Jesse Richards

Jesse Richards
Jesse Richards

Jesse Richards
Birth name Jesse Beau Richards
Born July 17, 1975 (1975-07-17) (age 36)
Bridgeport, Connecticut, U.S.
Nationality American
Field Painting, Photography, Cinema
Training The School of Visual Arts, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Movement Stuckism (2001-2006), Remodernist film
Works Night Life, Shooting at the Moon
Influenced by Die Brücke, wabi-sabi, mono no aware

Jesse Richards (born July 17, 1975) is a painter, filmmaker and photographer from New Haven, Connecticut and was affiliated with the international movement Stuckism.[1]

Contents

Early life

Jesse Richards was born in New Haven.[1] He had an ambition to be a forest ranger during his teens,[2] which was also the time he started to make films.[3] He studied film production at the School of Visual Arts, New York, which he left after a nervous breakdown.[1] He directed plays including "Hamlet" and "Look Back In Anger" for the New Haven Theatre Company, and made short romance and punk films.[1]

In 1999, Richards was arrested for reckless burning, destruction of property and disorderly conduct.[1] After the charges were dropped, he began painting.[1]

Stuckism

Richards affiliated with the Stuckist art movement in 2001 and founded a gallery[4] as the first Stuckism center in the United States in 2002, helping to organize shows. The center opened its doors with a show entitled "We Just Wanna Show Some Fucking Paintings."[1]

In 2003, an anti-war "Clown Trial of President Bush" took place outside the New Haven Federal Courthouse,[4] in order to "highlight the fact that the Iraq war does not have the support of the United Nations, thus violating a binding contract with the UN".[5] It was staged by local Stuckist artists dressed in clown costume, led by Richards with Nicholas Watson and Tony Juliano. One of the participants was a public defender for the state of Connecticut.[5]

Simultaneously the Stuckism center opened a War on Bush show, including work from Brazil, Australia, Germany and the UK, while the London equivalent staged a War on Blair show.[6] Richards said the original intention of a straightforward art show to an anti-war show had been changed after a phone discussion with Stuckism founder, Charles Thomson.[7] Richards told The Yale Herald, "Duchamp would go over to the Yale University Art Gallery and he would say, 'This is crap,' and he would go paint a picture." [8]

Jesse Richards. Nightlife shown at The Stuckists Punk Victorian, 2004

Also in 2003, Richards was an exhibitor in the UK show, Stuck in Wednesbury at Wednesbury Museum & Art Gallery, the first Stuckist show in a public gallery,[9] and in The Stuckists Summer Show at the Stuckism International Gallery, London.[10]

In 2004, Richards was one of eight artists in the "International Stuckists" section of The Stuckists Punk Victorian show at the Walker Art Gallery[4] during the Liverpool Biennial. He said of his exhibited work, Nightlife: "This came out of heavy drinking and loneliness. New Haven's social scene is entirely going to bars, so it was my only way to meet new people."[1]

Joe Machine. My Grandfather Will Fight You. Praised by Richards.

Richards reviewed the Biennial and the Stuckist show, where he found Joe Machine's My Grandfather Will Fight You, "one of the best Stuckist paintings. Machine's work is the epitome of raw, real expressive painting."[11] He said that Stuckist Photographer Andy Bullock's work was "silly installation photography" which was "trying to be trendy."[11]

In 2005, 160 paintings from the Walker Art Gallery show, including one by Richards,[12] were offered as a donation to the Tate gallery, but rejected by Sir Nicholas Serota, because "We do not feel that the work is of sufficient quality in terms of accomplishment, innovation or originality of thought to warrant preservation in perpetuity in the national collection".[13]

In 2005, Richards was a co-ordinator of, and participated in, Addressing the Shadow and Making Friends with Wild Dogs: Remodernism, the first Remodernism exhibition in the US to include work from all of the Remodernist groups, including the Stuckists, the Defastenists, Remodernist Film and Photography, and Stuckism Photography.[14] The show took place at the CBGB 313 gallery.[14]

In 2006, Richards was one of the artists in The Triumph of Stuckism, a show at Liverpool John Moores University Hope Street Gallery, curated by Naive John at the invitation of Professor Colin Fallows, Chair of Research at Liverpool School of Art and Design, and part of the Liverpool Biennial 2006.[15]

Richards left the Stuckist movement in 2006.[16]

Shows

CBGB, New York: Richards co-organized the show Addressing the Shadow and Making Friends with Wild Dogs: Remodernism in its gallery.

