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Art in Cinema: Documents Toward a History of the Film Society, by Scott MacDonald. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2006. Hardcover, $63.50, 465pp. ISBN: 1-592-134254
"Art in Cinema" was the name given to the first series of experimental films presented by an art museum in North America. Frank Stauffacher, an energetic and passionate young cinephile who had brought a Bolex back from his military service in the South Pacific, co-founded and then directed the series starting in the fall of 1946. Housed in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, from which it received some institutional support, Stauffacher's Art in Cinema series ran on and off for nine years, focusing primarily but not exclusively on avant-garde film. In 1955, after more than two years of illness, Stauffacher died of a brain tumor at age thirty-nine. Art in Cinema died with him. After a brief introduction, MacDonald more or less lets the documents he has selected speak for themselves. Readers familiar with his volume on Cinema 16 will find significantly fewer of MacDonald's own interviews, largely because most of the Bay Area protagonists are no longer alive. A brief conversation with Frank's brother, Jack Stauffacher, introduces the collection, while a surprisingly frank exchange with Frank's wife and last collaborator, Barbara Stauffacher Solomon, appears near its end. A rare interview with artist and filmmaker Jordan Belson testifies to the importance of the screening series for local film artists. MacDonald includes only one other document extraneous to the 1946-1954 lifespan of the Art in Cinema Society, a moving 1984 tribute to Stauffacher by James Broughton. The vast majority of the book consists of letters to and from the volunteer staff of the Art in Cinema Society, interspersed with publicity material for the eleven series, program notes for a handful of individual programs, and a facsimile of the 98-page Art in Cinema catalogue (originally published in 1947 with one reprinting in 1968), intended to accompany its first season.
In 1946, Stauffacher and his early collaborator Richard Foster intended to present a series of work by contemporary artists working in the film medium. Discovering that there wasn't a huge amount of such work, they decided, with guidance from film scholar Jay Leyda, to dedicate their first season to presenting a historical overview of experimental film. The ten programs presented in October and November of that year at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art included evenings dedicated to the French avant-garde, the "Continental" avant-garde, animation, abstract film, experimental documentary, surrealist film, and contemporary experimental film in the United States. The series and its accompanying catalogue of essays with articles by Hans Richter, Man Ray, Maya Deren, John and James Whitney, Luis Buñuel, and others (all of whose work was featured in the series) were a huge success. One successful season led to another, with, in the early years, increasing focus on work by California artists who were encouraged and stimulated by Stauffacher's series. Five years later, Stauffacher, in an atypical assertion of pride, wrote to a journalist "it is safe to assume that Art in Cinema was responsible for what Lewis Jacobs terms a post-war movement in experimental film in this country." (235) Although Stauffacher immediately qualified his statement, others made similar claims for the series. Amos Vogel and filmmakers such as Curtis Harrington, Jordan Belson, Harry Smith, and James Broughton directly or indirectly credited Art in Cinema as having had a significant impact on experimental filmmaking in this country. Broughton, in his 1984 essay on Mother's Day and tribute to Stauffacher (his cinematographer), claimed that the latter became "without intending it, the father of a burgeoning American art in the Bay Area" and that Art in Cinema was his "public monument, which fertilized a whole generation and brought filmmakers to San Francisco from all over the country." (182) According to Broughton, artists such as he and Sidney Peterson would have never dedicated themselves to filmmaking had it not been for Stauffacher's encouragement and the enormous public enthusiasm bred by the Art in Cinema screenings. Stauffacher himself emphasizes the financial support that Art in Cinema provided for filmmakers, with over thirty-five films produced as a direct result of such support.
In the nine years of the Art in Cinema Society's correspondence, Stauffacher never lost his curiosity, dedication, and humility. He had never intended to make a career of film curating, keeping his job as a commercial artist, and never received a salary for this work. "If you have ever heard of a labor of love, this is one" (279) he wrote. Indeed, much of his early programming appears born of his desire to bring most of the experimental films he could get his hands on to San Francisco. This passion and his Bolex also led him to cinematography (which he did, gratis, for many Bay Area experimental film artists) and to his own filmmaking, with Sausalito, ZigZag, and Notes on the Port of St. Francis among his better-known works. With time, frustration and ambivalence about running the series occasionally surface. Stauffacher was no blind enthusiast when it came to programming films, and there were several contemporary works he seems to have never screened, sometimes inciting the explicit ire of filmmakers who were eagerly awaiting his decision and the return of their prints. When questioned, he took the time to express his criticism in letters with great tact and sincerity. However, to those he took into his confidence he sometimes complained as did they of the meager quantity or mediocre quality of contemporary experimental work, and to others he lamented the thankless role of the curator, often berated by filmmakers for not being selected or for a negative reaction on the part of the audience. In his correspondence he also willingly gave and took advice from other curators; expressed his thoughts on how experimental work was best programmed; and engaged in discussions on such issues as the role of music in abstract film, the pitfalls of acting, and the possibilities of showing certain experimental pieces on television. Over the years he toyed with going into film distribution and with starting an independent institution outside of the Museum. But film and, even more so, filmmaking were his passion, and his work programming and managing Art in Cinema remained in the form of a constantly evolving gift, rather than a job. In the last years his programming sometimes branched out, with one intriguing evening on the "Joys and Miseries of the Sponsored Film." The last two seasons, programmed while he was recovering from surgery and organized with the help of his wife, were entitled "Aspects of the American film: the Work of Fifteen Directors." They included works by D. W. Griffith, Mack Sennett, John Ford, Cecil B. De Mille, Gene Kelly, Robert Flaherty and, with their directors in person, films by Fred Zinneman, Vincente Minnelli, Willard Van Dyke, Merian C. Cooper, and Joseph Mankiewicz, among others.
November 2008 | Issue 62 Irina Leimbacher is a film scholar and curator based in San Francisco. She is co-founder of kino21 and will guest curate the 2009 Flaherty Film Seminar. ALSO: More book reviews |
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New book from the
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Action! Interviews with Directors
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Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
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Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
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Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles