Tagged with Carlos Casas

WOLF WAR

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/28552670[/vimeo]

Wolf War, by the dearest dear señor Carlos Casas, padrino from another continent and Tóxico record taco eater (16).

(It came to mind when I read about the unmanned drones that will be killing wild wolves in Montana.)

 

 

 

 

Tagged ,

MAÑANA! TÓXICO PROVOCATEURS: CARLOS CASAS EN EL CENTRO CULTURAL ESPAÑA

Mini-maratón de cine y plática.

Participan en la mesa Carlos Casas (Es) director de la trilogía, Maximiliano Cruz (Mx) , miembro de la distribuidora Interior13 Cine y programador de FICUNAM, y Antonio Zirión (Mx) , antropólogo visual y profesor-investigador de la UNAM-I.

Puedes ver la programación completa aquí.

Una colaboración del Centro Cultural España, Tóxico Cultura, y Map Productions.

(Muchas gracias a The Lift y La Colección/Fundación Jumex y el British Council  por el apoyo a las actividades generales de Tóxico, y a Daniel Viera por hacer posible este proyecto.)

 

Tagged , , ,

TÓXICO PROVOCATEURS: CARLOS CASAS EN EL FARO DE ORIENTE

Un filme hecho a manera de cadáver exquisito sobre Iztapalapa creado por sus habitantes, cual proyecto a episodios, a la búsqueda de nuevos imaginarios colectivos y otras visiones urbanas. Taller de cine documental impartido por Carlos Casas.

 

Tagged , ,

TÓXICO PROVOCATEURS: CARLOS CASAS EN AURAL

Más info aquí.

(Gracias al apoyo del Centro Cultural España y Daniel Viera.)

***

(We love collaborations and provoking all sorts of dialogues in different fields. Tóxico Provocateurs is a new project that we created to invite and sponsor wonderful and visionary visitors, but to be part of other amazing projects in Mexico City. It will also permit us to soon go  beyond the artistic fields, reconfiguring our initial concept of what it means to be a multidisciplinary platform.)

Tagged , ,

DESCENDING INTO MEXICO CITY No.001: CARLOS CASAS

Our dear friend and partner in crime, Carlos Casas, arrives in Mexico City today.

Carlos is an award-wining documentary filmmaker, visual artist, sound expert, ex designer, ex architect, ex Fabrica, ex Colors Magazine, ex Sette pagemaker, who trots the globe at an amazing pace, always in love with distances and obsessed with the ends of the earth. He also cofounded to great projects: Von Archives and Map Productions, creating links between Europe and Uzbekistan. He will surely land armed with a black notebook in which we will ritualistically make lists and diagrams about all those projects and things we want to do soon, plus have also done already since the last time we met.

And he officially inaugurates a new project of ours: Tóxico Provocateurs; so we can check off that from our list.

(Bienvenido de vuelta querido Carlitos)

(Taco de ojo de cena)

Tagged , , ,

EVIL VARIATION 1, AND SUSTAINED WASHES OF SOUND

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/11334968[/vimeo]

By Carlos Casas (ES)
Music: Andrea Belfi (IT)

EVIL  03:46   |  Prix Ars Electronica 2010  |

Says Carlos:

Evil (3:30) Evil variations 1

is part of a archive works I ve been developing to uncover a certain ghostly fluid inherent in film, a way to deconstruct and use archive material as mortar for a new audiovisual matter. These works are only a way to give new life to this material, as well as constructing a new vision. Evil uses samples expands or extends the opening shot of Touch of Evil, by Orson Welles.  Considered the most remarkable long shot in the history of cinema, it also includes  an amazing sound design work, and music, that at it s time was more than revolutionary and was only understood and applied years later when Walter Murch reedited the film through Welles´s notes.  Evil is the first on a series of variations developed with italian musician and drummer Andrea Belfi.   It is trough these notes that I found inspiration to rework and recompose these scene.

Orson Welles: “In scoring the picture, it was planned to use, for the most part, rock and roll and latin-american rhythm numbers. The streets of a border town are always noisy with the blare of various loudspeakers, broadcasting from the entrance of night clubs…bars and cantinas. Considerable use was to be made of this. It is very important that the usual rancheros and mariachi numbers should be avoided and the emphasis should go on afro-cuban rhythm numbers. …This rock and roll comes from radio loudspeakers, juke boxes and in particular, the radio in the motel. It is very important to note that in the recording of all these numbers–which are supposed to be heard through street loudspeakers–that the effect should be just exactly as bad as that. The music itself should be skillfully played, but it will not be enough in doing the final sound mixing to run this track through an echo chamber with a certain amount of filter. To get the effect we’re looking for, it is absolutely vital that this music be played through a cheap horn in the alley outside the sound building. After this is recorded, it can be then loused up even further by the basic process of re-recording with a tinny exterior horn….  And since it does not represent very much in the way of money, I feel justified in insisting upon this, as the result will really be worth it.” “All the above music of course is “realistic”, in the sense that it is literally playing during the action. For the purpose of clarity in these notes, this music will be referred to as ‘background music’, as distinguished from ‘underscoring’, a term which will be used to designate that part of the music which accommodates dramatic action and which does not come from radios, night clubs, orchestras or juke boxes. In other words, the usual dramatic music (used) in a picture. This underscoring, as will be seen, is to be most sparingly used, and should never give a busy, elaborate, orchestrated effect. What we want is musical color rather than movement; sustained washes of sound rather than…melodramatic or operatic scoring.”