Stuckist group shows organised or featuring work by Richards include:

Film and photography

Richards has worked on films with Nicholas Watson since 1996.[17] Their film noir, Blackout, was premiered at the event Stuck Films at the New Haven Stuckism International Center in 2002.[9][18]

In 2003, Richards co-produced Shooting at the Moon, a short film premiering at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival.[16] In 2008, the film made its London premiere at Horse Hospital during its FLIXATION Underground Cinema Club event. Richards said that his films had previously often contained nudity, but this time he wanted to do the opposite and the two leads do not quite even kiss:[16]

While making this film I guess the main thing we were thinking about accomplishing was to express this emotional experience, and have people really feel it, and not to get too complicated with story or anything that would distract from this feeling we wanted people to have while watching the film.[16]

Kurt Walker, an editor and critic on The Auteurs, described one of Richards' films, so tell me again, this way:

Jesse Richards. so tell me again. A still from the Remodernist film praised by Kurt Walker of The Auteurs.

While Tarkovsky's aesthetic is impossible to recreate, Richards shows a clear understanding of the dictation of time and capturing those evasive and important moments in life, with his short (or excerpt from an upcoming feature) So Tell Me Again. The first sequences of shots and sounds clearly conjure before they indicate. Nostalgia proliferated through the torrential over-exposure of 9mm film (sic), the moment between two lovers, one being the auteur himself, quickly translates from the personal to the universal. Whether or not the viewer has grasped the palpable beauty of the situation in their own lives, is irrelevant, as Richards Re-modernist cinema seems to assert (though not stated in the manifesto) that our memories of cinema become incongruently melded with the memories and our own lives. Cinema is only 3 senses away from reality, and Richards has taken it upon himself to imply the other senses in the name of a more absolute depiction of it. And yet, realism is not Richards’s concern, as the film hinges on a form far removed from the description of naturalism, and translates its power through a memory that is universal. One gets the sense that if My Bloody Valentine's Loveless were a film, it'd look something like this. Every shot feels as though it could implode under the rays of the sun, and yet the film gradually explodes with a portrait of love at its moment of perfection. The back-lot of this couples sadness is implied in our peripherals, and quickly disarmed by the lurid beauty of an ancient pop melody. Who says naiveté can't be transcendental.[19]

A book of pinhole photography called "Dark Chamber", featuring new work by Richards as well as work by Wolf Howard, Billy Childish and others was published by Urban Fox Press in May 2007.

Brian Sherwin said of Richards that his work was "Street truth":[16]

His work may seem crude to some, but at least it is honest (sometimes brutally honest.) This honesty is captured by his ability to convey human behavior and struggles with each shot from his camera.[16]

In February 2010, the Australian film magazine Filmink announced Richards' participation in a compilation feature film by the Remodernist film movement. The film is scheduled to premiere in New York in December 2010.[20]

Richards announced in July 2010 that he joined a "new international film collective" called Subvex, which was initiated by Tobias Morgan, co-director of The Auteurs's Garage. "Subvex is currently based in Paris and New York and advocates the occupation of new spaces for the projection of films that would otherwise struggle to receive distribution in a mainstream market, and emphasises the development of ground-level cultures around new waves in contemporary filmmaking".[21] In August 2010, Subvex announced its first project, an 8mm film version of Exquisite Corpse, which will feature new work by Richards, Jonas Mekas, Bill Morrison, Nina Menkes, Lav Diaz, Ian Helliwell, Amos Poe and others. The collaboration is not-for-profit and is being financed through crowdsourcing.[22]

In December 2010, Richards joined the Board of Directors of Cine Foundation International.[23]

Richards currently lives in Granby, Massachusetts.

