Midwest Video Poetry Fest Day TWO | Arts + Literature Laboratory | Madison Contemporary Arts Center

Midwest Video Poetry Fest Day TWO

Video poetry gives creators an opportunity to use one of our newest art forms--film--to transform one of our oldest art forms—poetry. This emerging and exciting format is adding to the rapidly growing audience for poetry in America. MVPF will be the first of its kind in Wisconsin and will present the work of local, national, and international poets and filmmakers. Our curators screened over 1600 videos totaling nearly 160 hours to bring you the very best in video poetry. 

Please note: dates have changed. The festival is free and open to the public and will be live on ALL's YouTube channel. Subscribe now for this and other great content.

Midwest Video Poetry Fest is presented by American Family Insurance DreamBank, with additional support from FilmFreeway, New American Press, the Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets, and Willy St. Co-op. The festival is also supported in part by a grant from Dane Arts, with additional funds from the Endres Mfg. Company Foundation, The Evjue Foundation, Inc., charitable arm of The Capital Times, the W. Jerome Frautschi Foundation, and the Pleasant T. Rowland Foundation.

Program Day Two

Friday, November 20 at 7 PM CST [After watching, please fill out this survey to help us plan next year's festival.]

still from Conversation boy and man fishing on dock with seagull Midwest Video Poetry Fest

1) Conversation (4m49s)
Directed by Star Bazancir, Carl Hedsved
Written by Star Bazancir, Carl Hedsved, Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sweden

A delightful animated poetic video created by students in Sweden and based on a poem by Wisconsin poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox. A man asks God what it means to possess and lose, to grow up, to age and die.

Where I'm From (after Where I'm From by George Ella Lyon) Midwest Video Poetry Fest

2) Where I'm From (1m30s)
Directed by Rebecca Vickers, Dennis Vickers
Written by Rebecca Vickers, Dennis Vickers
Wisconsin, United States
Rebecca Vickers' Website

Dennis Vickers collaborated from his home in White Lake, Wisconsin with his daughter in Bangkok to create this homage to George Ella Lyons's poem "Where I'm From" during the pandemic. 

Las Personas que Recuerdan Demasiado Midwest Video Poetry Fest

3) Las Personas Que Recuerdan (People Who Remember Too Much) (5m)
Directed by Eduardo Elli
Written by Eduardo Elli
Argentina

Haunting lullaby sung in Mapuche provides the background for a domestic worker, a laborer and a child--each alone--showing the fragility of our presence in each other’s lives. 

Still from Shiver by Mark Niehus Midwest Video Poetry Fest

4) Shiver (2m10s)
Directed by Mark Niehus
Written by Mark Niehus
Australia
Mark Niehus Website

“Shiver” celebrates the triumph of a woman over the fragmentation that can result from absue. 

woman and man walking beside water Listen to the Poems Midwest Video Poetry Fest

5) Listen to the Poems I Will Whisper (4m16s)
Directed by Elvert Bañares
Written by Karla Quimsing (poetry), Elvert Bañares (film)
Philippines

An interpretation of the Hiligaynon-language poem "Ang Ilongga Nga Nagsakay sa Habal-Habal" (“The Ilongga Who Rode a Motorcycle Taxi”) by Filipino poet Karla Quimsing. The video contrasting the jovial tone of the poem with a solemn contemplation of the role of nature in relationships.

unicorn in glitter Glitter Gutter still Midwest Video Poetry Fest

6) Glitter Gutter (37s)
Directed by Cristina Vila Nadal
Written by Fausta Jolly
United Kingdom
Cristina Vila Nadal's website

A quarantine cross-nation creation between Fausta Joly and Cristina Vila Nadal. One filmmaker, one poet, one lens, one screen— lots of glitter.

