
'There is no why for my making films. I just liked the twitters of the machine, and since it was an extension of painting for me, I tried it and loved it. In painting I never liked the staid and static, always looked for what would change the source of light and stance, using glitters, glass beads, luminous paint, so the camera was a natural for me to try but how expensive!'-- Marie Menken
'The realist sees only the front of a building, the outlines, a street, a tree. Marie Menken sees in them the motion of time and eye. She sees the motions of heart in a tree. ... A rain that she sees, a tender rain, becomes the memory of all rains she ever saw; a garden that she sees becomes a memory of all gardens, all color, all perfume, all mid-summer and sun.'– Jonas Mekas
'Marie Menken (1910-1970) is the unsung heroine of the American avant-garde cinema. Best known for her role as a protagonist in Andy Warhol's Chelsea Girls, she was, far more importantly, a mentor, muse and major influence for such key experimental filmmakers as Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, Jonas Mekas and Andy Warhol. Menken created an extraordinary body of exuberant and stunningly beautiful films shaped, above all, by her intuitive understanding of handheld cinematography. Beginning with her celebrated first film, Visual Variations on Noguchi (1945), Menken used the hand-cranked Bolex camerafavored by avant-garde filmmakers to introduce a new agility, grace and spontaneity into experimental cinema, a lightness of camera and form hitherto unseen in American film.
'With Noguchi, Menken also began a spirited dialogue between cinema and the plastic and painterly arts that extends across her films in a witty yet deeply insightful exploration of the formal language and methodology specific to those schools and painters with whom Menken was close – from the Abstract Expressionist drip painting humorously critiqued in Drips in Strips (1963), to the factory production of Pop art in the revelatory Andy Warhol (1964) and the Fluxus practice of Robert Watts in Watts with Eggs (1967).
'The longtime creative and marital partner of poet-filmmaker Willard Maas, Menken began as an accomplished painter whose eccentrically textured and effulgent canvases incorporate all manner of reflective media – phosphorescent paint, crushed glass, sequins – in a playful challenge to the traditional boundaries of the painted canvas. Light remained a major focus of Menken's films, most notably in major works such as Notebook (1940-62) and Lights (1964-66) which transform her Bolex into an instrument for painting marvelous sculptural forms from neon and city lights.
'Like the painters-turned-filmmakers Robert Breer and Carmen D'Avino, Menken (who animated the chess sequence in Maya Deren's At Land) embraced various animation techniques – collage, stop-motion cinematography – as a direct extension of her painting. Yet for Menken, animation also became a way of radically transforming the world around her, reimagining postwar New York City, for example, in her masterpiece of single frame cinematography Go! Go! Go! (1962-64), a work that condenses two years of patient documentary filmmaking into a delirious and exhilarating vision of a hyperactive city.
'An important first step towards the recuperation of Menken as a major artist and figure in the postwar avant-garde scene, Martina Kudláček’s recent documentary Notes on Marie Menken (2006) includes rare footage and revealing interviews with a number of close friends and colleagues such as Anger, Mekas, Gerard Malanga and Alfred Leslie.'-- collaged
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Stills

















































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Further
Marie Menken @ IMDb
Marie Menken @ Wikipedia
'Notes on Marie Menken'
'Making Light of IT: Marie Menken'
Marie Menken @ The Filmmakers Coop
'Who's the Source for 'Virginia Woolf'?'
'More Notes on Marie Menken'
'By Marie Menken'
Marie Menken @ mubi
Video: Jonas Mekas talks about Marie Menken
'Marie Menken and the mechanical representation of labor'
Marie Menken's works @ Ubuweb
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Documentary

View an excerpt from Martina Kudlácek's 2006 film on the influential New York experimental film maker, artist and woman-about-town, Marie Menken. Given access to Menken's archive by her nephew, Kudlácek mixes rare footage with a soundtrack by John Zorn and interviews with Menken's contemporaries, including Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, Gerard Malanga, Jonas Mekas and Billy Name. Written and directed by Martina Kudláček, camera: Martina Kudláček, editor: Henry Hills, sound: Judy Karp, original Music: John Zorn.
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Paintings

'Marie Menken was known initially not for her films but for her paintings she made from sand and other nontraditional materials. Her first show opened at the Betty Parsons Gallery in November 1949 (the show that followed hers was Jackson Pollock's), and her paintings were described before the opening by F.Y.I, the employee newsletter of Time, Inc., where she worked as a night clerk on the overseas cable desk. According to F.Y.I., her paintings were made from "stone chips, stone powders, marble chips, marble dust, ground silicate, sand, cement dust, luminous paints, glass particles, glues and lacquers, occasionally string and fiber. " So Dwight was perhaps right to call these paintings desertipicti; the species epithet means "of the Painted Desert." Menken had a second show at Betty Parsons in February 1951, and her third, held at Tibor de Nagy the following month, featured Pollock-like swirls of phosphorescent paint that glowed in the dark.

