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TILT-SHIFT: Em Butler

Explores the relationships between land, culture, embodied memory, and anti-imperialist movements

Fri., Jan. 17, 2025
Doors at 6:30pm | Show at 7pm
Indexical
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$10 General / FREE or discounted for Members
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Indexical welcomes Em Butler, a Social Documentation MFA student in the Film & Digital Media department at UC Santa Cruz. Butler received a BS in Human Biology at UC San Diego, with a minor in Visual Arts. She is a community organizer, writer, and filmmaker from Long Beach, California whose work struggles through the relationships between land, culture, embodied memory, and anti-imperialist movements. Alongside her work, Em will also screen Tsai Ming-liang's The Skywalk is Gone (2002), a mystery that unfolds against the backdrop of Taiwanese urban development. These will be followed by the 1996 short, Blight, which in the words of director John Smith, "revolves around the building of the M11 Link Road in East London, which provoked a long and bitter campaign by local residents to protect their homes from demolition."


TILT-SHIFT

TILT-SHIFT, referring to a pair of interactions between a camera lens and the image plane, is a new film series about moving images and politics. TILT-SHIFT invites guest filmmakers to screen their work alongside a film that helped inspire it, and discuss with audiences how their work connects to longer lineages of radical cinema and anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist struggle. This monthly series, curated by UCSC Film and Digital Media PhD. student alex cruse, intends to connect conversations about aesthetics and form to work being done on the ground.

TILT-SHIFT: Em Butler

Explores the relationships between land, culture, embodied memory, and anti-imperialist movements

Fri., Jan. 17, 2025
Doors at 6:30pm | Show at 7pm
Indexical
Add to Calendar
$10 General / FREE or discounted for Members
Buy Tickets

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