***

(Carlos Casas is a Tóxico padrino, constant accomplice, fellow list maker–with more projects joint coming soon. He also gave a fabulous cinema workshop for “La Incubadora”–a multidisciplinary program created by Tóxico for the 12 best students of a private university in Mexico City.)

Tagged , , , , ,

THE END

Screen shot 2009-12-11 at 1.56.47 PMScreen shot 2009-12-11 at 1.57.11 PMScreen shot 2009-12-11 at 1.57.00 PM

Screen shot 2009-12-11 at 1.47.33 PM

Images by Carlos Casas. From The End trilogy.

Carlitos Casas. Filmmaker, visual artist, sound artist and somewhat of a poet of the everyday. Oh: and Tóxico Padrino extraordinaire.

Says Carlos:

“The trilogy of films dedicated the most extreme environments on the planet, I was interested in living in these lands trying to capture those lives styles which are dissapearing, I was interested in the collective imaginary of these places and their mythic idea of the end of the world. I was interested in landscapes, places that carried in a certain way a feeling of the “End”, through abandonness, remoteness, harshness of the land and of course living conditions, places that could represent in a way a post apocalyptic future scenario and at the same time a certain archaic civilisation feeling. I was interested in the people living in this peripheries of civilization and how they survive their everyday life, why they were here and how they were managing to survive. I was interested in living among them, following their rhythms and trying to understand their ways, their reasons.”

***

(Take a look at his website for more images, films, texts and sounds.)

(And click here to learn about MAP Productions: a headquarter for the creation cultural projects–based in Paris and Uzbekistan–  that Carlos recently created with his wife Saodat Ismailova, also an award-winning filmmaker, and one of the most incredible women I know.)

(Carlos is also part of La Otra Maleta Mexicana, a collective art project created by Tóxico that is now showing  in Cuba)

Tagged , , , , ,

TÓXICO PROJECT ARRIVES IN CUBA

Screen shot 2009-11-18 at 7.34.38 PM

One morning, hunting the Mexico City flee markets, I came upon a small battered suitcase that caught my eye. When I opened it up I was surprised to find it full of old photographs, negatives, postcards and other personal mementos from the 30s and 40s. There was a whole story to be woven, image by image: I could tell that the original owner was both an amateur photographer and also an amateur physicoculturist; I could easily imagine that this suitcase kept a certain (nameless) young man’s favorite pictures, plus dozens of self-portraits in different stances and under different guises. I was mesmerized by all that was there to be inferred, and also wondered about how such a suitcase ended up in a stranger’s hands. It made me think of the story of The Mexican Suitcase–a suitcase full of negatives of the Spanish war, shot by Capa et al–and also of the suitcases that someone found on the streets of Massachusetts, full of pictures of a ravaged Hiroshima after the war… both of them surprisingly full of important historical contents. And then there was this suitcase, this other Mexican suitcase, also full of images, of a very different nature. The contents  are not historical, but it is history nonetheless: a personal history taken, kept,  forgotten and lost and then sold.  Because yes, I bought it with all it contained. And Tóxico then invited several talented visual artists to reinterpret the materials–or rather be inspired by them, to propose their own.

Today the suitcase flew into Cuba, ready to be shown at the Fototeca, in Habana. Besides, Alinka Echevería–wonderful Mexican photographer, and one of the artists involved–will be working with several talented local photographer’s: the suitcase will leave the island with a new artist-book, created collectively.

And so the suitcase will travel now, and keep on traveling, and it will acquire a will of its own. It will travel with what it contains, both the new and some of the old, making space for both chance and accident, and at every stop a new artist will be added to the list and at every gallery or museum the project will be presented in a different type of installation. And just like before: who knows where it will end up, and in whose hands.

Artists: Ramiro Chaves, Mark Powell, Mezli Vega, José Luis Cuevas, Carlos Casas, Maggie Delgado, Santiago da Silva, Carlos Álvarez Montero, Alinka Echeverría, Lorena Moreno, Andrés Padilla, Corine Vermeulen, Alfredo Moreno, Omar Gamez, Gabriella Gómez-Mont and the anonymous photographer, the original owner of the suitcase.

(Muchas gracias a Alinka Echevería, Lorena Moreno y Maggie Delgado por su ayuda. Y gracias a Nelson–curador de Noviembre fotográfico– por su invitación.)

(Soon a website for la Maleta)

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

ARCHIVE WORKS. CEMENTARY SERIES

New work by  Carlos Casas. Visual Artist. Sound Artist. Filmmaker. Toxico-padrino extraordinaire.

(This is both art installation material and also visual and audio research for one of his films in progress.)


Tagged , , ,