Marie Menken, If Earth in Earth Delight, 1951, oil, sand, glass, and thread on masonite, 11 ½ x 17 ½ inches.
'Menken's paintings are . . . "idiosyncratic" is the word likely to be employed. She experimented with sand, string, glass--like a Julian Schnabel aforehand, though on a human scale. The paintings are on masonite (board), not canvas. Except for one, which is on brown paper that has been crumpled, rubbed with what appears to be colored pencil, and then stretched more-or-less flat again. The masonite, at least in the case of IF EARTH, appears to have been trimmed by hand–which explains the irregular edges of the image I sent you.

Marie Menken, Untitled, [1951], oil, sequins, shells, and phosphorescent paint on masonite, 12 x 18 inches. Not signed, not dated.
'The paintings on masonite, including IF EARTH IN EARTH DELIGHT, are stuccoed with sand, strings, beads, glass, etc. They are not all so brown as IF EARTH. One is mostly green, as I remember, another reddish. Another has Pollock-like swirls of phosphorescent paint studded with tiny shells. I did not know it was phosphorescent until one night I went into the dark basement where all the Ripley stuff was being unpacked . . . and got quite a start. It seems pretty clear Menken liked the play of light, just as she says somewhere. Because of the raised and encrusted surfaces of the paintings the light dances or changes patterns according to your angle of viewing–even in the work made from dull crumpled paper.

Marie Menken, Doctor Coon's Ghar Hotu, 1951, oil, sand, and thread on masonite, 11 ½ X 21 inches.
'While Martina [Kudlacek] was making her documentary of Menken, she preserved for Anthology Film Archives footage Menken shot in Guadix Spain [Gravediggers of Guadix] during the same 1958 trip with Kenneth Anger which resulted in her Arabesque for him at the Alhambra. The Guadix footage is unforgettable. Spooky monks, who look like they will retire to their cells to flog themselves or each other, are repetitively spading, spading, spading the red Spanish earth . . . and Menken's camera goes to that earth as if it can't help itself. The effect, I remember, is exactly as you say about her camera: it's stop-start, momentum infused with the potential of interruption, lingering and delay. I even seem to remember that the earth hits the lens at some point....

A Green Dream, 1946, oil, sand, glass, and thread on masonite, 13 x 13 inches.
'The comparison to IF EARTH IN EARTH DELIGHT is dramatic. The painting was shown at Betty Parsons in 1951 and the film wasn't shot until 1958 but in each the texture, the color, the granularity–even in a way the non-translucent limits of the dull, unreflective medium of earth–are made to do a lot of esthetic work on our behalf. Put this similarity together with her George Herbert title (it's from the poem "The Priesthood") and one could work up a whole exegesis. Speculative, but then, she's the one that picked the title.

