To the Winged Distance
Programme One
![]() |
|
Robert Beavers
AMOR 1980 © Robert Beavers |
Programme duration 80 min
This screening is introduced by Robert Beavers.
Programme:
AMOR, USA 1980, 15 min
AMOR is an exquisite lyric, shot in Rome and at the natural theatre of Salzburg. The recurring sounds of cutting cloth, hands
clapping, hammering, and tapping underline the associations of the montage of short camera movements, which bring together
the making of a suit, the restoration of a building, and details of a figure, presumably Beavers himself, standing in the
natural theatre in a new suit, making a series of hand movements and gestures. A handsomely designed Italian banknote suggests
the aesthetic economy of the film: the tailoring trimming, and chiselling point to the editing of the film itself. (P. Adams
Sitney, Film Comment)
Work Done, USA 1972/1999, 22 min
Florence and the Alps, and celebrates an archaic Europe. Contemplating a stone vault cooled by blocks of ice or the hand stitching of
a massive tome or the frying of a local delicacy, Beavers considers human activities without dwelling on human protagonists.
Like many of Beavers’ films, Work Done is based on a series of textural or transformative equivalences: the workshop and the field, the book and the forest, the
mound of cobblestones and a distant mountain. (J. Hoberman, The Village Voice)
The Hedge Theater, USA 1986–90/2002, 19 min
Beavers shot The Hedge Theatre in Rome in the 1980s. It is an intimate film inspired by the Baroque architecture and stone carvings of Francesco Borromini
and St. Martin and the Beggar, a painting by the Sienese painter Il Sassetta. Beavers’ montage contrasts the sensuous softness of winter light with the
lush green growth brought by spring rains. Each shot and each source of sound is steeped in meaning and placed within the
film’s structure with exacting skill to build a poetic relationship between image and sound. (Susan Oxtoby, Toronto International Film Festival)
£5, booking recommended

