror since 2000. Covering films from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) to Candyman (2021), and identifying distinct cycles, production strategies and patterns of reception, this book illustrates the importance of the remake to contemporary horror cinema and addresses key cultural, industry and reception contexts. Rather than representing the death of horror, Reanimated argues that remaking instead demonstrates the genre’s capacity for creative recycling, adaptation and evolution.

https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-reanimated.html

Palace Collection in the book Nasty Business, Mark McKenna, 2020

July 28, 2022

Nasty Business: The Marketing and Distribution of the Video Nasties

The history of the ‘video nasties’ has been recounted many times and the films that caused so much offence have themselves been endlessly examined. However, the industry that gave rise to the category has received scant little attention. Earlier histories have tended to foreground issues of censorship, and as such, offer only glimpses of an underexplored industrial history of British video. This book focuses explicitly on an industry that is still portrayed in heavily caricatured terms, that is frequen

http://www.drmarkmckenna.co.uk/

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A Tory Puppet Show

March 31, 2020

My response to the way our government has dealt with the ongoing Covid-19 Epidemic. (ongoing)

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The Dark CCA Londonderry →

January 25, 2020

Agnes Meyer-Brandis, Darren Banks, Liz Collini, Sinead McKeever

25 January – 7 March 2020

The Dark presents a constellation of new and existing works by artists from Northern Ireland, England and Germany. The artists look out into space, back at Earth and consider science fiction, fact and artist projections.

Human endeavor, hubris and crisis thread through the exhibition ranging in media including drawing, assemblage and film. Darren Banks’ blobs and ‘sci-fi looking things’ create close encounters and uncanny upending of everyday objects. Agnes Meyer Brandis’ has trained a fleet of geese for life on the moon (based on Godwin’s The Man in the Moone) and Sinead McKeever’s GEO Star E shows us a charred globe as seen from beyond, which in light of the tragic fires in Australia takes on an extra pathos. Liz Collini’s text-based drawings expose the component parts of letters. Seen from afar, the galaxy of marks form words and phrases inspired by the ideas in the show that may be read with hope or cynicism.

http://cca-derry-londonderry.org/exhibitions/the-dark/

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Its origins are indeterminate

February 08, 2018

Whitechapel Gallery Sat 17 Mar, 11.15am – 6pm

The screening series Its origins are indeterminate examines the concept of ‘language-as-a-virus.’ As carriers of meaning, words and images are vulnerable to intervention and corruption. The works presented test and bend the limits of language, send out new versions of media to spread, and breakdown systems of controlling grammar.

Featuring: Morehshin Allahyari, Graeme Arnfield, Darren Banks, Pauline Boudry & Renate Lorenz, Jenny Brady, Terence Broad, Karen Cunningham, Katie Hare, Saskia Holmkvist, Mike Hoolboom, Sky Hopinka, Patrick Hough, Hannah Catherine Jones, Christine Sun Kim & Thomas Mader, Ieva Kraule, Oliver Laric, Liz Magic Laser, Serena Lee, Ghislaine Leung, Deirdre Logue, Sara Magenheimer, Evan Meaney, Anne McGuire, Sondra Perry, Laure Prouvost, Gabrielle de la Puente & Zarina Muhammad, Steve Reinke, Miko Revereza, Manuel Saiz, Keith Sanborn, Linda Stupart, Jenna Sutela, Emily Vey Duke & Cooper Battersby, Douglas Waterman, and Anna Zett.

Mount Florida screenings @ GOMA

July 25, 2017

Keepeeupee →

April 04, 2017

Keepeeupee is a series of audio visual collaborations between the band Herr Teufelsdröckh und das Taschenmesser and artist film makers. The audio of each performance is recorded and sent to a new collaborator. This provides the stimulus for new visual material which in turn is then sent back for the next episode and so on and so forth ….

 // Episode 2 // 28.04 // 20.00 //

 Herr Teufelsdröckh und das Taschenmesse , Film Work - Darren Banks,  Dron Sator  (Rudolf Kollektiv), Schicky Tapes (DJ Tape Bar)

// Kottishop, Adalbertstr 4, 10999 //

Photo credit: Darren Banks, Object Cinema, 2015

Photo credit: Darren Banks, Object Cinema, 2015

IKG Presents Film Days

February 24, 2017

Tues, Feb 28 until Thurs, Mar 2, 2017

WHERE: IKG Gallery Number 2

The Illingworth Kerr Gallery is delighted to announce a three-day programme of film screenings hosted in Gallery Two from Tuesday, February 28 until Thursday, March 2, 2017. Each day a different film programme will present a series of films curated by different arts professionals.

This initiative reflects the intention of periodically activating the galleries by means of activities other than the static exhibition format. Similarly to IKG LIVE (a festival dedicated to performance, live and time-based art) and our rolling programme of public events and workshops, IKG FILM DAYS intends to explore other ways of using our exhibition spaces so as to engage different practitioners and speak to diverse audiences. Elisabetta Fabrizi and Justin Waddell are the two Guest Curators who have conceived alongside Lorenzo Fusi (Visiting Academic Curator at the IKG) the programmes for this edition of FILM DAYS.

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