SFCINEMATHEQUE

X

It’s Just Business, Baby (2023) by Ayanna Dozier

September 26 – October 12, 2024

CROSSROADS 2024 Online Echo– program 2

the haunted sprawl

The CROSSROADS 2024 online echo presents deep cuts and festival favorites remixed and distilled from the far-reaching 75-film festival into two concise programs, streaming to homes and phones around the world. Online program 2—the haunted sprawlwefts luminous explorations of the haunted metropolis with expressions of familial distance, memory and intimacy in the face of the increasingly virtual before reaching a stirring and elegiac conclusion. 

SCREENING:
to open a window (2023) by Craig Scheihing (US); 16mm, color, silent, 2 minutes.
Feather Family (2023) by Alison Folland (US); digital video, black & white, sound, 5 minutes.
Hey Sweet Pea (2023) by Alee Peoples (US); 16mm, color, sound, 11 minutes.
The San Francisco Art Institute (A Ghost Story) (2024) by Dominic Angerame (US); digital video, b&w, sound, 9 minutes.
Foot to Ground (2024) by Christopher Thompson (US); digital video, black & white, sound, 9 minutes.
It’s Just Business, Baby (2023) by Ayanna Dozier (US); digital video, color, silent, 6 minutes.
why i never became a driver (2023) by Yuula Benivolski (Canada); digital video, color, sound, 12 minutes.
Ripple Effect (2024) by Niyaz Saghari (UK); digital video, black & white, sound, 9 minutes.
TRT: 62 minutes

Access to this online program is **FREE** (donations accepted)!
Please register here to obtain password.


program 1  •  program 2
Online Echo

to open a window (2023) by Craig Scheihing

a mirrored window makes a suggestion (Craig Scheihing)

Feather Family (2023) by Alison Folland

A voice-to-text soliloquy. A child tastes loneliness, freedom, power and care via an animal simulator game. Roles are rehearsed and reversed. (Alison Folland)

Hey Sweet Pea (2023) by Alee Peoples

Parental aging and an existential wave collide together in funny ways. Hey Sweet Pea borrows scenes from the 1984 children’s sci-fi movie The Neverending Story to process our collective grief. (Alee Peoples)

The San Francisco Art Institute (A Ghost Story) (2024) by Dominic Angerame

The San Francisco Art Institute (A Ghost Story) is Dominic Angerame’s unique tribute to San Francisco’s legendary film school and the oldest art institution west of the Mississippi River, composed of two parts—the an experimental film project developed under Angerame’s supervision and footage shot on campus shortly before the school’s closure. Once a hub of creativity and a birthplace of ideas that have shaped the Bay Area experimental film scene, SFAI is now replete with ghostly figures, specters, shadows and memories, but perhaps it is not the final chapter of the school’s rich history. (Kornelia Boczkowska)

Foot to Ground (2024) by Christopher Thompson

Minimalist frontiers proliferate from acquisition. Larping utopia, shedding skins, forging new luxury amidst shards of past lives. Embracing shadows, sculpting stagnant futures in the flicker of ancient flames. (Christopher Thompson)

It's Just Business, Baby (2023) by Ayanna Dozier

It’s Just Business, Baby is also part of the trilogy of the same name. The film captures an encounter between a client and a working girl where the lines of care are blurred following a session. The film repeats this encounter with the same actors switching parts to trouble the relationship of power that exists between that dynamic. (Ayanna Dozier)

why i never became a driver (2023) by Yuula Benivolski

Three women engage with the medical system to confront strange dreams that may not belong to them. Early one morning, I regained consciousness in a hospital bed as the sun was coming up. I was sixteen. First thing I heard was the news: Princess Diana had died in a car accident. Two hours earlier, I was hitchhiking home from a party with friends. We were picked up by a Toyota hatchback; the driver was drunk, but we were desperate. At the bottom of the twisted mountain road we crashed into the wall surrounding my town’s cemetery. As I watched updates on Diana from my hospital bed, images of her smashed-up car crept into my mind and imprinted as my own. (Yuula Benivolski)

