Oscar Micheaux "The Exile"

Cabinet

poster for Oscar Micheaux "The Exile"

This event has ended.

The Exile
Oscar Micheaux, 16mm, 1931, 93 mins
Introduced by Martine Syms

In his seminal essay "Bad Movies," J. Hoberman describes Oscar Micheaux as the "Black Pioneer of American film—not just because he was a black man, or because in his youth he pioneered the West, or because he was the greatest figure in 'race' movies and an unjustly ignored force in early American cinema. Micheaux is America's Black Pioneer in the way that André Breton was Surealism's Black Pope. His movies throw our history and movies into an alien and startling disarray." For tonight's event, artist Martine Syms, one of the proprietors of Golden Age in Chicago, will present The Exile, Micheaux's first sound picture, a sensationalist melodrama of illicit desire that shifts from a Windy City whorehouse to the South Dakota homestead and back again. In addition to constituting a vital chapter in the history of independent film distribution and Black entrepreneurship, Micheaux's movies have also long been admired by some of cinema's most adventurous practitioners for their invigorating, sui generis narrative logic—one of the rare prints of The Exile is being provided courtesy of Ken Jacobs. As Hoberman would put it, "Micheaux constructed an anti-Hollywood out of rags and bones on some barely-imaginable psychic tundra."

Media

Schedule

October 04, 2011 from 19:00

Artist(s)

Oscar Micheaux

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use