Ten Cents' Worth of Tears, 1954, oil, sand, beads, and thread on masonite, 9 3/4 x 13 3/8 inches.
'The stanzas in the middle, where the title comes from, are so much to the point that she could not have been innocent of them. "Yet have I often seen, by cunning hand / And force of fire, what curious things are made / Of wretched earth." And next: But since those great ones, be they ne'er so great, / Come from the earth, from whence those vessels come; / So that at once both feeder, dish, and meat, / Have one beginning and one final sum: / I do not greatly wonder at the sight, / If earth in earth delight.'-- Douglas Crace
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9 of Marie Menken's 24 films
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Visual Variations on Noguchi (1945)
'Visual Variations on Noguchi is a riveting visual study of the dynamic relationship between film movement and sculptural form. Marie Menken made the film while looking after Isamu Noguchi’s MacDougal Alley studio in 1945. It is both Menken’s first film, and the first within in a series of her films that study the work of prominent modern artists including Piet Mondrian, Dwight Ripley and Andy Warhol. Produced at a particularly rich moment of innovation within the avant-garde, the film can be read as an important intermediary between visual art and cinema in post-war North America. As such, it is an indispensable film for contemporary viewers of cinema and modern art alike.'-- Senses of Cinema
Excerpt
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Glimpse of the Garden (1957)
'Marie Menken was a pioneer of experimental film in the New York avant-garde scene; known as The Body by Andy Warhol and her peers she struck an imposing figure at a formidable six-foot-two inches tall. Her marriage to poet Willard Maas and their wicked arguments inspired playwright Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Viriginia Woolf and her salon-home was a sort of proto-factory, the place where Warhol met Albee, Marilyn Monroe and filmmaker Kenneth Anger.At odds with her size Menken's 'little, little' films are often feminised, described as lyrical and ephemeral they are known for their fragility of movement and intuitive sense of pace. Glimpse of the Garden (1957), filmed through a magnifying glass is a visual poem that illuminates the strange in the ordinary. In a collage of textured close-ups flowers and plants take on a surreal quality, shifting streams of foliage dance to a phonographic recording of birdsong and Menken's somatic camera delicately captures the everyday act as an act of art.'-- The Plant
the entire film
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Dwightiana (1959)
'Menken's 16mm, stop-motion tribute to the art of Dwight Ripley was filmed in 1959 in his apartment at 416 East Fifty-eighth Street in New York. She used his drawings as flats.The remarkably contemporary soundtrack for steel drum, guitar, flute, and voice was written for the occasion by Maya Deren's young husband, Teiji Ito, and is available in his album Music for Maya (Tzadik). Stan Brakhage called Dwightiana a pioneer example of the film portrait, abstract rather than narrative (the colored pencils represent Ripley's palette). Ripley was also a botanist, and Menken's unusual title alludes to botanical nomenclature as if Dwightiana might be the name of a species as well as a work "about" Dwight.'-- Dwight Ripley Info
the entire film
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Arabesque for Kenneth Anger (1958 - 1961)
'Arabesque for Kenneth Anger is Marie Menken's tribute to her fellow avant-garde filmmaker, Kenneth Anger, whose influence obviously looms large over this expressive, evocative short. The film, shot in a Moorish palace in Spain over the course of an afternoon, is concerned, as Anger always was, with light and color, and especially with the ways in which forms could be made to interact with the tempos of music and cutting. The film is set to a lively score by composer Teiji Ito, who combines Spanish guitar and castanet motifs with Japanese-influenced reeds, resulting in a driving, vivacious score that's perfectly suited to Menken's imagery. Although the score was made later, to fit the short, the film sometimes seems to move with the tempo of the music, as when the circular ripples in a puddle dance to the beat of the snapping castanets. Even better is a wonderful section where the film takes on the stuttery rhythm of the percussion as the frame seems to jump and skip, giving the illusion of a sideways motion through a courtyard but in fact repeatedly returning to the same spot again and again. The black edges of the frame take on the function of cutaway walls, so that the viewer is faked out into believing that the camera is moving from one room to the next. It's a compelling image of being in constant motion while never quite going anywhere; the camera is essentially running in place.'-- Only the Cinema
the entire film
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Mood Mondrian (1965)
'"A film of a painting of a sound. Piet Mondrian's 'Broadway Boogie-Woogie' is translated into visual boogie rhythm." --M.M. "Mood Indigo can already be described as an extraordinary and perhaps revolutionary cinematic achievement." -- Joseph LeSueur. In 2006, John Zorn wrote a belated, ideal score for Menken's film Mood Indigo. It was included in the album Filmworks XVII: Notes on Marie Menken/Ray Bandar: A Life with Skulls (Tzadik Records).'-- collaged
Imaginary score
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Moonplay (1964 - 1966)
'An expansion upon an idea put forward in Marie Menken's film Notebook; single-frame footage of the moon shot on various nights, blinking and darting around within Menken's field of vision.'-- David Lewis, All Movie Guide
Teiji Ito's score for 'Moonplay'
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Go! Go! Go! (1962 - 1964)
'In transit across the Brooklyn Bridge, cables and railings whirr and weave, interrupted by lampposts beating across the frame. Now in Manhattan, window grids pulse and ripple. Reflected sunlight off the metal of cars and trucks, strikes the screen. Wooden crates, iron railings, construction barriers flutter by. Blocks of stuttering bricks and windows are punctuated by foreground figures--pedestrians, cars, broad sides of trucks--popping in and out of frame. Sometimes the frame of the car window from which Marie Menken is capturing these single-frame samples hovers in view. A flurry of images mark out the density and clutter of vendor's wares. A collage of urban signage stamps its imperatives of grabbing and directing attention; these signs fly at the screen too quickly to be read, leaving viewers instead with their collective impact of attraction.'-- Angela Joosse
the entire film
