Events

Past Event

Film Screening and Discussion of The Third Part of the Third Measure, a film about Julius Eastman

March 6, 2020
5:30 PM - 7:30 PM
Event time is displayed in your time zone.

THE THIRD PART OF THE THIRD MEASURE, A FILM ABOUT JULIUS EASTMAN, FILM SCREENING AND DISCUSSION

with visual artists and film directors: Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar (The Otolith Group)

Ellie Hisama (Professor of Music, Columbia University)

and Isaac Jean-Francois (Columbia College ’20)

Moderated by: Saidiya Hartman (Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University)

612 Schermerhorn Hall, Columbia University

https://irwgs.columbia.edu/events/third-measure-film-screening-and-discussion

About the Film

The Third Part of the Third Measure (2017), a new audiovisual composition commissioned by the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia and Sharjah Biennial 13, creates an encounter with the militant minimalism of avant-garde composer, pianist, and vocalist Julius Eastman. The Third Part of the Third Measure focuses on what The Otolith Group describe as “an experience of watching in the key of listening,” invoking political feelings of defiance and the collective practice of movement-building that participates in the global struggles against neoreactionary authoritarianism. The Third Part of the Third Measure invites viewers to attend to exemplary ecstatic aesthetics of black radicalism that Eastman himself once described as “full of honor, integrity, and boundless courage.”

The Otolith Group is an award-winning collaboration whose practice spans the moving image, audio, performance, installation, and research. Founded in 2002 by the artists and theorists Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun, the group engages with the cultural and political legacies and potentialities of non-aligned movements, new media, Black Study, Afrofuturism, and Indofuturism while thinking speculatively with science fictions of the present. Their methodologies incorporate post-lens-based essayistic aesthetics that explore the temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions, and synthetic alienation of the posthuman, the inhuman, the non-human, and the anti-human. Expanding on the work of The Otolith Group is the public platform The Otolith Collective, whose work spans programming, exhibition-making, artists’ writing, workshops, publication, and teaching aimed at developing close readings of image and sound in contemporary society. Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically engaging the works of Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon. The work of The Otolith Group and Collective has been presented widely, most recently at the Berlinale 13th Forum Expanded; Khiasma, Paris; The Van Abbe Museum, Eindhoven; Sharjah Biennial 13; Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; and Haus Der Kulturen de Welt, Berlin. The Otolith Group was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2010.

Co-Presented by: The Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality; Columbia University Department of Music; The Fritz Reiner Center for Contemporary Music; Film and Media Studies, School of the Arts; and Columbia University Department of Art History and Archaeology