FEEL IT.STREAM
?

Pia Epremian

Directing

Biography

(Chivasso, Turin, 1940), only woman filmmaker of the CCI, she spent time on the Turin art scene in the 1960s with her childhood friend and confederate Tonino De Bernardi. Her degree thesis on Proust formed the basis of her first film Proussade 1967, followed by other short and medium-length films, all in 8mm until 1971, when she stop making films. She then moved to Rome to concentrate on psychoanalysis, specialising in the treatment of children and teenagers.

Known For

Tutto, tutto nello stesso istante
N/A

Collective manifesto by the members of C.C.I. It is a collective film, the result of an operation devoid of any aesthetic purpose: to verify the existence of any harmony between a fairly large group (twelve people) of members of the independent Cooperative. Someone, who had the idea, turned 60 meters of Ektachrome according to the moods –or discontent – of the moment and gave them to others to see. The others reacted, each with their own piece. It was then thought to call the film “circular letter”. It was not so simple and so quick: the operation, which started in June of ’68, ended in March of ’69.

Tutto, tutto nello stesso istante

1969
Medea
4.0

"Medea gathers all my important relatives and friends. Above all my daughter Alida as a child when they found out she had diabetes while she was hospitalised. It was my feeling of being a bad mother and a transmitter of hereditary that made me name the film Medea. All of the characters somehow transmit the inner pains of birth, body and life in a symbolic way" - Pia Epremian

Medea

1969
Il mostro verde
N/A

Short made for double parallel projections, for which Allen Ginsberg said that it's his favorite underground European film, debut from the director, cheeky hommage to B-movies.

Il mostro verde

1967
Migration
N/A

A series of migrants who at times narrate and impersonate shards of myths, among them the Great Goddess, the Virgin of Bach’s Magnificat, the Sulamite of Stockhausen’s Song of Solomon (“I am black but comely”), tales by Herodotus, Kafka, Villon (as set to music by Ezra Pound). Third part of the Flower of Eryngium cycle.

Migration

1970
Dei
10.0

The construction of the film is very simple. Most of the time we see faces in close-up. Three pairs of faces, usually, on three different levels of superimpositions. At first, the faces are very theatrical, made-up. It's not clear whether they are men or women. They move only slightly. They are, indeed, godlike. As the film progresses, very unnoticeably, these faces begin to gain more life and masculine and feminine qualities. At the end of the film, after three hours, the faces are very real, and very human, and sexes and ages are very clearly defined: men, women, children.

Dei

1968
No image
N/A

No description available.

Le vin de la paresse

1969
Dissolvimento
N/A

Dissolvimento shows two women in domestic interiors who perform two different actions, edited one after the other. In the first, the painter Gigliola Carretti is engaged in an action with a series of sexually explicit props, making the activity resemble the brushing of teeth; in the second, the director herself is seen from behind, seated on a toilet. The film ends with the almost abstract view of cascades of the fountains of Turin.

Dissolvimento

1970
Proussade
N/A

No description available.

Proussade

1967
Doppio suicidio
N/A

Experimental short about a male and a female figure.

Doppio suicidio

1968
Infiniti sufficienti
N/A

No description available.

Infiniti sufficienti

1970
Piena di fiume
N/A

No description available.

Piena di fiume

1968
Pistoletto & Sotheby's
N/A

This film represents an encounter with several major icons of the history of western painting, "while attempting"–as the filmmaker says–"to always create a link between art and life, an impertinence with respect to those images that the production of works of documentation [books and magazines] brought to the attention of everyone for the first time." Reclaiming art history in a performative, playful way and evoking the tradition of tableau vivant, Pistoletto with his daughters Cristina and Maria Pioppi "act out" in a series of little scenes: Orpheus and Eurydice, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Raphael, Chaim Soutine, James Ensor, Edgar Degas, Vincent Van Gogh.

Pistoletto & Sotheby's

1968
Antonio Delle Nevi
N/A

No description available.

Antonio Delle Nevi

1969