Was there experimental cinema behind the Iron Curtain? What forms did experiments with film take in state socialist Eastern Europe? Who conducted them, where, how, and why? These are the questions answered in this volume, the first of its kind in any language. Bringing together scholars from different disciplines, the book offers case studies from Bulgaria, Czech Republic, former East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and former Yugoslavia. Together, these contributions demonstrate the variety of makers, production contexts, and aesthetic approaches that shaped a surprisingly robust and diverse experimental film output in the region. The book maps out the terrain of our present-day knowledge of cinematic experimentalism in Eastern Europe, suggests directions for further research, and will be of interest to scholars of film and media, art historians, cultural historians of Eastern Europe, and anyone concerned with questions of how alternative cultures emerge and function under repressive political conditions.
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Ksenya Gurshtein and Sonja Simonyi
- Part I: Key Figures
- 1. The Experimentalism of Gábor Bódy
- 2. Circles, Lines, and Documentary Designs: Tomislav Gotovac’s Belgrade Trilogy
- 3. From the Workshop of the Film Form to Martial Law: On the Intersecting and Bifurcating Paths of Paweł Kwiek’s and Józef Robakowski’s Cinematographic Work in the 1970s and the 1980s
- Part II: Production, Support, and Distribution
- 4. Amateur Cinema in Bulgaria
- Vladimir Iliev with Katerina Lambrinova
- 5. The Polish Educational Film Studio and the Cinema of Wojciech Wiszniewski
- 6. Home Movies and Cinematic Memories: Fixing the Gaze on Vukica Đilas and Tatjana Ivančić
- Part III: Viewing Contexts, Theories, and Reception
- 7. Alone in the Cinemascope
- 8. kinema ikon—Experiments in Motion (1970–89)
- 9. AudioVision: Sound, Music, and Noise in East German Experimental Films
- Part IV: Intersection of the Arts
- 10. Intersections of Art and Film on the Wrocław Art Scene, 1970–80
- 11. Conceptual Artist, Cognitive Film: Miklós Erdély at the Balázs Béla Studio
- 12. Works and Words, 1979: Manifesting Eastern European Film and/as Art in Amsterdam
- 13. Wizardry on a Shoestring: Čaroděj and Experimental Filmmaking in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia
- Index