The Remodernist Film Movement

Jesse Richards and Nicholas Watson. Shooting at the Moon. A still from an early Super-8 Remodernist film.

In 2004, Richards and fellow filmmaker Harris Smith co-founded Remodernist Film and Photography, a new Remodernist group attempting to introduce Remodernist/Stuckist values into film and photography.

In 2008, Richards published a Remodernist Film Manifesto, calling for a "new spirituality in cinema" and the use of intuition in filmmaking.[3] He described Remodernist film as a "stripped down, minimal, lyrical, punk kind of filmmaking",.[3] Point four of the manifesto is:

The Japanese ideas of wabi-sabi (the beauty of imperfection) and mono no aware (the awareness of the transience of things and the bittersweet feelings that accompany their passing), have the ability to show the truth of existence, and should always be considered when making the remodernist film.[3]

There were also criticisms of Stanley Kubrick, digital video, and Dogme 95.[3]

In late August, 2009, an International Alliance of Remodernist Filmmakers was started by Richards in order to promote discussion and collaboration amongst those following the manifesto. The filmmakers include Jesse Richards, Harris Smith, Christopher Michael Beer, Dmitri Trakovsky, Kate Shults, Peter Rinaldi and Khurrem Gold of America, Roy Rezaali of Holland, Rouzbeh Rashidi of Iran and Dean Kavanagh of Ireland.[24]

In October, 2009, with the intention "to further develop and explain Remodernist film concepts", a series of articles by Richards, Peter Rinaldi and Roy Rezaali were published in the magazine MungBeing [21] In Richards' two essays in the magazine, he explains the development of cinema in terms of modernism, postmodernism and remodernism, and discusses remodernist film craft as involving filmmakers "teaching themselves to paint pictures, to try acting in their own movies and those of others (especially if they are shy), to be nude models for other artists, to meditate, worship if they are religious, to do things that affect their levels of consciousness, try things that make them nervous or uncomfortable, to go out and be involved in life, to find adventure, to jump in the ocean. I think that is the exploration of craft".[25] He also relaxes the criticisms made in the manifesto about digital video, claiming that can "have a place in Remodernist cinema", but with a "new language" and not in the way it is used now, which he says is to "mimic film".[25]

He describes his specific approach to Remodernist filmmaking as well:

...my own interests are a little more specific. I'm interested in Japanese aesthetics, Tarkovsky's ideas on "sculpting in time", an emphasis on moments. But there's something else I've really been thinking about lately. I believe that the most effective way to really make subjective and authentic work involves an "addressing of the shadow" (as Billy Childish and Charles Thomson have described it). Now what does this mean exactly? It might mean that you are really obsessed with pubic hair, or maybe you are really embarrassed by a physical or mental disability that you try to hide, or like Billy Childish, you were abused as a child. These things, these "shadows" that we are hiding within ourselves, need to be brought forth into the light of day - in our films, in our work, in our poetry. It's necessary for us to share these parts of ourselves so we and the people we share with can grow into complete, honest human beings. Now, this kind of brutal honesty about ourselves shown through imagery that isn't shy, has been explored to a degree in the work from the Cinema of Transgression, and is advocated by Antonin Artaud in his writings about the Theatre of Cruelty, and his later writings on cinema. But I don't think it's quite as simple as just that. As human beings, we are also full of beauty and love and poetry - we can see this in ourselves and in others and in the world around us. So this beauty must be explored as well, and in combination with the exploration of the shadow. The funny thing is that if we would just be honest as filmmakers, or painters, or as whatever we happen to work with, if we could be this honest, this approach would happen automatically. But we are told again and again- these things don't go together, don't tell people about that thing that you can't get out of your head- that image is inappropriate. We've become very afraid of just expressing ourselves honestly, of removing the desperate attempts to appear clever, we've been afraid of showing our true selves out of fear that others will think us fools. So this is where Artaud, the Cinema of Transgression, and even Andrei Tarkovsky have not gone quite the distance. The cinematic exploration of spirituality and transgression together - pubic hair, blood and shit and love and the green grass and the dying cherry blossoms, falling snow, passing trains - every single fucking beautiful piece of life - that is what my conception of Remodernist film is.[25]