Backwards God still 3 women in white with hands outstretched

7) Backwards God (5m 57s)
Directed by Natalie Cook
Written by Natalie Cook
New York, United States

Backwards God tells the story of how man made God in his image. The film interweaves elements of ecology and spirituality to retell the book of Genesis through a womanist lens.

cutting a lemon Portrait of the Family as a Definition Midwest Video Poetry Fest

8) Portrait of the Family as a Definition (2m57s)
Directed by Adriane Little
Written by Kerrin McCadden
Michigan, United States
Adriane Little's Website

This video poem was inspired by Karen McCadden’s poem "Portrait of the Family as a Definition.” The video translates the brief and lyrical exchanges between loss, family, addiction, trauma, and that which otherwise haunts.

uborn rivers of sky sepia photo of street with trees Midwest Video Poetry Fest

9) Unborn Rivers of Sky (3m16s)
Directed by Brian Ratigan
Written by Daniel DeVaughn
New York, United States
Non-Films Website

A collaborative work between filmmaker, musician and poet. Work created separately is combined to create this poetic video. The passing of time in an exquisite corpse. 

A Piano A Poem by Gertrude Stein an animated calligraphic romp by k.l. Darnell Midwest Video Poetry Fest

10) A Piano: A Poem by Gertrude Stein (3m10s)
Directed by Kathryn L. Darnell
Written by Gertrude Stein
Michigan, United States

An animated interpretation of "A Piano" by Gertrude Stein from her collection: Tender Buttons, originally published in 1914.

This job is of the hurtful kind split screen sky and wheat Midwest Video Poetry Fest

11) Light's Backbone (52s)
Directed by Vangelis Bekas
Written by Eftychia Panayiotou
Greece
Vangelis Bekas's Website

Stunning visual imagery accompanies this translation of Greek poet Eftychia Panayiotou’s poem about the toll of being human in the world’s fever for progress.

boolean array attempting facial recognition Midwest Video Poetry Fest

12) "Value": boolean (2m50s)
Directed by Stuart Pound
Written by Stuart Pound
United Kingdom

A found poem within the algorithms of Boolean operators in facial recognition technology that highlights the fraught intersection between identity and big data.

hands cutting tangerines Rotten Fruit Midwest Video Poetry Fest

13) Rotten Fruit (6m32s)
Directed by Chessa Casper
Written by Chessa Casper
Washington, United States

Found footage, tarot cards, and personal footage are combined in this poetic video exploring location and identity.

Novena snowy background Midwest Video Poetry Fest

14) Novena (1m58s)
Directed by Shirley Camia
Written by Shirley Camia
Canada

This short film, inspired by videos created by Filipinx artists of the diaspora who integrate their cultural heritage into their work, transforms one of Shirley Camia's written poems into a multimedia artistic collaboration, incorporating elements of music, voice and motion design. 

Pushkin poem jumbled by computer Midwest Video Poetry Fest

15) Rolling Poe... (4m10s)
Directed by Edward Kulemin
Written by Edward Kulemin
Russian Federation

An animated poetic video that simulates the handwriting of the great poet A.S. Pushkin. As a result of computer manipulations and animations poetic lines undergo a number of changes, curl up into a ball, are woven into the verbal vortex, and split into separate syllables and letters. 

How many blissful revelations
The spirit of enlightment hides,
Experience, the son of painful errors,
and genius - friend of paradox,
And chance - almighty god-inventor...

still Eagle Tattoo Midwest Video Poetry Fest

16) The Eagle Tattoo (1m06s)
Directed by Roesmary Norman, Stuart Pound
Written by Rosemary Norman
United Kingdom

Short poem that meditates on the resilience and ultimate fragility of skin, life, and hope.

Hide Your Name Buddha destroyed by extremists Midwest Video Poetry Fest

17) Hide Your Name (3m33s)
Directed by Aninda Rahman
Written by Nazia Afrin
Bangladesh

Based on "Genocide", a poem by Nazia Afrin, this is an unusually progressing collage film presenting  typographic animation, erasure poetry,  and the exploration of assimilation and “otherness.”

lights and full moon crowded street in Lebanon Midwest Video Poetry Fest

18) We Take Back Mountains (7m50s)
Directed by Hind Shoufani
Written by Hind Shoufani
Lebanon

This poetic- revolution film is inspired by the popular uprising across Lebanon, which started in October 2019. This short poetic film commemorates a nation finally on the road to reclaiming public space, rights and dignity.

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