Ripple Effect (2024) by Niyaz Saghari

The diver plunges into the sea (death), but also into life (eternity), where he will rediscover the primordial waters of life. This quote from Pierre Lévêque about the illustrations in Tomb of the Diver resonated when I watched the viral video of a young man who was executed in Iran in 2020. A few days after his death, the grainy mobile video of him was released. He ran in slow motion and dove into a pool. Like an act of preservation, I filmed the video with a super 8 camera. The camera became a tool of magnifying and grieving. Three years later, men and women still chanted his name in protests. Like the waves after a dive, injustice has a ripple effect. (Niyaz Saghari)

Craig Scheihing (US) is an artist based in New York City. His work has been screened, performed and exhibited around the world in film festivals, museums, basements, bars, beneath bridges, in cinemas, vacant lots, galleries, garages, universities, yards and in-between.

Alison Folland (US) is a filmmaker and performer based in Somerville MA. Her short hybrid films engage questions of affect, play, and truth-value and are directly informed by her work as an actor in the commercial film industry. Alison’s films have been screened at festivals such as Athens International Film and Video Festival (Ohio), Athens International Film Festival (Greece), Antimatter, Winnipeg and Milwaukee Underground Film Festivals. She is a member of AgX Film Collective and teaches 16mm filmmaking at Emerson College.

Alee Peoples (US) maintains a varied artistic practice that involves screen-printing, sewing, sculpture and film. Currently living in Los Angeles, she has taught youth classes at Echo Park Film Center and shown her sculpture and film work at GAIT, 4th Wall and elephant. Peoples has shown her films at numerous festivals including Edinburgh, Images (Toronto) and the New York Film Festival and at museums and spaces including SFMOMA, Brooklyn Museum of Art, The Pompidou Center, Dirt Palace (Providence) and Nightingale Cinema (Chicago). Started in 2022, Arroyo Seco Cine Club is a thematically programmed film series she co-curates with Mike Stoltz. She is inspired by pedestrian histories, pop song lyrics and invested in the hand-made.

Dominic Angerame (US) has created more than 45 films. Angerame has taught at institutions including the San Francisco Art Institute; New College of California; University of California, Berkeley and University of Nevada, Reno. Angerame was Director of Canyon Cinema 1980-2012. His recent exhibitions include screenings at Anthology Film Archives and the Film-Makers’ Cooperative in New York. The soundtrack to The San Francisco Art Institute is by Kevin Barnard, a visual artist, musician, seeker. Kevin is perpetually drawn to a life of wonder, with the notion that writing clever tunes for people who like to sit still and dream with their eyes open might be seen as a truly noble vocation.

Christopher Thompson (US) is a contemporary American artist and filmmaker whose work examines desire, capital and the seemingly supernatural forces that govern its acceleration. His films and video works have been featured in film festivals and exhibitions worldwide, including CROSSROADS, the San Diego Underground Film Festival, Frontera Sur International Non Fiction Film Festival, Prismatic Ground and Mimesis Documentary Film Festival. He holds an MFA from Washington University in St. Louis where he studied video art and experimental film.

Ayanna Dozier (US), PhD, is a Brooklyn-based artist-writer. Her art practice centers performance, experimental film, printmaking and photography using auto-fiction, surrealist, conceptual and feminist methods. She is currently working on a narrative short examining the emotional interiority of dominatrixes. She is an assistant professor in communication, emphasis in film, at University of Massachusetts, Amherst and is the author of Janet Jackson’s The Velvet Rope (2020).

Yuula Benivolski (Canada) is an artist and filmmaker based in Toronto. She uses autofiction and personal archives to explore the territory between memory and official history. Most recently, her work has been shown at e-flux Screening Room in NYC; Istanbul International Experimental Film Festival; the Interbay Cinema Society, Seattle; DIFFUSION 2023, Toronto; Beijing International Short Film Festival and Images Festival, Toronto.

Niyaz Saghari (UK) is a UK-based Iranian filmmaker. She has studied Cinema in Tehran’s Art University and earned an MA in animation from Newport University, UK. She directs documentaries and experimental films about the aspects of urban and cultural life that she feels are in danger of being forgotten. Her work has been screened at Ann Arbor, Alchemy, Brazier film festivals.