Film Love and Atlanta Contemporary Art Center present:
Anna Grimshaw's Mr Coperthwaite: a life
in the Maine woods
Part Three: Autumn's Work
World premiere
|
Friday, September 13, 2013
8:30 pm at Atlanta Contemporary Art Center
$8 general | $5 student/senior | Free with
ACAC membership
Note: The four parts of Mr Coperthwaite are cyclical - one may watch the
parts in any order, jump into the project at any time, and it is not necessary
to have seen parts one or two before seeing this part.
Film Love presents part three of Anna Grimshaw's year-long documentary project,
about a singular figure in American culture.
For the last fifty years, Bill Coperthwaite has lived and worked on 300 acres of
wilderness in Machiasport, Maine – committed to what he calls "a handmade life."
Over the course of one year, anthropologist and filmmaker Anna Grimshaw visited
Coperthwaite each season, creating an intimate document of a remarkable person.
Like Coperthwaite's life, Grimshaw's film is personal, handmade, and truly
alternative. Instead of interviews, we simply observe the process of
Coperthwaite's activity as it unfolds in time. Instead of a standard
feature-length documentary, Mr Coperthwaite is in four parts of different
lengths – one for each of the seasons.
To reflect these alternate methods of living and cinema, Film Love presents each
part of Mr Coperthwaite during the season which it depicts. Part three,
Autumn's Work, premieres September 13, 2013 at Atlanta Contemporary Art
Center. This screening is the world premiere, and Anna Grimshaw will be present
to introduce the film and discuss her work.
Akin to Henry David Thoreau, Autumn's Work finds Coperthwaite alone in
the woods over several days, cutting up and removing a large fallen tree. The
turning leaves and sudden breezes alert us to the passage of one season into
another; meanwhile, counting the rings in the tree trunk, Coperthwaite observes
that its age matches his own. As always, time – the real time of a task, the
cinematic time of editing, the span of human and natural life, the eternal
movement of the seasons – is the film’s underlying subject.
But Autumn's Work is also deeply cinematic. Just as Coperthwaite
struggles with the tree's massive trunk and stray branches, Grimshaw had to deal
with the mass of video footage, editing it into a coherent whole. Both are
"cutting" into time, whether the lines in the tree trunk or the video footage.
Thus Grimshaw's filmmaking elegantly mirrors Coperthwaite's work on the land. As
Coperthwaite's tree slowly comes apart, Grimshaw's film comes together, and
Autumn's Work becomes an allegory of the creative and destructive cycle of
the seasons, and of nature itself.
Mr Coperthwaite: a Life in the Maine Woods, Part Three: Autumn's Work (Anna
Grimshaw, 2012) 48 min, digital video World Premiere
The Atlanta Contemporary Art Center
535 Means Street NW
Atlanta, GA, 30318
404.688.1970
http://www.thecontemporary.org/
MR COPERTHWAITE is a Film Love event, programmed and hosted by
Andy Ditzler for Frequent Small Meals. Film Love promotes awareness of the rich
history of experimental and avant-garde film. Through public screenings and
events, Film Love preserves the communal viewing experience, provides space for
the discussion of film as art, and explores alternative forms of moving image
projection and viewing. Film Love was voted Best Film Series in Atlanta by the
critics of Creative Loafing in 2006, and was featured in Atlanta Magazine's Best
of Atlanta 2009.