Hank Bull, The Time Dilation Machine

Monday, June 27, 2011 - 8:30 pm

Programmed by Amy Kazymerchyk

Double-8, Super-8 and 16mm films made in the 1970s by Hank Bull, Kate Craig, Patrick Ready, Byron Black and friends. Live accompaniment by Hank Bull and Patrick Ready.

The Time Dilation Machine was a device for travelling through the seven dimensions of time and space, devised by HP (Hank Bull and Patrick Ready) in 1975. Constructed inside an old steamer trunk, it employed mirrors, tinfoil and hanging photo-puppets to trigger teleportation, and was accessed by means of a peephole in one end.

Similar technology, found buried in a cardboard box of 8mm films, takes us back to a time before video when a group of Vancouver pataphysicians made investigations into transmutation and altered consciousness. All that remains of their research today is a collection of filmic fragments.

This collection of Hank Bull’s unedited 8mm and 16mm reels include Spadina Special (1971), Helen and Monica (1972), Swing (1974, with Kate Craig), HP Movie (1975, with Patrick Ready), Rembrandt (and Goya) (1977, with Patrick Ready and Kate Craig), How to Make Good Whisky (1977, with Patrick Ready), and The HP Sedan Bottle (1975, with Patrick Ready, Byron Black and Randy Gledhill).

Hank Bull is an artist born in Calgary, Alberta, in 1949. In 1973 he moved to Vancouver to join the Western Front. There his practice expanded into performance, video, radio and telecommunications art. His work is represented in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada and the New York Museum of Modern Art, and was included in the Venice Biennale 1986, Dokumenta 9 1987, and Ars Electronica 1989. In 1999 he co-founded the Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art (Centre A), where he served as executive director until 2010.

Presented in collaboration with the Signal & Noise Media Arts Festival, June 23-27, 2011, at VIVO Media Arts Centre. www.signalandnoise.ca

      

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