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Lights (1966)
'"Made during the brief Christmas-lit season, usually between the hours of midnight and 1:00 A.M., when vehicle and foot traffic was light, over a period of three years. Based on store decorations, window displays, fountains, public promenades, Park Avenue lights, building and church facades. I had to keep my camera under my coat to warm it up, as the temperature was close to zero much of the time."'-- M.M.
the entire film
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Sidewalks (1966)
'Marie Menken points her camera downward and picks up the rhythms of walking and its visual counterpoint in the patterns of sidewalks.'-- David Lewis, All Movie Guide
'Sidewalks' projected behind a performance by Richard Barone
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p.s. Hey. ** Thomas Moronic, Awesome response and thinking, man. No surprise that when putting the stack together I spent a bunch of brain power trying to suss out who in the photos was actually reading (seeing if I could tell by their faces and/or tell whether the photo was a document or from photo shoot or a film or something) and, if they were reading, whether they knew/cared about how they/that would look. Trying to figure out just how immersive the experience of reading is, when you're actually reading. Can one semi-read something? I don't know. Interesting. ** Bitter69uk, Hi, man. Ha ha, you're not a fan of 'Girl on a Motorcycle' then. I kind of am or was when I saw it which, admittedly, was long enough ago that my opinion has probably outlasted its expiration date. ** Tosh Berman, I think so too. Two of Bowie and two of somebody else famous that I wonder if anyone noticed. Oh, so very obviously, I feel envy and offer my congratulations on your imminent Japan trip. I miss that place a lot. Sounds so great. Have huge fun, duh, and check in if you can and want. ** David Ehrenstein, Howdy. ** Sypha, I think it's safe to say that was indeed LeBron James's first blog appearance. I barely know who he is, and, in fact, I have no idea which photo shows him. I must have grabbed it just because I liked the photo. Wendy Carlos is cool, obviously. ** Steevee, Let me join the chorus of praisers re: your 'MBL' piece. It was very fine. Kudos. People still read books while on the metro and trains here quite a bit. I know of EZTV, but I ... don't think that I've actually heard them? I will definitely try them. I have a big soft spot for The Flamin' Groovies, so that's an alluring reference point. Thanks, Steve. ** James, Thank you. I think Martin Amis's non-fiction is much better or at least more fun than his fiction. ** Bill, Hi. I had the best time watching that video. It was lovely and strange and much more. Thank you sharing it! Always very happy to hit your soft spot, ha ha. ** Damien Ark, Hi. But maybe it was a book called 'Death Sucks' or 'Death is Boring'? ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. Yeah, I mean, I love physical books. They're beautiful things, and they create a reading experience that, due to their form and the required handling, etc., is very different than reading on devices. But there's really no question that books are dying, and that they will be fetish objects like vinyl records before too long at all. And, I don't know, that's fine. And even exciting, really, if you think a technically progressive change is inherently exciting, and I do. The reading experience is being reinvented. How cool is that? I don't know. Anyway, I think I'm saying that I agree with you. I dream that animated gifs could evolve such that they could be divided out from devices and printed anywhere. An animated gif tattoo, for instance, would probably really annoying, but the idea excites me. I had a sense when listening to Drake that I would feel differently and understand his work's positives much better if I were more familiar with the context, I guess meaning the current state of Rap as a form/art. I mean, I know pop music and rock music really well because I've been listening to that stuff and studying it sometimes since I was a kid, and I can really appreciate when an artist does some kind of nuanced, subtle twist or upgrade or whatever to the classic form in a way that people who don't know the form well enough to be fascinated by its progress and evolution wouldn't pick up on or find very interesting. You have a good morning too! ** H, Hi. Oh, thank you very much. No, I only picked photos of people reading either books, magazines, newspapers, or, in a few cases, movie scripts. It was a kind of homage to the beauty of analog reading, I guess. I don't know Queens at all. I don't think I've ever actually even been there. You got the haircut! Sweet! You sound really good and happy. That's so nice to hear/read. ** Etc etc etc, Hi, Casey. Thanks, my pleasure, thank you. I saw your email as I was awakening this morning, and I'll get to it and the questions as soon as I finish up here. Best day! ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks, Jeff. Yeah, it ended up being kind of really beautiful, didn't it? Like I told Steevee, you do still see people on the metro here readings actual books fairly often, and actually interesting books in many cases, which is the nicest part. I haven't really had enough metro/subway experiences in other cities to know. People read books a lot on the trains and planes that I've taken to other European cities. The film premiere is set, and it's a little frustrating because we were told that the festival would announce their official line-up on Thursday whereupon we could announce the premiere, but they still haven't released the official line-up yet. Any minute, I guess. No time to go back to my text novel yet, sadly. I think it's going to have wait until Zac and I have written the pilot for the TV series Gisele is planning to direct, so not for some weeks more, I guess. But I'm jonesing. How's your novel going? ** Styofoamcastle, Hey! Yeah, sorry. Zac's and my film is about to premiere, and I've gotten swept up in a bunch of last minute technical and publicity-related stuff I have to do to prepare for that. How about tomorrow or Sunday? I think I'll be in the clear at least temporarily by tomorrow. Love, me. ** Postitbreakup, Hi. Thanks, that's kind of you. Wow, someone actually noticed and mentioned that 'holding my breath' thing. I was starting think I wrote that p.s. from the Twilight Zone or something. Thank you, J. ** Adrienne White, Hi, A! Great, happiness, yay! Yeah, it was kind of a sweetie of a post, wasn't it? I got lucky. Love to you! ** Okay. I have this feeling that maybe most of you won't know Marie Menken because she's pretty roundly overlooked, but she was/is a very interesting filmmaker/ artist, and I hope that you guys who don't know her stuff will enjoy what I've found and posted. See you tomorrow.