FEEL IT.STREAM
?

Marcel Broodthaers

Directing

Biography

Marcel Broodthaers 1924-1976 Belgian poet, photographer, film-maker and artist. Born in Brussels. Began as a poet and aged 16-17 had some contacts with the Belgian Surrealists, especially Magritte, who gave him a copy of Mallarmé's Un Coup de Dés. (Magritte's paintings with words, in which there is a contradiction between the painted word and the painted object, were later a crucial influence on him). Started in 1958 to publish articles illustrated with his own photographs. At the end of 1963 decided to become an artist and began to make objects. First one-man exhibition at the Galerie St Laurent, Brussels, 1964. Exhibited everyday objects, words, lettering, child-like drawings etc., often with verbal-visual puns; made books, catalogues, prints on everything from canvasesattached to the wall to reliefs in plastic. Made his first film in 1957 and from 1967 a number of short films.

Known For

Here Is Always Somewhere Else
6.0

The life and work of enigmatic Dutch/Californian conceptual artist Bas Jan Ader, who in 1975 disappeared under mysterious circumstances at sea in the smallest boat ever to cross the Atlantic. As seen through the eyes of fellow emigrant filmmaker René Daalder, the picture becomes a sweeping overview of contemporary art films as well as an epic saga of the transformative powers of the ocean.

Here Is Always Somewhere Else

2007
No image
8.0

The figure of wax to which the title alludes is that of philosopher and jurist Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), one of the founders of the University of London. The film was shot over a period of two days in three locations: the hall of University College, London, where Bentham’s wax figure sits in a glass-fronted case; Oxford Street; and the City of London. Subtitles indicate a dialogue between Broodthaers and Bentham, in addition to a spoken commentary delivered by Charlotte Hardman. The film is accompanied by Broodthaers playing scales and music by Beethoven and Chopin on the piano.

Figure Of Wax

1974
A Film by Charles Baudelaire (Second Version)
7.0

The film purports to be the second version of a (fictional) film made by Baudelaire in 1850 in memory of his (actual) voyage across the Pacific. It was shot using a world map mounted on black board, filmed in its entirety and in extreme close-up.

A Film by Charles Baudelaire (Second Version)

1970
No image
8.5

Berlin scenery, intercut with scenes of Broodthaers smoking, reading, eating and daydreaming.

Berlin Oder Ein Traum Mit Sahne

1989
No image
7.0

This is one of a series of films that Broodthaers made on the subject of the pipe, a reference to the work of René Magritte. A static camera depicts images of a pipe, clock, and smoke against a whitewashed brick wall. The superimposed titles were added in 1971, and include the labels ‘Figure I’ and ‘Figure II’, phrases that recur throughout Broodthaers oeuvre, and echo Magritte’s concern with the relationship between object, image and language.

Ceci Ne Serait Pas Une Pipe

1970
No image
N/A

Illustrates what initially seems to be a regular game of tic-tac-toe. As the film progresses, the text diverges from the image, moving from documentation to symbolic play.

O-X

No image
N/A

Short by Marcel Broodthaers.

Speakers Corner

1972
Projet Pour Un Poisson
N/A

The main part of this film was created by the process of superimposition: Broodthaers’s ink drawings of fish, scales, words and signs were transferred to film stock, which was used in negative to create the final work. In contrast, the title sequence, added in 1971, shows Broodthaers’s drawn storyboards filmed with a moving camera. The film was shown for the first time at the Galerie Michael Werner in Cologne in 1971, and a second film Le Poisson est Tenace, was created partly from its out-takes.

Projet Pour Un Poisson

1970
La Clef de L'horloge (Poème cinémathographique en l’honneur de Kurt Schwitters)
10.0

Broodthaers’s first film, Clef d’Horloge was made using a borrowed camera and some film stock that he had been given. It was shot at the Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, in 1956, during an exhibition of works by Kurt Schwitters. The film is made in negative and positive and is based on several works that were on display. It premiered on 23 April 1958 at ‘Filmexprmntlfilm’, an experimental film convention in Brussels.

La Clef de L'horloge (Poème cinémathographique en l’honneur de Kurt Schwitters)

1958
Au-delà de cette limite
N/A

No description available.

Au-delà de cette limite

1971
La Pluie (Projet Pour Un Texte)
7.3

The film shows Marcel Broodthaers trying to write while the rain constantly washes away the ink. In the final scene, during which the artist gives up and drops his pen, the inscription “Projet pour un texte” (Project for a text) appears.

La Pluie (Projet Pour Un Texte)

1969
Pipe Satire
10.0

No description available.

Pipe Satire

1969
A Voyage on the North Sea
N/A

Marcel Broodthaers’ film and book, both titled A Voyage on the North Sea which were distributed together as part and parcel of the same publishing plot. The ostensibly related subject of both book and film consists mutually of 19th and 20th century nautical images including: 1. photographic reproductions and details of an amateur’s 19th century painting of a fleet of fishing ships and 2. photographs of a contemporary sailboat.

A Voyage on the North Sea

1974
No image
N/A

Short by Marcel Broodthaers.

Mauretania

1972
No image
8.0

Short by Marcel Broodthaers.

Monsieur Teste

1974
Le Corbeau et le Renard
N/A

A documentation of Marcel Broodthaers's exhibition Le Corbeau et le Renard at the Wide White Space Gallery, Antwerp.

Le Corbeau et le Renard

1968
La signature
8.0

Animation of Marcel B.'s signature

La signature

1970
No image
N/A

Short by Marcel Broodthaers.

Exercice

1971
Rendez-vous Mit Jacques Offenbach
N/A

Rendez-vous...includes La pipe (1968), La pluie (1969), and Un film de Charles Baudelaire (1970) in its compilation, among others...

Rendez-vous Mit Jacques Offenbach

1972
No image
N/A

Short by Marcel Broodthaers.

The Last Voyage

1974