The articles also broaden the aim of the movement, explaining the common bond among Remodernist filmmakers being a search for truth, knowledge, authenticity and spirituality in their work, but having different approaches on achieving that goal.[25]

Filmography

  • Frank's Wild Years, 1994/1995
  • I Wonder, 1996
  • Sex and Lies, 1998[26] (destroyed except for trailer)
  • Blackout, 2000
  • Shooting at the Moon, 1998. Re-edit 2003
  • Yugen, 2009
  • wonder about patterns in your head, 2009
  • so tell me again, 2009
  • Nothing: December 2, 2009, 2009
  • Orphans, 2009

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Milner, Frank (2004). The Stuckists Punk Victorian, p. 132. National Museums Liverpool, ISBN 1-902700-27-9
  2. ^ "'Nightlife', Jesse Richards", Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool. Retrieved April 15, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e Richards, Jesse. "Remodernist Film Manifesto", When the trees were still real, August 27, 2008. Retrieved August 20, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c "International Stuckists", Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool. Retrieved August 20, 2009.
  5. ^ a b "Clown Trial of President Bush", stuckism.com. Retrieved March 27, 2006.
  6. ^ "War on Blair/Bush", stuckism.com, 2003. Retrieved March 27, 2006.
  7. ^ Donar, Erin. "'Stuckists' protest war with art", Yale Daily News, March 27, 2003. Retrieved August 20, 2009.
  8. ^ "Stuckists scoff at 'crap' war", The Yale Herald, March 28, 2003. Retrieved March 27, 2006.
  9. ^ a b "Archive: Diary", stuckism.com. Retrieved on August 20, 2009.
  10. ^ "The Stuckists Summer Show (2003)", stuckism.com. Retrieved August 27, 2009.
  11. ^ a b Richards, Jesse. "Liverpool Biennial: Stuck In Liverpool", NYArts, November/December 2004. Retrieved August 20, 2009.
  12. ^ "Works offered as a donation and rejected by the Tate gallery", stuckism.com. Retrieved 8 April 2008.
  13. ^ Alberge, Dalya. "Tate rejects £500,000 gift from 'unoriginal' Stuckists", The Times, 28 July 2005. Retrieved 1 February 2008.
  14. ^ a b "Addressing the Shadow and Making Friends with Wild Dogs: Remodernism", stuckism.com, 2005. Retrieved on August 20, 2009 from the Internet Archive of August 3, 2005.
  15. ^ "The Triumph of Stuckism", Liverpool John Moores University, 2006. Retrieved on August 20, 2009 from the Internet Archive store of April 14, 2006.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Sherwin, Brian. "Art Space Talk: Jesse Richards", Myartspace, November 24, 2006. Retrieved May 4, 2008.
  17. ^ "Home", New Haven Stuckists Film Group. Retrieved August 27, 2009.
  18. ^ Dauphinais, Jennifer. "Maya your days be merry", New Haven Advocate, December 19, 2002. Retrieved August 27, 2009 from the Internet Archive store of June 13, 2003.
  19. ^ Walker, Kurt. "The Garage Showcase", The Auteurs, March 10, 2010. Retrieved April 4, 2010.
  20. ^ Cara Nash "Cinema with soul", Filmink, February 25, 2010 Retrieved February 28, 2010
  21. ^ a b Jesse Richards "Subvex", When The Trees Were Still Real, July 2, 2010 Retrieved July 21, 2010
  22. ^ Anne Thompson "Exquisite Corpse: 8 MM Film Experiment", Thompson on Hollywood, August 27, 2010 Retrieved August 30, 2010
  23. ^ http://cinefoundation.org/2010/12/board-of-directors/
  24. ^ Richards, Jesse. "International Alliance of Remodernist Filmmakers", When the Trees Were Still Real, August 25, 2009. Retrieved October 5, 2009.
  25. ^ a b c d "Remodernist Film", MungBeing, October 4, 2009 Retrieved October 5, 2009
  26. ^ "Sex and Lies" stuckfilm.com. Retrieved August 27, 2009.

External links


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