~ December 2024 ~

fuze by Sandra Louise Dyas and LeAnn Erickson

An experimental film that showcases the role of the viewer in creating videopoetry. As Iowa City-based visual artist Sandra Louise Dyas explains in the Vimeo description, ‘”fuze” is a collaborative video created for Homegrown Stories that relies on chance and serendipity. LeAnn Erickson (video) and I (sound) worked separately, only knowing the length of the piece and its title.’

Homegrown Stories has been nurturing creative collaborations for many years.  This year we were interested in creating a more hands-on collaborative project among our loyal and talented collaborators. We invited sound and image artists who have contributed great work in the past to take part in this year’s Homegrown Stories theme – The Serendipity Project.

Twelve individuals were formed into six collaborative pairs. The pair of artists selected a title for their video piece and a designated length. They then worked separately with one collaborator creating a soundtrack inspired by the title and the other creating a silent image track.  At a designated time, these two separate tracks were combined.

Using collage, organic image, music as sound, and a variety of structural schemes, these collaborative videos reveal the random magic of Serendipity.

The Serendipity Project 2024

Other videos for the project that don’t include text in their soundtracks are still well worth watching, but the magic here lies in just how well elements of the text do complement the imagery, culminating in a shot of a horseshoe crab which, as an environmentalist knowing something of the plight of horseshoe crabs, I found quite moving.

We’ve shared Dyas’ work here before: her 2016 videopoem River Étude. LeAnn Erickson, a professor of film and video production at Temple University in Philadelphia, is new to Moving Poems. Here’s her website.

Call for work: Millennium Film Workshop poetry films

Short notice for a call out, we’re grateful to the heads up from Adam Stone on this one…

A screening at the long-established and renowned Millennium Film Workshop (Brooklyn, NY) curated by Michèle Saint-Michel and Erica Schreiner.

The deadline is 10th December 2024, entry is free via a submission form. Unfortunately not too much information is easily found online, or on the Millennium Film Workshop’s own website , but details include:

Now accepting poetry films from all artists regardless of location for a screening in 2025 at the Millennium Film Workshop in Brooklyn, NY.

We aim to embrace the broadest possible definition of the genre and hope this screening will spark dialogue about the genre’s fluid boundaries and its spill into often mispronounced and unwieldy territories.

See a bit more here or in the submission form itself.